Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (18) (remove)
Language
- German (18)
Keywords
- Kirchengeschichte (4)
- Schleiermacher, Friedrich (4)
- Christentum (3)
- Theologie (3)
- Edition (2)
- Editionswissenschaft (2)
- Geschichtstheorie (2)
- Harms, Claus (2)
- Kirchenkampf (2)
- Kirchenkampf <1933-1945> (2)
- Luther, Martin (2)
- Nationalsozialismus (2)
- Schlesien (2)
- Adoptianismus (1)
- Allgemeine Evangelisch-Lutherische Konferenz (1)
- Altona (1)
- Asmussen, Hans Christian (1)
- Augustinus, Aurelius (1)
- Autofiktion (1)
- Baltikum (1)
- Barby (1)
- Bekenntnisschriften (1)
- Bibel. Altes Testament (1)
- Bibel. Neues Testament (1)
- Bonhoeffer, Dietrich (1)
- Briefwechsel (1)
- Brüdergemeine (1)
- Chiliasmus (1)
- Christologie (1)
- Dogma (1)
- Dogmengeschichte (1)
- Drittes Reich (1)
- Ekklesiologie (1)
- Elert, Werner (1)
- Entwicklungsgeschichte (1)
- Erweckung (1)
- Estland (1)
- Evangelienharmonie (1)
- Evangelisation (1)
- Fleisch, Paul (1)
- Freikirche (1)
- Frömmigkeit (1)
- Gemeinschaftsbewegung (1)
- Gesangbuch (1)
- Geschichtsphilosophie (1)
- Geschichtsschreibung (1)
- Geschichtstheologie (1)
- Gnadenfrei (1)
- Heitmüller, Friedrich (1)
- Hermeneutik (1)
- Herrnhuter (1)
- Hipploytus von Rom (1)
- Homiletik (1)
- Humanismus (1)
- Intermedialität (1)
- Judentum (1)
- Kirche und Nationalsozialismus (1)
- Kirchenparteien (1)
- Kirchenstatistik (1)
- Kirchenverfassung (1)
- Konfessionen (1)
- Konfessionskunde (1)
- Kreuzzug (1)
- Lettland (1)
- Livland (1)
- Ludwig, Hartmut (1)
- Luthertum (1)
- Marahrens, August (1)
- Mittelalter (1)
- Monarchianismus (1)
- Möller, Johann Friedrich (1)
- Niesky (1)
- Orpheus (1)
- Otto von Freising (1)
- Peschitta (1)
- Polemik (1)
- Praktische Theologie (1)
- Predigt (1)
- Protestantismus (1)
- Rechtfertigungslehre (1)
- Reformation (1)
- Reformationsgeschichte (1)
- Ronsdorf (1)
- Salomon, Charlotte (1)
- Schleiermacher, Briefe (1)
- Schleiermacher, Johann Gottlieb Adolph (1)
- Schleswig-Holstein (1)
- Segeberg (1)
- Symbolismus (1)
- Tatianus, Syrus (1)
- Textgeschichte Neues Testament (1)
- Totalitarismus (1)
- Trinitätslehre (1)
- Universität Breslau. Evangelisch-Theologische Fakultät (1)
- Witzel, Georg (1)
- Wolf, Ernst (1)
- katholische Reform (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (18) (remove)
Institute
- Akademienvorhaben Schleiermacher in Berlin 1808-1834, Briefwechsel, Tageskalender, Vorlesungen (18) (remove)
This article is a report from the edition of Schleiermacher’s correspondence within the critical Schleiermacher edition (Kritische Gesamtausgabe, KGA) and puts forth a surprising revision which was discovered during work on vol. 10 (1808–1810): with the exception of one letter the letters from Schleiermacher’s sister-in-law and friend of Ernst-Moritz Arndt, Charlotte von Kathen (1778–1850), to Friedrich Schleiermacher, should be attributed to a different Charlotte, Schleiermachers’s friend Charlotte Cummerow. The correspondence between Friedrich Schleiermacher and Charlotte Cummerow was assumed until now not to have been handed down. The article shows with a look at the transmission history how this false attribution came about through Dilthey and which indications led to this revision. The delineated description here of the two correspondences is completed by a tabular overview of the revised correspondences of Schleiermacher with Charlotte von Kathen and Charlotte Cummerow.
In the Monarchian controversy of the beginning third century the Roman bishop Calixtus evolved his own kind of monarchianism taking in elements of Theodotian, Noëtian, Praxean, and Sabellian doctrine and of stoicism. Calixtus defined in a respectively different way, wherein the unity and binity of the one Father-Son-God consists before and after incarnation: Before incarnation God is one Spirit and one Logos, in the whole world present and efficient, one Prosopon, called Father and Son. At incarnation however the Spirit-God (Father) unifies the human flesh (Son) with himself, so that the flesh made (Father and Son), again one Prosopon, is called one God.
In Schleiermacher’s thought, according to romanticism, history and historical evolution can only be understood as the revelation and realisation of an idea within empiric world. At the end of this evolution there will be the identity of Geist (mind, spirit) and nature, idea and reality.
For Schleiermacher church history ist the middle discipline of historical theology. Between 1806 and 1826 he held three lectures on this subject and made diverse attempts to appoint the relation in which church history stands to universal history and to the idea of knowledge
and science.
When Martin Luther published his Smalcald Articles in 1538, Georg Witzel, who had returned to the Catholic party some years earlier offered a polemic response; Luther and his sect, he wrote, did not heal but rather exacerbated the schism. The two foci of Witzel’s Anti-Luther, the continuity with the undivided, original, and apostolic church and the doctrine of justification, indicate already the crucial points of many later attempts for ecumenical agreement.
This article publishes the minutes of a conference held on February 26th, 1934 by prominent members of the German Lutheran churches. August Marahrens, Ernst Sommerlath, Werner Elert, Paul Fleisch, and others are discussing how to maintain the Lutheran position on conditions of the Third Reich and the Reichskirche.
This miscelle deals with the quotations from the gospels in the Syriac version of Theodore of Mopsuestia’s catechetical homilies. Many of these quotations correspond with Syriac gospel texts that are earlier than Peshitta. In one passage of Homily 14 a mixed quotation from the gospels could also be infl uenced by the old Gospel Harmony “Diatessaron”.
This essay deals with Friedrich Schleiermacher’s readings on ecclesiastical geography and statistics (which have been be published for the first time in 2005 as volume II/16 of the Kritische Gesamtausgabe). For Schleiermacher the ecclesiastical statistics were the last part of historical theology; he developped this subject to describe the present state of the churches in the whole world, especially their life and culture, their constitutions, and their relations with states and goverments. Though Schleiermacher’s statistics had some influence on comparative symbolics and the study of denominations as well as on Practical Theology, they could not be established as one discipline among the other theological disciplines.
Heinrich von Lettland, Pfarrer in Papendorf (lett. Rubene), Zeitzeuge und Chronist der Kreuzzüge ins Baltikum, war am Augustinerchorherrnstift in Segeberg ausgebildet worden. Auf der Grundlage eines typologisch-symbolistischen Bibelverständnisses, das Gemeinsamkeiten mit Otto von Freising und anderen hat, kommt Heinrich zu einer Geschichtstheologie, nach der Mission, Missionskrieg und überhaupt alles göttliche und menschliche Wirken auf die Ausbreitung des Friedens Christi, des „vere pacificus“, abzielt.
Das „Wort und Bekenntnis Altonaer Pastoren in der Not und Verwirrung des öffentlichen Lebens“, verfasst unter dem Eindruck des Altonaer Blutsonntags (17.7.1932) und am 11.1.1933 veröffentlicht, wenige Wochen vor der nationalsozialistischen Machtergreifung, rief im Namen der Ordnung und des Ordnungswillens Gottes zur Loyalität gegen den Staat auf und verwarf den Traum vom kommunistischen Paradies und den Glauben an einen Zukunftsstaat nationaler Artgemäßheit als widerchristliche Heilslehren. Dieser Beitrag macht geltend, dass der seinerzeit aufsehenerregende Text, der von Bonhoeffer und den republikanisch Gesinnten begrüßt, von kommunistische rund nationalsozialistischer Seite scharf abgelehnt wurde, kein „unklares Vorspiel“ war, wie Hartmut Ludwig in Anlehnung an Ernst Wolf schrieb, sondern der Auftakt der bekenntnismäßigen Auseinandersetzung mit dem Nationalsozialismus.