The Oxford Handbook of Martin Luther's Theology

The Oxford Handbook of Martin Luther's Theology
Author: Robert Kolb
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 689
Release: 2014
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0199604703

A comprehensive look at the background and context, the content, and the impact of Martin Luther's Theology, written by an international team of theologians and historians.

The Genius of Luther's Theology

The Genius of Luther's Theology
Author: Robert Kolb
Publisher: Baker Academic
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2008-02
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 080103180X

Leading Luther scholars offer students and other non-specialists an accessible way to engage the big ideas of Luther's thinking.

Luther and Late Medieval Thomism

Luther and Late Medieval Thomism
Author: Denis Janz
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Total Pages: 201
Release: 1983
Genre: History
ISBN: 0889201323

A careful analysis of Luther’s thought in the context of his age, this volume examines Luther’s links with later medieval Thomism. The study is organized on the theme of theological anthropology—the state of humans within a theological system. In the course of the discussion, Janz studies parallels and divergences between the thought of Luther and the thought of Thomas Aquinas, Peter Lombard, John Capreolus, Henry of Gorkum, Conrad Koellin, Karlstadt, and Cajetan. Janz suggests that at some crucial points late medieval Thomist teaching misrepresents the teaching of Thomas Aquinas. This, compounding Luther’s lack of direct knowledge of Thomas, helps to explain Luther’s opposition not only to his own nominalist teachers but to the scholastics generally. Students of late medieval and Reformation theology will find the wealth of primary citation and the detailed readings of the sources invaluable guides to the issues. Students of religion interested in contemporary problems in theological anthropology, in the natural capacity of humanity for good and evil, for example, will find the historical Christian perspective of great interest.

Christological Anthropology in Historical Perspective

Christological Anthropology in Historical Perspective
Author: Marc Cortez
Publisher: Zondervan Academic
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2016-02-02
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0310516420

What does it mean to be “truly human?” In Christological Anthropology in Historical Perspective, Marc Cortez looks at the ways several key theologians—Gregory of Nyssa, Julian of Norwich, Martin Luther, Friedrich Schleiermacher, Karl Barth, John Zizioulas, and James Cone—have used Christology to inform their understanding of the human person. Based on this historical study, he concludes with a constructive proposal for how Christology and anthropology should work together to inform our view of what it means to be human. Many theologians begin their discussion of the human person by claiming that in some way Jesus Christ reveals what it means to be “truly human,” but this often has little impact in the material presentation of their anthropology. Although modern theologians often fail to reflect robustly on the relationship between Christology and anthropology, this was not the case throughout church history. In this book, examine seven key theologians and discover their important contributions to theological anthropology.

Theological Anthropology, 500 Years after Martin Luther

Theological Anthropology, 500 Years after Martin Luther
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 342
Release: 2021-07-19
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004461256

Theological Anthropology, 500 years after Martin Luther gathers contributions on the theme of the human being and human existence from the perspectives of Orthodox and Protestant theology. These two traditions still have much to learn from each another, five hundred years after Martin Luther's Reformation. Taking Martin Luther's thought as a point of reference and presenting Orthodox perspectives in connection with and in contradistinction to it, this volume seeks to foster a dialogue on some of the key issues of theological anthropology, such as human freedom, sin, faith, the human as created in God's image and likeness, and the ultimate horizon of human existence. The present volume is one of the first attempts of this kind in contemporary ecumenical dialogue.

Engaging Luther

Engaging Luther
Author: Olli-Pekka Vainio
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2010-04-26
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1621893243

The Reformer Martin Luther is the source of endless fascination and dispute. Not only his antagonists but also his supporters have created a host of representations of his thought. On the one hand, Catholic and other similar voices have accused Luther of being the major agent in the birth of modern secularism. On the other hand, Lutherans themselves are divided on the meaning of Reformation. In view of all these interpretations and dismissals of Luther and the Lutheran Reformation, it requires a certain boldness to claim that Luther's theology is intellectually fascinating and contains exceptional resources. This is precisely what the present volume claims. The studies collected in this volume aim at showing in which sense Luther remains a fully Catholic and genuinely Augustinian theologian who is not so much a forerunner of problematic modernity as a representative of classical Christianity. At the same time, Luther's theology contains ideas that can be made fruitful in dialogue with currents like communitarianism or Radical Orthodoxy. The volume consists of articles written by scholars affiliated with the project known as "the New Finnish Interpretation of Luther." The topics include Luther's theological anthropology, Trinity, christology, sacraments, faith, theology of the cross, the Virgin Mary, sexuality, music, and the spiritual reading of the Holy Scriptures.

Christian Character Formation

Christian Character Formation
Author: Gifford A. Grobien
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2019
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0198746199

This work argues that Christian righteousness is bestowed and becomes active primarily in worship, particularly through the congregational use of the means of grace, and that the proper appropriation of this righteousness by a Christian is ethically formative.

Martin Luther

Martin Luther
Author: Mihai Androne
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 116
Release: 2020-07-20
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 3030524183

This book explores specific aspects of Martin Luther’s ideas on education in general, and on religious education in particular, by comparing them to the views of other great sixteenth-century reformers: Huldrych Zwingli, John Calvin, and Philip Melanchthon. By doing so, the author highlights both the originality of the German reformer’s perspective, and the major impact of the main religious movement at the dawn of modernity on the development of public education in Western Europe. Although Martin Luther was a religious reformer par excellence, and not an educational theorist, a number of pedagogically significant ideas and ideals can be identified in his extensive theological work, which may also qualify him as an education reformer. The Protestant Reformation changed the world, bringing to the fore the relation between faith and education, and made the latter a public responsibility by proving that the spiritual enlightenment of youth, regardless of gender and social origin, is indissolubly linked to instruction in general, and especially to a more thorough understanding of the classical languages, arts, history and mathematics.

Martin Luther

Martin Luther
Author: Robert Kolb
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2009-02-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 019920893X

Martin Luther's theology presented a paradigmatic shift in defining God and humanity, refuting the foundations of Aristotelian anthropology with a new emphasis on the Revealed God and his unconditioned grace. Robert Kolb traces the development of Luther's thinking within the context of late medieval theology and piety at the dawn of the modern era.

Who Do I Say That You Are?

Who Do I Say That You Are?
Author: William Schumacher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010-01-04
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781498252638

The question of what it means to be a human creature lies at the heart of contemporary wrestling with anthropology, and especially anthropology from a theological perspective. Through both historical and systematic engagement with the so-called Finnish school of Tuomo Mannermaa, this study explores and assesses the anthropological dimension of their theology of theosis, or deification. Mannermaa initiated a minor revolution in Luther studies and in contemporary Lutheran theology by interpreting Luther's doctrine of justification to be a close analog to the Eastern Orthodox doctrine of theosis, but his ecumenical interests led him to minimize or overlook key themes in Luther and sharp distinctions between Luther and Orthodox theologians. Mannermaa's colleague Simo Peura then developed this thesis with specific reference to anthropology in a way reminiscent of the sixteenth-century reformer Andreas Osiander. On closer inspection, the project of Mannermaa and his Finnish colleagues fails to understand adequately both Luther's sources and his own theological development. In this study, a theological anthropology which is more consistent with Luther's theology is developed, an anthropology which is determined by God's address to his human creatures: what God himself says we are, and what he makes us by that word. Such an answer to the anthropological question refuses to flee from creation but instead upholds the complex and paradoxical nature of human beings as creatures, sinners, and saints.