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John Theodore Mueller-A Tribute, Richard R. Caemmerer Dec 1960

John Theodore Mueller-A Tribute, Richard R. Caemmerer

Concordia Theological Monthly

My first acquaintance with Doctor John Theodore Mueller was that of a beginning student at Concordia Seminary, where I served also as his part-time secretary. Two first impressions have remained vivid through the years: his utter seriousness concerning the vocation of theological professor and a devotion to duty and application to the tasks in hand that seemed, to a schoolboy at least, almost fanatical in its steadiness.


Luther's Sola Scriptura, Lewis W. Spitz Dec 1960

Luther's Sola Scriptura, Lewis W. Spitz

Concordia Theological Monthly

Fifty gulden (about $470) to make Martin a doctor of theology was doubtless one of Elector Frederick's wisest investments - much wiser than the generous amount he spent for his prodigious collection of sacred relics. The payment of this fee guaranteed his Electoral Grace a tremendous benefit to his beloved University of Wittenberg. To obtain this sum of money for the promotion of his brilliant friar, Vicar John Staupitz had to the Elector that Luther would fill the chair of lectura in Biblia of the theological faculty for the remainder of his life.


Faith Triumphant-Echoes From The Epistle To The Hebrews, Paul M. Bretscher Dec 1960

Faith Triumphant-Echoes From The Epistle To The Hebrews, Paul M. Bretscher

Concordia Theological Monthly

Who wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews? No one knows. But every reader of this epistle does know that its author was a man of faith. The term "faith" appears some 30 times in the epistle. Together with related terms, it constitutes one of the chief motifs in the epistle. On the basis of this epistle, we shall examine I. The Nature of Faith, and II. The Triumph of Faith.


The Conquest Of Canaan According To Joshua And Judges, Walter R. Roehrs Dec 1960

The Conquest Of Canaan According To Joshua And Judges, Walter R. Roehrs

Concordia Theological Monthly

Many Old Testament scholars find two opposing views regarding the Israelite conquest of Canaan in the books of Joshua and Judges. In the former the 12 tribes are represented as achieving full possession of the Promised Land through a few swift victories resulting in immediate and full occupation. In the Book of Judges, on the other hand, the process is described as gradual, beset by many reverses, and incomplete for a long time. The first, it is said, is an idealized picture; the latter is more true to the facts.

It is the purpose of this study to examine these …


Homiletics: Outlines On The Old Testament Eisenach Series, Herbert E. Hohenstein Dec 1960

Homiletics: Outlines On The Old Testament Eisenach Series, Herbert E. Hohenstein

Concordia Theological Monthly

Outlines on the Old Testament Eisenach Series


Book Review. - Literatur, Robert D. Preus Dec 1960

Book Review. - Literatur, Robert D. Preus

Concordia Theological Monthly

Book Review. - Literatur


Index For Volume Xxxi, Concordia Seminary Dec 1960

Index For Volume Xxxi, Concordia Seminary

Concordia Theological Monthly

Index for Volume XXX


Theological Observer, Unknown Dec 1960

Theological Observer, Unknown

Concordia Theological Monthly

Theological Observer


Editorial Comment, Martin H. Scharlemann Nov 1960

Editorial Comment, Martin H. Scharlemann

Concordia Theological Monthly

There they were! In front of them lay the Sea of Reeds; behind them were the troops of Pharaoh. To Moses came the order from God Himself, "Tell the people to go forward!" At His command an east wind began to blow strongly enough to create a way of escape for Israel and a path of destruction for its enemies. God's word is always one of power. When He speaks things begin to move - forward! In fact, His action is at times His first word, giving promise of more to come.


Declaring God's Glory Through Welfare Work, William A. Buege Nov 1960

Declaring God's Glory Through Welfare Work, William A. Buege

Concordia Theological Monthly

Declare God's Glory," a great church body insisted as it met in convention, and no one could fault it for having chosen anything less than the highest as the standard for measuring its past and the purpose of all its doing in the present and the objective of all its planning for the future. After all, it is called of God out of the darkness of self-governed and self-motivated action into the glorious light of being God-governed and God-motivated so that it might show forth His praises and not the destructive wonders of which man is capable.


Book Review. - Literatur, Carl S. Meyer Nov 1960

Book Review. - Literatur, Carl S. Meyer

Concordia Theological Monthly

Book Review. - Literatur


Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Herbert E. Hohenstein Nov 1960

Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Herbert E. Hohenstein

Concordia Theological Monthly

Outlines on the Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series


Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller Nov 1960

Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller

Concordia Theological Monthly

Theological Observer


Brief Studies, Robert O. Hoerber, Carl S. Meyer, H. Hamann Nov 1960

Brief Studies, Robert O. Hoerber, Carl S. Meyer, H. Hamann

Concordia Theological Monthly

The Decree of Claudius in Acts 18:2

Luther and Melanchthon at Muenster in 1960

Leadership

Statistics on World Lutheranism


Studies In Discipleship, Martin H. Franzmann Nov 1960

Studies In Discipleship, Martin H. Franzmann

Concordia Theological Monthly

When Jesus said, "Follow Me," He was confiscating man for Himself. For that word applied to man with personal and inescapable urgency His call to repentance and His annunciation of the Kingdom come; it brought the gift and the claim of the Kingdom to bear on man. The whole Gospel of Matthew is simply the record of this process of progressive Messianic confiscation, the record of how Jesus shaped men in the mold of repentance (the Kingdom-imperative), of how the Christ created men in His image, Christian men. Matthew's record, with its rich reproduction of the words of Jesus, anything …


Editorial Comment-Reformation -Radicality, Gilbert A. Thiele Oct 1960

Editorial Comment-Reformation -Radicality, Gilbert A. Thiele

Concordia Theological Monthly

The task courageously undertaken by our Anglo-Lutheran brethren and sisters in Britain generally and in England specifically to reverse almost four centuries of British church history by establishing and extending the Evangelical Lutheran Church of England (ELCE) gives rise to the informative and aggressive piece with which this 1960 Reformation issue of our journal opens.


Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Harold W. Scheibert Oct 1960

Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Harold W. Scheibert

Concordia Theological Monthly

Outlines on the Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series


Brief Studies, A. O. Fuerbringer, Robert Preus Oct 1960

Brief Studies, A. O. Fuerbringer, Robert Preus

Concordia Theological Monthly

A Statement on the Form and Function of the Holy Scriptures

The Christology and Soteriology of Karl Barth

Lutherans in North America


Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller Oct 1960

Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller

Concordia Theological Monthly

Theological Observer


Book Review. - Literatur, Edgar Krentz Oct 1960

Book Review. - Literatur, Edgar Krentz

Concordia Theological Monthly

Book Review. - Literatur


Luther And The English Reformation, E. George Pearce Oct 1960

Luther And The English Reformation, E. George Pearce

Concordia Theological Monthly

Martin Luther never came to England. So far as I know, he was never invited. Melanchthon was-many times, sometimes by King Henry himself, very often by the Archbishop of Canterbury, but he always found reason to decline. Martin Luther never set foot on the realms of Henry VIII. What, then, is the connection between Luther and the English Reformation?


Studies In Discipleship, Martin H. Franzmann Oct 1960

Studies In Discipleship, Martin H. Franzmann

Concordia Theological Monthly

There is probably no balder piece of narrative in all literature than Matthew's account of the calling of the first four disciples (4:18-22). There is not an adjective in it, and only one adverb, and the style is so completely nondramatic that at least one scholar has spoken of its "casualness." But this sparse and lean simplicity of narrative is anything but an indication that the event here recorded is of minor or subordinate importance, for this same Matthew records the birth and the resurrection of Jesus in subordinate clauses and devotes to the act of the crucifixion a single …


Melanchthon The Confessor, Arthur Carl Piepkorn Sep 1960

Melanchthon The Confessor, Arthur Carl Piepkorn

Concordia Theological Monthly

By definition, a confessor is "one who confesses." Specifically and strictly, a confessor is an ordained clergymen who hears confessions and is authorized to grant absolution. Or he is one who professes or gives heroic evidence of his faith in Christ, a saint who suffers persecution for his faith without undergoing martyrdom in the process.


Editorial Comment, Charles L. Hill Sep 1960

Editorial Comment, Charles L. Hill

Concordia Theological Monthly

In this issue we are continuing the observance of the 400th anniversary of the death of Philip Melanchthon. To the articles appearing in the August issue of our journal, we are adding two more which likewise were read as a commemorative symposium at Concordia Seminary on April 2-21 of this year. In calling these articles to the attention of our readers, we have chosen to let Melanchthon speak to us directly from bis Loci communes, selecting some of his 33 theses, which conclude his treatise on law and Gospel.


The International Student-Test Of A Living Church, William J. Danker Sep 1960

The International Student-Test Of A Living Church, William J. Danker

Concordia Theological Monthly

In a world in which the process of homogenization is being stepped up constantly, it is not surprising that we have reached the era of the International Man. Amid the strident cries of nationalism from newly independent nations of Asia and Africa and in the complacently preoccupied provincialism of America's Midwest it is easy to overlook him, but he is there.


Brief Studies, Harry G. Coiner Sep 1960

Brief Studies, Harry G. Coiner

Concordia Theological Monthly

The Pastor at Work


Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller Sep 1960

Theological Observer, John Theodore Mueller

Concordia Theological Monthly

Theological Observer


Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Arthur C. Nitz Sep 1960

Homiletics: Outlines On The Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series, Arthur C. Nitz

Concordia Theological Monthly

Outlines on the Synodical Conference Gospels Second Series


Melanchthon As Educator And Humanist, Carl S. Meyer Sep 1960

Melanchthon As Educator And Humanist, Carl S. Meyer

Concordia Theological Monthly

Melanchthon, it seems, lacked a sense of humor. Tactful, careful, intent on weighing the pros and cons of each question, working all day even on Sunday, grubbing and grinding, this was Melanchthon according to Martin Luther, who had ample opportunity to observe his friend and colleague.


Book Review. - Literatur, Carl S. Meyer Sep 1960

Book Review. - Literatur, Carl S. Meyer

Concordia Theological Monthly

Book Review. - Literatur