12 August 2020
Reformation & Renaissance Review, Volume 22, Issue 2, 2020 is now available, both printed and online.
Editor Simon J.G. Burton: “The articles in this issue speak to a wide variety of themes in Roformation and early modern history and theology. Three of the articles offer new perspectives on Luther, Melanchthon and the German Reformation. They draw on both well-known and little-known texts and traverse territory from ecclesiology to soteriology to educational reform. The other two are reception studies examining the way in which important theological discourses, on grace and eschatology respectively, taking place in Britain in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were taken up and transformed in subsequent decades.”
Richard J. Serina Jr: Irreparable Breach or Late-Medieval Reform? Luther’s Address to the Christian Nobility and the Conciliar Reform Tradition
Anthony N.S. Lane: Why was Luther Hostile to Article 5 on Justification Agreed at the Religious Colloquy of Regensburg, 1541?
Alexander Corrigan: John Napier’s Influence on Seventeenth-Century Apocalyptic Thinking in England
Jan van de Kamp: Reformed and Lutheran Responses to Richard Baxter: Theological Heterodoxy and the Synod of Dort
Zachary Purvis: Philip Melanchthon on Himself and His Books: The Preface to His Operum tomi quinque, 1541
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