In this year of REFO 500 the author investigates the question why the Reformation with its ‘theology of sola Scriptura and solus Christus’ could not prevent the successive identification of church and ‘volk’ in history and why it could not prevent the fatal consequences this identification had for the gospel message of reconciliation, the exemplary existence of the church of Christ and the coming of the kingdom of God. Three examples serve as proof for this statement: the attitude of the Anglican Church in England during the second Anglo-Boer War (now called the South African War)(1899-1902); the Lutheran Church in Germany during the Second World War (1939-1945) and the Reformed Churches in South Africa during the years of apartheid (1948-1...
This article gives a short historical background to the debate between Lutherans and Calvinists on u...
CITATION: Jackson, R. 2016. Sources of unity or disruption? : a reflection on some mid-sixteenth cen...
<p><strong>�Is Christ divided?� Reflections on the theological justification of church d...
CITATION: Mahokoto, S. S. 2019. Is there any hope for church unity? Some perspectives on the causes ...
This article discusses the term Sola Scriptura and the consequences of its a...
An essay on where we have come with the Reformation after four hundred years. Davis writes that The ...
Among a growing body of recent scholarship that has shown interest in the geneses, definitions, and ...
The term ‘Protestant’ itself is a historical accident, but the category of western Christians who ha...
As a reformer, Calvin struggled with the issue of the oneness of the church. If the church was no lo...
Near the end of 1536 Martin Luther wrote that a seven-year-old child knows what the church is (SA ...
The basic principle underlying the Protestant Reformation was the “evils inherent in the Roman Catho...
There is considerable unity in the principle with respect to the essential nature of the church, a u...
This article is based on a paper delivered at a Lutheran Missionary Conference in Bleckmar, Germany....
Peer reviewedThe Hermannsburg Mission Society (HMS) missionaries who were first sent in the mid-185...
This article discusses the complicated question of the connection between Calvin and the confessions...
This article gives a short historical background to the debate between Lutherans and Calvinists on u...
CITATION: Jackson, R. 2016. Sources of unity or disruption? : a reflection on some mid-sixteenth cen...
<p><strong>�Is Christ divided?� Reflections on the theological justification of church d...
CITATION: Mahokoto, S. S. 2019. Is there any hope for church unity? Some perspectives on the causes ...
This article discusses the term Sola Scriptura and the consequences of its a...
An essay on where we have come with the Reformation after four hundred years. Davis writes that The ...
Among a growing body of recent scholarship that has shown interest in the geneses, definitions, and ...
The term ‘Protestant’ itself is a historical accident, but the category of western Christians who ha...
As a reformer, Calvin struggled with the issue of the oneness of the church. If the church was no lo...
Near the end of 1536 Martin Luther wrote that a seven-year-old child knows what the church is (SA ...
The basic principle underlying the Protestant Reformation was the “evils inherent in the Roman Catho...
There is considerable unity in the principle with respect to the essential nature of the church, a u...
This article is based on a paper delivered at a Lutheran Missionary Conference in Bleckmar, Germany....
Peer reviewedThe Hermannsburg Mission Society (HMS) missionaries who were first sent in the mid-185...
This article discusses the complicated question of the connection between Calvin and the confessions...
This article gives a short historical background to the debate between Lutherans and Calvinists on u...
CITATION: Jackson, R. 2016. Sources of unity or disruption? : a reflection on some mid-sixteenth cen...
<p><strong>�Is Christ divided?� Reflections on the theological justification of church d...