... November 11, 1883,” in Henry Davenport Northrop, Life and Works or Rev. Charles H. Spurgeon (Chicago, 1890), 244–60. In the sermon, Spurgeon told his audience that “I pray that a Luther may spring from your ranks.
This stimulating volume explores how the memory of the Reformation has been remembered, forgotten, contested, and reinvented between the sixteenth and twenty-first centuries.
The aim of this book is not only to collect these diverse Catholic and Evangelical perspectives but also to provide resources for all Christians, including pastors and scholars, to think and argue about the roads we have taken since ...
While the book focuses on German-speaking lands, Thomas Albert Howard also looks at Reformation commemorations in other countries, notably in the United States.
Marking the 500th anniversary of the inauguration of Luther’s movement for reform, this volume aims to bring Catholics, Protestants, and Evangelicals into conversation in a shared, but distinct, theological space.
This work examines how and under what circumstances past commemorations have occurred.
and everybody knows that the relation between human works and divine grace is crucial for the Reformers. What is the role of the works of the priest in the sacraments? The question precedes the Reformation.
While the book focuses on German-speaking lands, Thomas Albert Howard also looks at Reformation commemorations in other countries, notably in the United States.