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Lutheran Forum An independent theological quarterly for Lutherans and ecumenical friends.

Lutheran Forum editor, Piotr Małysz, appearing on the Kessler Conversations at Pitts Theological Library at Emory Univer...
13/01/2025

Lutheran Forum editor, Piotr Małysz, appearing on the Kessler Conversations at Pitts Theological Library at Emory University, discussing "Loneliness, Ideology, and Embodied Politics: What Martin Luther has to Say to our Political Existence Today." The conversation was recorded in early December 2024.

Loneliness, Ideology, and Embodied Politics: What Martin Luther has to Say to our Political Existence Today

Soon coming to your mailbox!
09/01/2025

Soon coming to your mailbox!

07/01/2025
We are delighted to publish, in this upcoming issue of Lutheran Forum, the first English translation of Regin Prenter's ...
31/12/2024

We are delighted to publish, in this upcoming issue of Lutheran Forum, the first English translation of Regin Prenter's important essay on the relation of the doctrine of God and Christology. It’s a little tour de force, ranging from Biblical criticism, through figures such as R. Otto, Bultmann and Tillich, to engagement with Luther’s Bo***ge of the Will and patristic theopoiesis.

Stay tuned! -- And Happy New Year!

We look forward to the publication of an English translation of Lauri Haikola's important monograph on the uses of the l...
27/12/2024

We look forward to the publication of an English translation of Lauri Haikola's important monograph on the uses of the law, USUS LEGIS (1958/1981) -- which, we have learned, is about to come out very soon!

One more time--D. Bonhoeffer on the Gospel, the "glad tidings," of Christmas:
25/12/2024

One more time--D. Bonhoeffer on the Gospel, the "glad tidings," of Christmas:

Wishing all our readers and friends a blessed and joyful Christmastide!
23/12/2024

Wishing all our readers and friends a blessed and joyful Christmastide!

Regin Prenter (1907-1990) on worship and creation:
17/11/2024

Regin Prenter (1907-1990) on worship and creation:

A blessed Reformation Sunday, as well as Reformation's commemoration on Thursday, to all our readers and friends!
27/10/2024

A blessed Reformation Sunday, as well as Reformation's commemoration on Thursday, to all our readers and friends!

Just in time for Reformation Day, John Hoyum’s excellent piece on PROTESTANTISM WITHOUT LUTHER, republished from the pri...
25/10/2024

Just in time for Reformation Day, John Hoyum’s excellent piece on PROTESTANTISM WITHOUT LUTHER, republished from the print version of Lutheran Forum:

This article first appeared in print in the Spring 2024 issue of Lutheran Forum (vol. 57:1, pp. 33-34). Please consider supporting the work of Lutheran Forum by subscribing to the journal. by John W. Hoyum From one perspective, Martin Luther is an icon of conservative Reformation: he was

Two Danish observations today (by LF editor Piotr Małysz):First, it is quite remarkable to note the quality of artwork b...
17/10/2024

Two Danish observations today (by LF editor Piotr Małysz):

First, it is quite remarkable to note the quality of artwork boasted by what, in the middle ages, would have been (and still are) rural communities of only a handful of families--this specific one on a god-forsaken island that only few have heard of. What you behold is certainly not the achievement of a single generation. The Last Judgment is almost palpable here insofar as one is led to ponder the generations that took pride in this church and have already run the race. The message that the walls keep screaming at you is that for you the visitor the time is still running; perhaps running short. The story--beginning with the creation of humanity and culminating with the heavenly mansions--literally closes in on you. You're surrounded, enveloped, and interrogated by it.

Second, it is really quite remarkable to ponder the openness of the Lutheran Reformation (in Scandinavia to an even greater degree) to the art it had inherited, much of it theologically astute, some rather dubious, but most of it retained, preserved, and cherished. (The story is not without its complexities, though.)

Robert Jenson comes to mind for me here: "It is a right biblical insight that God first of all speaks and that our community with him and each other is first of all that we hear him and speak to him. It does not, however, follow, as Protestantism has made it follow, that to listen and speak we must blind ourselves. In this age, accurate hearing is paired with dimmed vision; it is precisely a promised chief mark of the Eschaton that accurate hearing will then be accompanied by glorious sight. And in this age, the Church must be the place where beatific vision is anticipated and trained." (How the World Lost Its Story)

Who knows, perhaps in this age of declining cultural literacy, these pictures still speak louder than words? Even for a trained theologian, they are a puzzle--you cannot avoid theologizing. Indeed, you must theologize!

10/09/2024

One of our editors was able, this past Sunday, to attend a choral Divine Service at the Aarhus Cathedral in Denmark. The cathedral, dedicated to St. Clement, is known for its well-preserved medieval frescoes, a splendid altar completed on the eve of the Reformation, a magnificent late 16th-century pulpit, and in general 500 years’ worth of Lutheran artwork. All of it creating an effect somewhere between otherworldly decadence and mildly self-punishing austerity.

The service was well attended, with over 200 (maybe up to 300) worshippers of all ages, including a fair number of children. There were two baptisms. Riveting organ music and singing, both from the choir and the congregation, with everyone remaining seated for the postlude! Once again, I was reminded the meta-language of the liturgy crosses all linguistic boundaries. You don't have to guess very hard what's being said or done. And those Lutheran hymns ... "Dit ord, o Gud, som duggen kvæger den svage sjæl med kraft og fred! / Thy Word, O God, like dew, restoreth My fainting soul to strength and peace—which I also know in Polish (“Twe Słowo rosą jest dla dusz...,” though set to a different tune than Neumark)—in this case, all translations from the German.

Below you’ll find a short film made of pictures taken with the phone mostly after the service and including just a tiny bit of the Communion music.

Aarhus will be the host of the International Congress for Luther Research in 2026 to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the first congress also held in Aarhus in 1956 and hosted by Prof. Regin Prenter.

Coming soon to a mailbox near you!
05/09/2024

Coming soon to a mailbox near you!

Jüngel on legalism and what is at stake in it—a disputation of the being of God:
14/08/2024

Jüngel on legalism and what is at stake in it—a disputation of the being of God:

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