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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
The Relationship Between Dogmatics And Ethics In The Thought Of Elert, Barth, And Troeltsch, Edward H. Schroeder
The Relationship Between Dogmatics And Ethics In The Thought Of Elert, Barth, And Troeltsch, Edward H. Schroeder
Concordia Theological Monthly
A concern for dogmatics and a concern for ethics do not always go together. The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, for example, has always had a strong dogmatic tradition, but has in general been uninterested in what is commonly called ethics. But this is the opposite of the situation in many other American denominations. To put the problem into a broader perspective, what is the relationship between dogmatics and ethics? A helpful approach is to study the distinctive answers given by Werner Elert, Karl Barth, and Ernst Troeltsch, which prove to be distinctive not only because their personal theological convictions …
What Does "Inerrancy" Mean?, Arthur Carl Piepkorn
What Does "Inerrancy" Mean?, Arthur Carl Piepkorn
Concordia Theological Monthly
This paper is primarily a terminological study rather than a theological one. It inquires into the meaning of, rather than into the justification for, a term that has become a staple of dogmatic discussion in our own and other denominations.
The Creation Account Of Genesis: Guidelines For An Interpretation, Walter R. Roehrs
The Creation Account Of Genesis: Guidelines For An Interpretation, Walter R. Roehrs
Concordia Theological Monthly
This paper addresses itself to the problem of how to read correctly what two books have to say on the same subject matter.
In both of them God speaks to us of what He has done. Since He does not contradict Himself, what He says in one book must be found to be in accord with what He proclaims in the other.
The two books of God are Holy Scripture and the book of nature. Both have something to say to us about the topic of creation.