Justin Effler’s Reviews > The Story of Creeds and Confessions: Tracing the Development of the Christian Faith > Status Update

Justin Effler
is 73% done
Historians regularly find it necessary to remind students of Calvin’s actual role in the Reformation, which was not as the founder of the Reformed faith, nor even the dominant influence on early Reformed churches, at least in his lifetime. Instead, Calvin was a second-generation Reformer, whose reputation was at first minimal in some Swiss regions, but he increased in stature by the end of his life.
— Dec 22, 2024 09:53PM
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Justin’s Previous Updates

Justin Effler
is 93% done
It might be expected that denominations in the New World simply carried over their confessions when they emigrated. However, in almost every denomination, there were additions to older confessions that addressed new situations or changes in belief, and in some instances, new confessions were written at the formation of new denominations.
— Aug 02, 2025 08:26AM

Justin Effler
is 83% done
Prominent in the Formula of Concord was a fine-tuning of the Lutheran teaching on original sin and free will. Both issues had been central to Luther’s theology, since original sin was the reason why Luther had denied free will.
— May 10, 2025 01:15PM

Justin Effler
is 81% done
The language of “faith working itself out in love” is biblical (Gal. 5:6) and was acceptable to Protestants, and it even appeared in the Tetrapolitan Confession.32 But Trent situated the concept of “working in love” differently than did any Protestant church, by viewing it through the lens of the penitential system of the Catholic Church.
— Mar 01, 2025 03:53PM

Justin Effler
is 78% done
In the East, Jeremiah II was not only aware of the Reformation but was also asked to give his verdict on the Augsburg Confession (1530). Although his response was judiciously warm and charitable, Jeremiah still made clear that he was troubled by Protestant teachings.
— Jan 01, 2025 10:21PM

Justin Effler
is 77% done
The Reformed confessions say nothing about the covenant or the Sabbath,and only little about predestination.Lutheran confessions speak of grace and justification,but do not give voice to the controversies on the Third Use of the Law or the ubiquity of Christ. Anabaptist confessions sketch only a very simple summary of their unique community life.And in the Anglican communion there was only the scant FortyTwo Articles
— Dec 29, 2024 11:11PM

Justin Effler
is 75% done
So, in June 1553, a royal mandate was issued that commanded use of the Forty-Two Articles in England. They were the work of Cranmer, and their message is overwhelmingly Protestant, although they take no noticeable side in the Lutheran or Reformed debate on the sacraments.
— Dec 28, 2024 09:29AM