
Was there a Lutheran Metaphysics?
The interpretation of communicatio idiomatum in Early Modern Lutheranism
Joar Haga(Author)
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 23. May 2012
297 pages
978-3-647-55037-4 (ISBN)
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Joar Haga traces the Lutheran doctrine of communicatio idiomatum, the exchange of properties between the natures of Christ, as it developed in some important controversies of the 16th and the early 17th Century. Regarding it as the nerve of his soteriology, Luther stressed the intimacy of the two natures in Christ to such a degree that it threatened to end the peaceful relationship between theology and philosophy. At the same time as the Wittenberg reformers broke with certain strains of their philosophical heritage, they would insist that the continuation of Christ's bodily presence was a reality in sacrament and nature (!), irreducible to a sign or to a memory. On the other hand, they did not want to be ignorant of the claims of reason. By rejecting the classic framework for a peaceful coexistence of philosophy and theology on the one hand, and insisting on Christ's bodily reality on the other, the quest for a new concept of how philosophy and theology related was implicitly stated.Earlier research identified two traditions of Lutheran Christology: One train of thought follows Luther in emphasising the difference between philosophy and theology. This can be seen in the Tübingen solutions where Johannes Brenz and Theodor Thumm are the most interesting thinkers. Another train of thought can be found in the conservative pupils of Melanchthon, where Martin Chemnitz and Balthasar Mentzer are the most prominent theologians. This research does not merely group the thinkers within the confines of a tradition, but underlines their individual contributions to an open-ended history.
More details
Series
Thesis
Doctoral thesis
2011
Edition
Aufl.
Language
English
Place of publication
Göttingen
Germany
File size
2,66 MB
ISBN-13
978-3-647-55037-4 (9783647550374)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Joar Haga
Was there a Lutheran Metaphysics?
The interpretation of communicatio idiomatum in Early Modern Lutheranism
Book
05/2012
1st Edition
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
€120.00
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Person
Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Table of Contents
- Body
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction
- Choice of theme and structure
- Some definitions and reflections on method
- Luther's new interpretation
- The role of Christology in Luther's understanding of salvation
- The great Christological disputations 1539-1540
- Summary : Luther's Christology
- Melanchthon's diverging solution
- Melanchthon's dismissal of communicatio idiomatum
- Melanchthon's method
- Melanchthon's interpretation of Colossians 3:1- 5
- Melanchthon's notion of presence
- Summary : Melanchthon's alternative
- Communicatio idiomatum in Lutheran thought between the reformer and the Formula of Concord
- Introduction
- Consolidation on the left: "Consensus Tigurinus" (1549)
- Lutheran critique of the "Consensus Tigurinus"
- Christology and cosmology : The definition of presence by Brenz . .
- Jacob Schegk: a philosophical evaluation of the Württemberg Christology
- Summary
- Martin Chemnitz and his voluntary ubiquity
- The Formula of Concord - a hybrid construction?
- Critique of the Formula: The Helmstedt theologians and Johannes Kepler
- Summary of the chapter
- The controversy between Giessen and Tübingen
- Introduction
- Prelude: A report from Saxony
- Balthasar Mentzer and his view of the presence of Christ
- The response from Tübingen
- Summary
- Was there a Lutheran metaphysics?
- Literature
- Index
- Index rerum
- Index personae
- Back Cover
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