Table des matières

Table of Contents for
Ink Against the Devil: Luther and His Opponents by Harry Loewen

Foreword by Walter Klaassen

Preface

1. In Search of a Gracious God

2. Luther's Early Red-Hot Pen

3. Dissenting Groups and Why They Opposed Luther

4. The Enemies Within: Luther and the Wittenberg Radicals

5. “The Soft-Living Flesh of Wittenberg”: Luther's Struggle and the Revolutionaries

6. “I Commanded Them to be Killed”: Luther and the Peasants

7. Two Riders of the Human Will: Luther Opposes Erasmus and Humanism

8. Luther Knew and Opposed the Evangelical Anabaptists

9. “I Told You So”: Luther and the Anabaptist Kingdom in Münster

10. Much Ado about Spirit and Matter: Luther and the Spiritualists

11. Three in One and One in Three? Luther Opposes the Rationalists

12. To Believe What You Like? Luther and His Opponents on Tolerance and Religious Liberty

13. “Drive Them Out of the Land!” Luther on the Jews

14. The Cross and the Crescent: Luther Opposes the Turks and Islam

15. “An Institution of the Devil!”: Luther's Last Battle Against the Papacy

16. Conclusion and Evaluation

Epilogue

Selected Bibliography

Index

La description

“One of the most fascinating books on Luther and the Reformation period to come along in some time. ” –P. E. Blosser, CHOICE

Sixteenth-century Reformation Europe was a tumultuous time during which many defining ideas of the modern era were formulated. The technological advancement augured by the Gutenberg press allowed the unprecedented circulation of ideas among a growing legion of literate Europeans. The writings of radical reformer Martin Luther were perhaps most influential of all. His opposition to the universal Roman Catholic Church fundamentally challenged the elites and their institutions. Along the way, Luther was opposed by the Church, the political powers of the day, and competing religious ideologies. Ink Against the Devil distills the major impulses from these debates that continue to resonate to this day.

Reviews

This is one of the most fascinating books on Luther and the Reformation period to come along in some time. . ..Solid scholarship. Winsome writing. Summing Up: Essential.

- P. E. Blosser, Sacred Heart Major Seminary