Luther's Revolution: The Political Dimensions of Martin Luther's Universal Priesthood

Luther's Revolution: The Political Dimensions of Martin Luther's Universal Priesthood

by Nathan Montover
Luther's Revolution: The Political Dimensions of Martin Luther's Universal Priesthood

Luther's Revolution: The Political Dimensions of Martin Luther's Universal Priesthood

by Nathan Montover

Paperback(Reprint)

$26.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Till now history has neglected the utterly radical nature of Luther's thought. In bringing together the political, theological, conceptual and cultural dimensions of Luther's work, Montover brings his readers to an awareness of their truly radical nature. Luther's understanding of the universal priesthood of believers was not simply another evangelical concept that dealt only with the office of ministry. In serving as a means for reordering the concepts of temporal authority and the temporal order it challenged the cosmological foundations of the political structure of his day. A compelling work that can only serve to revive the study of this monumental figure of theology.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780227680148
Publisher: James Clarke & Co. Ltd
Publication date: 09/27/2012
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 164
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x (d)

About the Author

Nathan Montover serves as Pastor at St. James Lutheran Church in Bettendorf, Iowa. He also teaches Religion at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois, and is an Adjunct Instructor of Reformation Studies at Wartburg -theological Seminary in Dubuque, Iowa.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Historiographical Assumptions 2 Biographical Appraisals of the Political Dimensions of Luther's Universal Priesthood 3 A Consideration of Luther's Body of Work on the Topic of the Universal Priesthood 4 The Social and Political Context of Papal Claims of Temporal Authority 5 Luther's Response to Claims of Papal Authority in 'To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation' 6 Conclusions and Trajectories for Further Studies Bibliography Acknowledgments Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Historiographical Assumptions 2 Biographical Appraisals of the Political Dimensions of Luther's Universal Priesthood 3 A Consideration of Luther's Body of Work on the Topic of the Universal Priesthood 4 The Social and Political Context of Papal Claims of Temporal Authority 5 Luther's Response to Claims of Papal Authority in 'To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation' 6 Conclusions and Trajectories for Further Studies Bibliography Acknowledgments

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"In Luther's Revolution, Montover presents a creative, compelling explication of the universal scope of Luther's vision of the 'priesthood of all believers,' for in living out their new life in Christ, both structures of the church and the world will be transformed. The author's use of Luther's 1520 treatise 'To the German Nobility of the German Nation Concerning the Betterment of the Christian Estate' offers a promising model for fruitful engagement of Luther's evangelical theology in the twenty-first century."
—Winston D. Persaud author of The Theology of the Cross and Marx's Anthropology

"Luther's Revolution is a provocative and evocative challenge to those who view Luther as someone who distanced himself from revolutionary politics. Montover offers a compelling and well-documented reading of the political implications of the early Luther's foray into the caste system of the medieval church's conception of the priesthood. His contention is that Luther's call for the universal priesthood of all believers entails not only an ecclesial reformation but a conscientious yet radical subversion of dominant territorial politics and entitlements of the time."
—Vitor Westhelle author of The Scandalous God

"In this careful analysis of Martin Luther's 'To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation,' Nathan Montover affirms the traditional scholarly opinion that the doctrine of the universal priesthood has crucial implications for ecclesiology and the doctrine of ministry. However, he also demonstrates convincingly that Luther addressed the political realm and temporal authority in strategic ways in light of this doctrine. Luther is, therefore, presented as a creative political as well as ecclesiastical and theological reformer."
—Kurt K. Hendel
Bernard, Fischer, Westberg Distinguished Ministry Professor of Reformation History
Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago

"How was it possible that a man deemed outlaw by the empire and heretic by the papacy could over time become portrayed as a political conservative? Nathan Montover deftly probes the silences in and conventions of Luther research to unveil an alternative figure. Luther's concept of the universal priesthood of all believers, based on careful analysis of his writings, coheres best with a frontal assault on the pope's claims to temporal authority and the dismantling of late medieval political cosmology. Luther emerges from this excellent study as a thoroughly political, prophetic, and revolutionary Christian engaged in the struggle for liberation, drawing radical political consequences from foundational theological claims."
—Craig L. Nessan author of Shalom Church and Beyond Maintenance to Mission

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews