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Geistliche Erfahrung und geistliche Übungen bei Ignatius von Loyola und Martin Luther : die ignatianischen Exerzitien in ökumenischer Relevanz /Henkel, Annegret, January 1995 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Diss.--Theologische Fakultät--Frankfurt am Main--Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, 1994. / Bibliogr. p. 376-402.
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Psalterium universum Helius Eobanus HessusFuchs, Mechthild Hessus, Helius Eobanus January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Jena, Univ., Diss., 2008 / Text teilw. engl., teilw. lat.
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Inkarnation und Schöpfung schöpfungstheologische Voraussetzungen und Implikationen der Christologie bei Luther, Schleiermacher und Karl BarthKäfer, Anne January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: Tübingen, Univ., Diss., 2009
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Just law wrought from human hands? : the separability of law and morality in German Protestant political theology /Kessler, Michael. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Divinity School, December 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Luther, Melanchthon, and Chemnitz the doctrine of the atonement with special reference to Gustaf Aulén's Christus victor /Aubert, Annette G. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 136-151).
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Wahrnehmung der Wirklichkeit und die vom Kommenden geöffnete Zukunft Untersuchung der Gottesprädikate und der ekklesiologischen Schemata in der Apokalypse des Johannes mit Hilfe der Rezeption der Auslegung von M. Luther, J. Wesley und K. BarthShin, Dong-Ook January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Bochum, Univ., Diss., 2008
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Exegesis, reason, and law in Luther's and Tyndale's ideas of reformation: a comparative study of their Sermon on the Mount commentariesHenninger, Frederick W. January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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That All May be One? Church Unity, Luther Memory, and Ideas of the German Nation, 1817-1883Landry, Stan Michael January 2010 (has links)
The early nineteenth century was a period in which the German confessional divide increasingly became a national-political problem. After the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire (1806) and the Wars of Liberation (1813-1815), Germans became consumed with how to build a nation. Religion was still a salient manifestation of German identity and difference in the nineteenth century, and the confessional divide between Catholics and Protestants remained the most significant impediment to German national unity. Bridging the confessional divide was essential to realizing national unity, but one could only address the separation of the confessions by directly confronting, or at least thinking around, memories of Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. This dissertation examines how proponents of church unity used and abused memories of Luther and the Reformation to imagine German confessional and national unity from 1817 through 1883. It employs the insights and methods of collective memory research to read the sermons and speeches, pamphlets and poems, histories and hagiographies produced by ecumenical clergy and laity to commemorate Luther and the Reformation, and to understand how efforts toward church unity informed contemporary ideas of German confessional and national identity and unity.Histories of nineteenth-century German society, culture, and politics have been predicated on the ostensible strength of the confessional divide. This dissertation, however, looks at nineteenth-century German history, and the history of nineteenth-century German nationalism in particular, from an interconfessional perspective--one that acknowledges the interaction and overlapping histories of German Catholics and Protestants rather than treating each group separately. Recent histories of the relationship between German religion and nationalism have considered how confessional alterity was used to construct confessionally and racially-exclusive ideas of the German nation. This dissertation complements those histories by revealing how notions of confessional unity, rather than difference, were employed in the construction of the German nation. As such, the history of ecumenism in nineteenth-century Germany represents an alternative history of German nationalism; one that imagined a German nation through a reunion of the separated confessions, rather than on the basis of iron and blood.
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Ministers and martyrs : Malcolm X and Martin Luther KingLuellen, David E. January 1972 (has links)
Loved or despised, black ministers Malcolm X and Martin Luther King made their ways from birth in Baptist parsonages separated by half a continent to significant positions in mid-twentieth century America. Both men were painfully dramatizing black problems and poignantly articulating black-white tensions when their careers were violently concluded in their thirty-ninth years by assassins' bullets-This dissertation is a study of the goals and strategies of these two ministers who became martyrs in the cause of freedom. The writings and speeches of each man served the author as the basic source from which the concepts which guided Malcolm and King were gleaned.Chapter I presents brief, integrated biographies of Malcolm and King as well as their reactions to the ideas of one another. Chapters II and III deal with Malcolm and King, respectively; the format is the same for both chapters. Following a short introduction, goals are reviewed. Then, attention is turned to the strategies by which each leader sought to secure his goals. At the end of each chapter a number of summary ideas which represent the author's personal reaction to the life of the man under review are presented. Chapter IV concludes the dissertation with an essay in which the styles and ideas of the two men are compared andcontrasted.Opinions about Malcolm and King and their roles in American society are as diverse as the number of people who have heeded them. -4To some, these two represent American determination for freedom at its most noble level; others cast them in the role of despicable demogogues. Some were able to accept King's leadership while rejecting Malcolm's. Some, who at first repudiated King, began to accept him when Malcolm's impassioned voice stirred new visions of racial revolution. Others felt that Malcolm was possessed with an urgency that was lacking in the approach of King.The operational principles of King's life were well defined when he became pastor of a Southern church in 1954. Early in his life King had synthesized the Christian message of love and the Ganahh en teaching, of nonviolence; this synthesis was to provide the springboard for his future ideology and program. It should not be assumed, however, that King did not develop new visions nor sense new relationships as he traveled the tortuous road from Montgomery to Memphis. Rather, it was his basic, undergirding position which was unchanged as he moved along that route.On the other hand, any attempt to force Malcolm's strategy into such a unitary mold will result in an inaccurate evaluation of the man. During the last fifty weeks of his life, Malcolm was undergoing significant philosophical changes. Even though he had earnestly preached orthodox Black Muslim doctrine for a dozen years, the split with Elijah Muhammad in early 1964 and especially the transforming Mecca pilgrimage caused his thinking to move in radically new directions. Many of his positions were not yet fully defined nor articulated at the time of his death.Malcolm and King presented American blacks with alternative means to secure the same goals. Both dramatically expressed feelings that were shared, some perhaps unconsciously, by most blacks. Their fearless articulation of the black plight attests to their personal integrity and their unflinching determination to build a more just world. By defining problems in a simple, naked manner a nation was briefly aroused from its apathy to deal creatively with its racial crisis. Perhaps, even now, the message Malcolm and King espoused has been too quickly forgotten.
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Luther und Tyndale : ein Vergleich ihrer Bibelübersetzung, Matthäus I-IVMurison, Delphine, 1942- January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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