By 1529, the year of publication of Luther's Large Catechism, parishioners took the Gospel for granted. Many had forgotten at what great peril the freedom of their faith had been won. In the Large Catechism Luther set out to inculcate the centrality of the Gospel that was largely neglected and whose freedom was frequently abused. Whether Luther is therefore dealing with the Ten Commandments or the Lord's Supper, the dynamic of the Word of God as Gospel provides the cutting edge for what he says....
For nearly thirty years, James M. Kittelson's Luther the Reformer has been the standard biography of Martin Luther. Like Roland Bainton's biography of the generation before, Kittelson's volume is the one known by thousands of students, pastors, and interested readers as the biography that gave them the details of this dramatic man and his history. The accolades were well deserved. Fair, insightful, and detailed without being overwhelming, Kittelson was able to negotiate a "middle way" between th...
Have a child or grandchild being confirmed this year? Want to share your zeal for studying the Bible? Conversational in tone, these brief essays (a collection of articles in the 1996-98 About the Bible series in Lutheran Woman Today) make a great gift for skeptics and believers alike-including yourself! They provide answers to some really tough questions about the Bible in a respectful way that makes the reader say, I want to learn more!
The Captivation of the Will (Lutheran Quarterly Books)
by Gerhard O. Forde
The Captivation of the Will provocatively revisits a perennial topic of controversy: human free will. Highly esteemed Lutheran thinker Gerhard O. Forde cuts to the heart of the subject by reexamining the famous debate on the will between Luther and Erasmus. Following a substantial introduction by James A. Nestingen that brings to life the historical background of the debate, Forde thoroughly explores Luther's "Bondage of the Will" and the dispute between Erasmus and Luther that it reflects. In t...
Act and Being (Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works, #2)
by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
The fresh, critical translation of the volume is now available in paper. Act and Being, written in 1929-1930 as Bonhoeffer's second dissertation, deals with the questions of consciousness and conscience in theology from the perspective of the Reformation insight about the origin of human sinfulness in the "heart turned in upon itself and thus open neither to the revelation of God nor to the encounter with the neighbor." Here, therefore, we find Bonhoeffer's thoughts about power, revelation, othe...
Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, "patriarch of the Lutheran Church in America."
by William K Frick
Lateinisch-Deutsche Studienausgabe / Christusglaube Und Rechtfertigung (Lateinisch-Deutsche Studienausgabe, #2)
by Dr Martin Luther
This reconstruction of Luther's and the early Reformation church's response to the poor gathers fragments from across Luther's early writings. The book uncovers a striking counter-image to the usual portrait of a quietist orientation, finding that Luther had a deep concern for the hungry poor.
This is the history of the relationship between mass produced visual media and religion in the United States. It is a journey from the 1780s to the present - from early evangelical tracts to teenage witches and televangelists, and from illustrated books to contemporary cinema. David Morgan explores the cultural marketplace of public representation, showing how American religionists have made special use of visual media to instruct the public, to practice devotion and ritual, and to form chil...
Grace That Frees (Traditions in Christian Spirituality)
by Bradley Hanson