The Lutheran reformation transformed not only theology and the church but law and the state as well. Beginning in the 1520s, Luther joined up with various jurists and political leaders to craft ambitious legal reforms of church, state, and society on the strength of Luther’s new theology. These legal reforms were defined and defended in hundreds of monographs, pamphlets, and sermons published by Lutheran writers from the 1520s to 1550s. They were refined and routinized in hundreds of new reformation ordinances promulgated by German cities, duchies, and territories that converted to the Lutheran cause. By the time of the Peace of Augsburg (1555) -- the imperial law that temporarily settled the constitutional order of Germany--the Lutheran Re...
Three major antinomian controversies took place in Wittenberg in the sixteenth century, one during L...
In this Article, the author considers the characteristics of feudal Germany during the period of Lut...
Lutheran theology and secular law: the work of the modern state. Edited by Marie A. Failinger and Ro...
The Lutheran Reformation transformed not only theology and the church but law and the state as well....
The Lutheran Reformation transformed not only theology and the church but also law and the state. De...
The Lutheran Reformation revolutionized both church and state, theology and law. This brief essay sk...
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
This Article analyzes the distinct legal contributions of the Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and Ana...
The Lutheran Reformation of the early sixteenth century brought about immense and far-reaching chang...
Martin Luther and his colleagues transformed the theology and law of marriage and family life in six...
Former Augustinian monk Martin Luther (1483-1546) rejected the canon law rules of clerical and monas...
Martin Luther was declared a heretic and outlaw in 1521. In the years that followed, dozens of city ...
Luther\u27s re-discovery of the proper distinction between Law and Gospel may be viewed as the start...
Martin Luther (1483-1546) was one of the great revolutionaries in the Western legal tradition. The P...
The Protestant Reformation began as a religious reform in Germany and ended in political revolutions...
Three major antinomian controversies took place in Wittenberg in the sixteenth century, one during L...
In this Article, the author considers the characteristics of feudal Germany during the period of Lut...
Lutheran theology and secular law: the work of the modern state. Edited by Marie A. Failinger and Ro...
The Lutheran Reformation transformed not only theology and the church but law and the state as well....
The Lutheran Reformation transformed not only theology and the church but also law and the state. De...
The Lutheran Reformation revolutionized both church and state, theology and law. This brief essay sk...
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
This Article analyzes the distinct legal contributions of the Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and Ana...
The Lutheran Reformation of the early sixteenth century brought about immense and far-reaching chang...
Martin Luther and his colleagues transformed the theology and law of marriage and family life in six...
Former Augustinian monk Martin Luther (1483-1546) rejected the canon law rules of clerical and monas...
Martin Luther was declared a heretic and outlaw in 1521. In the years that followed, dozens of city ...
Luther\u27s re-discovery of the proper distinction between Law and Gospel may be viewed as the start...
Martin Luther (1483-1546) was one of the great revolutionaries in the Western legal tradition. The P...
The Protestant Reformation began as a religious reform in Germany and ended in political revolutions...
Three major antinomian controversies took place in Wittenberg in the sixteenth century, one during L...
In this Article, the author considers the characteristics of feudal Germany during the period of Lut...
Lutheran theology and secular law: the work of the modern state. Edited by Marie A. Failinger and Ro...