Let God Be God - An Interpretation Of The Theology Of Martin Luther
166 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Let God Be God - An Interpretation Of The Theology Of Martin Luther , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
166 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing many of these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 08 janvier 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528763400
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

LET GOD BE GOD!
An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther
By
PHILIP S. WATSON, M.A.
Tutor in Systematic Theology and Philosophy of Religion , Handsworth College, Birmingham
MARTIN LUTHER
TO
J. M. W.
WHO GREATLY HELPED
AND
P. J. W.
WHO ONLY SOMETIMES HINDERED
ME IN THE WRITING OF THESE PAGES
PREFACE
I T is now over a quarter of a century since the publication in Germany of Karl Holl s epoch-making studies of Luther. They have been followed both on the Continent and more notably in Scandinavia by a veritable Luther renascence. Modern research has led to a new understanding and appreciation of Luther and shown the need for a thorough revision, not only of non-Lutheran, but also of traditional Lutheran conceptions of his reforming work.
The change of outlook has scarcely been noticed in this country, in spite of a marked quickening of interest in the Reformation in recent times. English discussions of Luther still largely reflect the interpretations of Adolf Harnack and Ernst Troeltsch, while English acquaintance with Luther himself all too rarely extends beyond the Wace and Buchheim edition of his Primary Works . This does much to explain the ease with which some eminent Churchmen were lately beguiled by the efforts of a modern Cochlaeus to persuade us that Martin Luther was Hitler s spiritual ancestor. It is particularly unfortunate that Troeltsch s Soziallehren , which displays a singular lack of insight in its treatment of Luther, should have found a translator (twenty years after its original publication), whereas we still have no English version of Holl s Gesammelte Aufs tze , which contains some penetrating criticisms of Troeltsch and is based on far greater knowledge of the sources.
Holl did not say the last word on the subject, of course, nor has it yet been said. If it is ever spoken, it will be due not least to the work of a number of Swedish theologians, to whom the leadership of Lutheran scholarship has passed in recent years. Something of their contribution to this Fernley-Hartley Lecture will be apparent from the Notes at the end of each chapter, but it is fitting here to record a wider indebtedness to them both for personal friendships and for books on subjects other than the Reformation.
It was in Sweden a dozen years ago that I found a Luther in many ways other and greater than I had heard of in either England or Germany; and in this lecture I have tried to show where his greatness essentially lies. An exhaustive account of his theology could not, of course, be given here, but all the main issues have at least been touched upon. I hope to discuss in a further volume several questions that call for fuller treatment-particularly those of reason , good works and free will .
In this lecture, Luther has been allowed as much as possible to speak for himself. If any error should prove to have crept into the references to his works, it will be remembered that these are not easily available in this country. I have had to rely a good deal on notes taken from them as opportunity has offered, and it has not been possible to make a final verification before going to press. For the translation of passages from the Weimar and Erlangen editions I must bear responsibility; and in quotations from translated sources I have occasionally taken the liberty of modifying spelling, capitalization, and punctuation to conform more nearly to modern English usage.
The quotation on page ii comes from The Papacy at Rome ( W.M.L ., I, 393)-Luther s reply in 1520 to the scurrilities of the Franciscan monk Alveld. The frontispiece reproduces an engraving by Lukas Cranach in the same year.
The following pages owe much to the kindness of friends and colleagues. My special thanks are due to Principal Wilbert F. Howard, M.A., D.D., for his unfailing interest and many hours generously given to discussion of the work; to the Reverend Harold S. Darby, M.A., for valuable criticism of the first draft of the manuscript, and the Reverend E. Gordon Rupp, M.A., B.D., for his approval of the second draft; and to the Reverend George W. Anderson, M.A., and the Reverend Michael J. Skinner, M.A., for assistance with the reading of proofs and the compilation of indexes.
P HILIP S. W ATSON
H ANDSWORTH C OLLEGE
Whitsuntide 1947
CONTENTS
FRONTISPIECE
PREFACE
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
Part One. The General Character of Luther s Theology
I . LUTHER AS A THEOLOGIAN
1. The Task of the Interpreter
2. Luther s Concern with Doctrine
3. Luther s Discovery of a Gracious God
4. The Theological Consequences of Luther s Discovery
Notes
II . THE MOTIF OF LUTHER S THOUGHT
5. Luther s Copernican Revolution
6. The Consistency of Luther s Outlook
7. Luther in Contrast with the Schoolmen
( a ) Duns Scotus
( b ) Saint Thomas Aquinas
8. Luther s Watchword: Soli Deo Gloria
Notes
Part Two. The Major Themes of Luther s Theology
III . THE REVELATION OF GOD
9. The Twofold Knowledge of God
10. Man s General or Natural Knowledge of God
( a ) The Creatures as Veils of God
( b ) The God of Power and of Law
11. The False Religion of the Natural Man
12. The Particular or Proper Knowledge of God in Christ
Notes
IV . THE THEOLOGY OF THE CROSS
13. The Incarnate Deity
14. Christ as Interpreter of the Law
( a ) The Condemnation and Curse of the Law
( b ) The Law of Nature and of Christ
15. Christ as Mediator and Saviour
( a ) The Work of Redemption and Atonement
( b ) The Redeemer, Human and Divine
16. The Majesty of Uncreated Love
Notes
V . THE DOCTRINE OF THE WORD
17. Christ the Word
18. The Word as Law and Gospel
19. The Sacramental Word
20. The Word and the Spirit
21. The Authority of the Word
Notes
LITERATURE CITED
INDEX OF SCRIPTURE REFERENCES
INDEX OF FOREIGN WORDS AND PHRASES
INDEX OF PROPER NAMES
INDEX OF SUBJECTS
ABBREVIATIONS
W.A ., Luther, Werke . Kritische Gesamtausgabe. Vols. Iff. (Weimar, 1883ff.)
E.A ., Luther, S mmtliche Werke . 67 vols. (Erlangen, 1826-57.)
R merbr., Luthers Vorlesung ber den R merbrief , 1515-16. Ed. J. Ficker. 4th edn. (Leipzig, 1930.)
Tischr., Martin Luther, Tischreden . Ed. H. Borcherdt and W. Rehm. (M nchen, n.d.)
W.M.L., Works of Martin Luther with introductions and notes. 6 vols. (A. J. Holman Company, Philadelphia, 1915-32.)
S.W., Select Works of Martin Luther . Tr. by H. Cole. 4 vols. (London, 1826.)
W.B., Luther s Primary Works . Ed. Wace and Buchheim. (London, 1896.)
Gal . E.T., A Commentary on St. Paul s Epistle to the Galatians , by Martin Luther. Ed. Erasmus Middleton. (London, 1807.)
(Figures in brackets following references to this work indicate chapter and verse on which Luther is commenting.)
B.o.W., The Bondage of the Will , by Martin Luther. Tr. by H. Cole. (Ed. H. Atherton, London, 1931.)
Sermons, Sermons on the most interesting doctrines of the Gospel , by Martin Luther. (London, 1830.)
Letters, The Letters of Martin Luther . Selected and translated by M. A. Currie. (London, 1908.)
M.H.B., The Methodist Hymn-book . (London, 1933.)
S.T., The Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas . Tr. by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province. 2nd and revised edn. (London, 1922.)
(Particulars of other works cited are to be found by reference to the authors names in the list on page 190 .)
Part One
The General Character of Luther s Theology
CHAPTER ONE
LUTHER AS A THEOLOGIAN
1. THE TASK OF THE INTERPRETER
A DISTINGUISHED Lutheran Church historian has written of Methodism that it can be described as the Anglican translation of the Evangelical-Lutheran doctrine of salvation . 1 If that is so, the People called Methodists may well be expected to show sympathy and understanding for the genius of Martin Luther, and it is not inappropriate that a Methodist lecture should be devoted to an interpretation of his theology.
The Founders of Methodism were profoundly, if in the main indirectly, influenced by Luther s doctrine. It was with his accents that Spangenberg spoke in Georgia and Peter B hler in Oxford; and it was his Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians and his Preface to the Epistle to the Romans that proved decisive in the historic month of May 1738. There is, moreover, a permanent Lutheran contribution to Methodist piety in John Wesley s translations of German hymns, and to Methodist theology in his standard Notes on the New Testament , of which he derived the major portion from the Gnomon Novi Testamenti of Bengel, that great light of the Christian world , as he calls him. John and Charles Wesley did not, of course, become Lutherans, nor yet Moravians; and Methodism both had and has its own peculiar ethos. Yet deeper than all differences is the essential spirit, in which the Wesleys are more nearly akin to Luther than to any other great exponent of the Christian faith and life. There is an extraordinary similarity between the spiritual evolution of the sixteenth-century monk into the Reformer and that of the eighteenth-century Oxford Anglicans into leaders of the Evangelical Revival; and the Revival itself is aptly named, for it was fundamentally a renewal and extension of the work of Luther s Reformation.
It is true that John Wesley, who spoke of the Reformer as a much greater man than himself, 2 was also sharply critical of him on certain points. We shall have occasion to notice and to criticize his criticisms in due course; but it is only fair to say here that he had some excuse for making

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents