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Titre : | Bugenhagen's Jonah : Biblical interpretation as Public Theology |
Auteurs : | Martin J. Lohrmann, Auteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Minneapolis, Minnesota [USA] : Lutheran University Press, 2012 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-932688-71-9 |
Format : | 282 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Résumé : | Bugenhagen's Jonah makes several significant contributions to Reformation studies. It is the first book published in English about Bugenhagen in over 80 years. It integrates diverse fields of study (including biblical interpretation, ecclesiology, worship, social reform and church history), draws upon the latest international scholarship, and translates original sources. Finally, the emphasis on Bugenhagen as a public theologian highlights the relationship between faith and daily life for every age. |
Note de contenu : |
- Foreword - 1. Johannes Bugenhagen as a Public Theologian: Johannes Bugenhagen Pomeranus (1485-1558) / Johannes Bugenhagen in Contemporary Academic Literature / Bugenhagen’s Jonah as Public Theology / Outline of this Work - 2. Bugenhagen’s Jonah in Historical Context: Charles V and the Holy Roman Empire / Two Lutheran Saxonies, Ernestine and Albertine / Elector Moritz and the Augsburg Interim / Lutheran Responses to the Augsburg Interim in Electoral. Saxony / Bugenhagen’s Writings from 1547 to 1550 / Publishing Jonah - 3. Biblical Interpretation as Public Theology: The Bible’s Living Voice / Jonah’s Title Page: The Bible and Lutheran Theology / Opening Arguments: Praefacio, Argumentum, Loci / Biblical Interpretation as Public Theology / On the Spirit and the Letter: Allegory and the Clear Word of God / Quid sit, Quid effectus-. Doctrines and Effects / Jonah in Wittenberg - 4. Bugenhagen as Public Interpreter of Martin Luther: Luther and Bugenhagen as Colleagues / Bugenhagen’s Funeral Sermon for Luther / Luther as “Father” / Luther’s Lectures on Jonah, 1525/26 / Luther and Bugenhagen on the Office of Ministry (Jonah 1:2) / Luther and Bugenhagen against the Louvain Theologians / A Report of Luther’s Reformation Breakthrough - 5. Repentance and Justification: Otto Vogt’s Essay on the “Jonascommentar” / The Transition from Commentary to Tracts / Contrition and Faith in Nineveh: The Tract on True Repentance / Jonah’s Sermon to Nineveh / Justification by Faith Alone: The Tract on Human Traditions / Ambrosiaster and Augustine on Faith Alone / The Lutheran Epistle of James - 6. Justification in Action: Faith and Tradition: The Tract against Montanism / Case Studies: Clerical / Marriage and Communion in Both Kinds / Usus Christi in Worship and Everyday Life / The Kingdom of God and the Bondage of the Will / Conclusion to the Tracts on Jonah 3 - 7. Final Confessions: Law and Gospel in Jonah 3 / The Ongoing Chastisement of the Saints: Bugenhagen and Jonah 4 / Bugenhagen’s 1551 Assessment of His Jonah - 8. Conclusions - Appendix One: Letter to Duke Albrecht of Prussia (May 1549) - Appendix Two: Dedication Letter to King Christian III of Denmark (October 1550) - Abbreviations - Bibliography - Endnotes |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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CKJon/A 192 | CKJon/A 192 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |