Results 11 to 20 of about 508,919 (181)

Martin Luther and Aesop: Fables as tales of morality for today?

open access: yesIn die Skriflig, 2023
Ancient Aesopian fables continued to capture the imagination, reaching even into Lutheran Wittenberg. Luther, concerned to address morality within the church and community, sanctioned the use of fables with some caution.
Raymond Potgieter
doaj   +1 more source

Luther’s lives [PDF]

open access: yes, 2003
This volume brings together two important contemporary accounts of the life of Martin Luther in a confrontation that had been postponed for more than 450 years. The first of these accounts was written after Luther's death, when it was rumoured that demons had seized the reformer on his deathbed and dragged him off to Hell. In response to these rumours,
Keen, Ralph   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Božja beseda in beseda človeka: Luthrova reformacijska teologija besede

open access: yesStati inu obstati, 2020
Članek uvaja v Luthrovo razumevanje Božje besede. Poudarek je na Luthrovi hermenevtiki, na njegovem razumevanju odnosa med Svetim pismom, Božjo Besedo in evangelijem.
Lubomír Batka
doaj   +1 more source

Alles Schicksal? Der Himmel als astrologische Auskunftei im Luthertum der Frühen Neuzeit [PDF]

open access: yesРелигия, церковь, общество, 2015
The article “All is Fortune? The sky as an astrology agency in the early modern time lutheranism” deals with attitude to astrology as part of the Lutheran intellectual culture of the 16–17th centuries.
Walter Sparn
doaj   +1 more source

Neither Philosophy nor Theology: The Origin in Heidegger’s Earliest Thought

open access: yesOpen Theology, 2021
“The Origin,” one of Martin Heidegger’s most important notions after 1934, is tightly related to being-historical thinking, and to the peculiar kind of divinity that being-historical thinking indicates.
Kuravsky Erik
doaj   +1 more source

Junia – A Woman Lost in Translation: The Name IOYNIAN in Romans 16:7 and its History of Interpretation

open access: yesOpen Theology, 2020
The name of the second person greeted in Romans 16:7 is given as IOYNIAN, a form whose grammatical gender could be either feminine or masculine which leads to the question: Is it Junia or Junias – a woman or a man – who is greeted alongside Andronicus as
Hartmann Andrea
doaj   +1 more source

The Daughter of the Word: What Luther Learned from the Early Church and the Fathers

open access: yesPerichoresis: The Theological Journal of Emanuel University, 2019
All the major sixteenth-century Reformers knew something about the early church and used the early Fathers. As an Augustinian monk and professor of theology, however, Luther’s knowledge and use of the great Father was both deeper and more nuanced.
Thompson Glen L.
doaj   +1 more source

Certitudo coram Deo: Reframing a fascinating feature of Dort

open access: yesIn die Skriflig, 2020
This article combines celebratory contributions to Dort400 and TSP150. It attempts to reframe the fascinating perspective of faith-certainty in Canons of Dordrecht (5:5, 13), in as far as it is linked to a notion of persevering before the undivided face ...
P. Paul Kruger
doaj   +1 more source

Sophists in humanistic and reformation propaganda [PDF]

open access: yesHypothekai, 2023
The article examines the topos of sophism and its content in written and visual texts of the late 15th - first half of the 16th centuries, primarily on the basis of dialogues and dramaturgical works, which occupied a special place in the urban communica ...
Zinaida LURIE
doaj   +1 more source

The Illusion of Agency as a Mark of Ultimacy

open access: yesOpen Theology, 2018
This essay proposes that action unaccompanied by the usual feeling of conscious agency constitutes a “mark of ultimacy.” Characteristically religious statements of “agentless action” find support in social psychological and cognitive scientific research ...
Nicholson Hugh
doaj   +1 more source

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