Luther: Lectures on RomansPresbyterian Publishing Corporation, 1961 - 444 pages Wilhelm Pauck enhances his fresh translation of Luther's Lectures on Romans with a body of notes which, along with his lucid introduction, greatly enhances the usefulness of Luther's work. Long recognized for the quality of its translations, introductions, explanatory notes, and indexes, the Library of Christian Classics provides scholars and students with modern English translations of some of the most significant Christian theological texts in history. Through these works--each written prior to the end of the sixteenth century--contemporary readers are able to engage the ideas that have shaped Christian theology and the church through the centuries. |
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Page 219
... everything ( I Cor . 6 : 2 ) . In this sense , the commandment is impossible for us . Hence , Blessed Augustine says in Chapter 16 of his book On Grace and Free Will : " He commands what we cannot do in order that we should know what we ...
... everything ( I Cor . 6 : 2 ) . In this sense , the commandment is impossible for us . Hence , Blessed Augustine says in Chapter 16 of his book On Grace and Free Will : " He commands what we cannot do in order that we should know what we ...
Page 220
... everything to have life and being in the glory of God . But nature , by contrast , regards everything it sees as worth- less unless it serves to its advantage and makes itself available to it . It values only what it can use for its own ...
... everything to have life and being in the glory of God . But nature , by contrast , regards everything it sees as worth- less unless it serves to its advantage and makes itself available to it . It values only what it can use for its own ...
Page 222
... everything . He that loves God more than himself certainly loves God above everything , for man loves nothing so much as himself . But this is an impossibility for the flesh ; for it is the way of the wisdom of the flesh that man loves ...
... everything . He that loves God more than himself certainly loves God above everything , for man loves nothing so much as himself . But this is an impossibility for the flesh ; for it is the way of the wisdom of the flesh that man loves ...
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Common terms and phrases
according apostle says Aristotle become believe Bernard of Clairvaux Blessed Augustine called carnal chapter Christian church circumcision commandment concupiscence condemned confess conscience death despise Duns Scotus Erasmus eternal everything evil Faber fact faith father fear Ficker flesh follows foolish Gabriel Biel Gentiles gift give glorify glory God's gospel grace Greek hates heart Hence Holy Spirit honor hope humility inasmuch iniquity interpretation Israel Jews judge judgment justified kind letter live Lord Luke Luther Lyra marginal gloss Matt means mercy mind namely Nicholas of Lyra original sin ourselves passage peace Pelagian Peter Lombard phrase Pierre d'Ailly pray prayer preach promise prudence psalm regard righteousness saints sake salvation Scholasticism Scholastics Scripture seek sense Sent sinner sins soul teaching thee theological things thou tion tribulation truth understand understood unrighteous unto Vulgate weak whole wisdom word