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Theology of the Reformers Theology of the Reformers by Timothy George
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“He referred to Pope Paul III as “His Hellishness.” Were not the pope and his associates at least members of the church? Yes, as much as spit, snot, pus, feces, urine, stench, scab, smallpox, ulcers, and syphilis are members of the body. Luther was never one to mince words.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“All of this is a commentary on Augustine’s famous dictum at the beginning of his Confessions: “O Lord, thou hast made us for thyself, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in thee.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Luther’s greatest contribution to Protestant ecclesiology was his doctrine of the priesthood of all believers.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Christ did not establish and institute the ministry of proclamation to provide us with money, property, popularity, honor, or friendship.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“In the words of Scripture you will find the swaddling clothes in which Christ lies. Simple and little are the swaddling clothes, but dear is the treasure, Christ, that lies in them.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“We believe, confess, and teach that the only rule and norm, according to which all dogmas and all doctors ought to be esteemed and judged, is no other whatever than the prophetic and apostolic writings both of the Old and of the New Testaments.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers
“O fortunate age of ours, a truly golden age, when … the whole crop of virtues from that age of innocence are renewed, restored to life, and bloom again!”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers
“We are like dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants; thanks to them, we see farther than they. Busying ourselves with the treatises written by the ancients, we take their choice thoughts, buried by age and human neglect, and we raise them, as it were, from death to renewed life.”20”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers
“There is nothing for which I wish to break my neck.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers
“Let God be good,” cried Erasmus the moralist. “Let God be God,” replied Luther the theologian. Although”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“As the process of reform unfolded, Zwingli came increasingly to see himself as a prophet to his people. Like the prophets of the Old Testament, the “shepherd” or “watchman” (Zwingli’s preferred words for pastor) needed to guard zealously the flock against attacks from the evil one and be ready to die fighting for the cause of Christ.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Luther urged Christians to accept civic responsibility (so long as it did not violate the claims of Christ) for the sake of the neighbor. This mandate extended even to those manifestly violent offices of the sword: “If you see that there is a lack of hangmen, constables, judges, lords, princes, and you find that you are qualified, you should offer your services and seek the position.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Here we find a parallel to Luther’s disdain of reason. In its legitimate sphere reason is the highest gift of God, but the moment it transgresses into theology it becomes the “Devil’s Whore.” So, too, with free will. Understood as the God-given capacity to make ordinary decisions, to carry out one’s responsibilities in the world, free will remains intact. What it cannot do is effect its own salvation.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“justification by faith alone frees me to love my neighbor disinterestedly, for his or her own sake, as my sister or brother, not as the calculated means to my own desired ends.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“The first thing I ask is that people should not make use of my name, and should not call themselves Lutherans but Christians. What is Luther? The teaching is not mine. Nor was I crucified for anyone. . . . How did I, poor stinking bag of maggots that I am, come to the point where people call the children of Christ by my evil name?”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Friedrich Nietzsche: “If Luther had been burned like Hus, the dawn of the Enlightenment might perhaps have come a little earlier and more brilliantly than we can now imagine.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“Coram Deo means that while we are always at God’s disposal, God is never at ours. “To believe in such a God,” Luther said, “is to go down on your knees.”23”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary
“History is never the simple recounting of the past as it really was. It is inevitably an interpretation of the past, a retrospective vision of the past, which is limited both by the sources themselves and by the historian who selects and interprets them.”
Timothy George, Theology of the Reformers: 25th Anniversary