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Now showing items 11-20 of 80
[A] Reaction to Mark Paustian’s Essay: I Am Convinced
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2021-09-20)
This is Stephen H. Geiger's reaction to Mark A. Paustian's "I Am Convinced: A Devotional Appropriation of Romans 8 to the Life of the Pastor" for 2021 Symposium on Pastoral Wellness.
[A Reaction to] Emotional Wellness: Holistic Care for God’s Workmanship
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2021-09-21)
This is John D. Schuetze's reaction to Benjamin S. Kohls's "Emotional Wellness: Holistic Care for God's Workmanship" for 2021 Symposium on Pastoral Wellness.
A Reaction to Professor James Danell’s Presentation of Dr. Martin Luther’s 1520 Theses “The Freedom of a Christian and Treatise on Good Works”
(2020-09-21)
This is Robert E. Wendland's reaction to James C. Danell's "The Freedom of a Christian and Treatise on Good Works" for 2020 Symposium on Martin Luther’s 1520 Treatises.
Luther's Call to Action: A Consideration of To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2020-09-21)
In this treatise Luther discusses the relationship of clergy and laity in the Christian church. He points out the artificial walls of superiority that the Catholic Church had created around itself and its clergy to guard ...
[A] Reaction to Pastor Jason Oakland’s Essay “Luther’s Call to Action: A Consideration of To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation”
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2020-09-21)
This is Joel D. Otto's reaction to Jason D. Oakland's "Luther's Call to Action: A Consideration of To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation" for 2020 Symposium on Martin Luther’s 1520 Treatises.
“Breaking Free”: Martin Luther's Babylonian Captivity of the Church in Context
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2020-09-22)
After deconstructing the walls with which the Catholic Church guarded its spiritual-temporal power in his treatise To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation, Luther moves on to challenge the Catholic Church’s central ...
[A] Reaction to “Breaking Free”: Martin Luther’s Babylonian Captivity of the Church in Context by Pastor Benjamin P. Schaefer
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2020-09-22)
This is Steven J. Pagels's reaction to Benjamin Schaefer's "'Breaking Free': Martin Luther's Babylonian Captivity of the Church in Context" for 2020 Symposium on Martin Luther’s 1520 Treatises.
An Introduction to and Defense of Apologetics
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2019-09-16)
Prof. Berg will define what apologetics is and examine how the apostles and prophets as well as the church fathers presented the truths of God to the people of their day. He will make the case that apologetics is really a ...
St. Paul and Martin Luther: Paradigms of Shepherd-Leaders
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2018-09-17)
The work of setting objectives and preparing strategies to meet those goals sometimes seem in conflict with the quiet whisper of the Spirit’s working. A careful assessment of Paul’s missionary endeavors and Luther’s work ...
Disclosing the Hidden God: Confessional Lutheran Doctrine and Christian Apologetics
(Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, 2019-09-16)
Lutheran theology informs how Lutheran pastors do outreach. What Scripture has to say about God’s hiddenness, the natural knowledge of God, the total depravity of the unregenerate, and the evidentiary and epistemic status ...