Peace, Order And the Glory of God

Peace, Order And the Glory of God
Title Peace, Order And the Glory of God PDF eBook
Author James Martin Estes
Publisher BRILL
Pages 257
Release 2005
Genre History
ISBN 9004147160

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This volume is a comparative study of the development of the thought of Luther and Melanchthon on the role of secular magistrates in the church that, in contrast to most earlier studies, sees essential agreement between them despite differences of argumentation.

Peace, Order and the Glory of God

Peace, Order and the Glory of God
Title Peace, Order and the Glory of God PDF eBook
Author James Estes
Publisher BRILL
Pages 256
Release 2005-11-01
Genre History
ISBN 9047415655

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This volume is a comparative study of the development of the thought of Luther and Melanchthon on the role of secular magistrates in the church that, in contrast to most earlier studies, sees essential agreement between them despite differences of argumentation.

Economics of Faith

Economics of Faith
Title Economics of Faith PDF eBook
Author Esther Chung-Kim
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages
Release 2021-03-12
Genre Religion
ISBN 019753774X

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Economics of Faith examines the role of religious leaders in the development of poor relief institutions in early modern Europe. As preachers, policy makers, advocates, and community leaders, these reformers offered a new interpretation of salvation and good works that provided the religious foundation for poor relief reform. Although poverty was once associated with the religious image of piety, reformers no longer saw it as a spiritual virtue. Rather they considered social welfare reform to be an integral part of religious reform and worked to modify existing poor relief institutions or to set up new ones. Population growth, economic crises, and migration in early modern Europe caused poverty and begging to be an ever-increasing concern, and religious leaders encouraged the development and expansion of poor relief institutions. This new cadre of reformers served as catalysts, organizers, stabilizers, and consolidators of strategies to alleviate poverty, the most glaring social problem of early modern society. Although different roles emerged from varying relationships and negotiations with local political authorities and city councils, reform-minded ministers and lay leaders shaped a variety of institutions to address the problem of poverty and to promote social and communal responsibility. As religious options multiplied within Christianity, one's understanding of community determined the boundaries, albeit contested and sometimes fluid, of responsible poor relief. This goal of communal care would be especially relevant for religious refugees who as foreigners and strangers became responsible for caring for their own group.

Fear God, Honor the King

Fear God, Honor the King
Title Fear God, Honor the King PDF eBook
Author Andrew Allan Chibi
Publisher Wipf and Stock Publishers
Pages 360
Release 2020-05-14
Genre Religion
ISBN 1725256630

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From a medieval perspective, God had provided a church to shepherd believers toward salvation. It had a divine mission, a sacred history, a hierarchy of officers, and the intellectual support of respected thinkers. It provided a means for believers to interact with God. Believers also had to interact with neighbors, strangers, and their rulers. Fear God, Honor the King considers that sometimes surprisingly problematic issue. What is the correct relationship between the church, believers, and the ruling magisterial authority (whether alderman, mayors, or kings)? The thinkers of the Reformation era produced many answers. They explained in a variety of ways how the church related to, or fit in with, or was separate from, or was controlled by the temporal government of the realm, and they set into motion what became the determinant factors—social, political, economic, and philosophical—underpinning modern Western societies’ determination to keep the church and the state in well-defined autonomous cubicles. The Reformers’ rival ideas ushered in new philosophies (such as conciliarism and localism) as well as directly conflicting doctrines (such as Luther’s two kingdoms or Bucer’s co-terminus). This book examines, compares, and explains these new theories using the voices of the Reformers’ themselves.

Luther's Legacy

Luther's Legacy
Title Luther's Legacy PDF eBook
Author Robert von Friedeburg
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 449
Release 2016-02-04
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1107111870

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A new account of the intellectual debates that created the German notion of the 'modern state' under the Thirty Years War.

Envisioning the Christian Society

Envisioning the Christian Society
Title Envisioning the Christian Society PDF eBook
Author Mattias Skat Sommer
Publisher Mohr Siebeck
Pages 252
Release 2020-05-19
Genre Religion
ISBN 3161594568

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Niels Hemmingsen (1513-1600) is one of the most influential Danish theologians in history. As a professor at the University of Copenhagen, Hemmingsen played an important role in moulding Danish society according to his understanding of Lutheranism during the second half of the sixteenth century. Drawing on sociology of knowledge, cultural memory, and confessional culture, Mattias Skat Sommer examines Hemmingsen's works and life in political and theological contexts. By studying Hemmingsen's role in forming a discourse of social interaction, the author argues that Hemmingsen was the leading agent in shaping post-Reformation Danish confessionalization. In doing so, Sommer emphasises the fluid boundaries of the Danish Reformation and adjusts two prominent theoretical frameworks discussed in contemporary research on early modern Europe, namely those of confessionalization and confessional culture.

Martin Luther

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

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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.