"Luther's Liturgical Reforms of 1523 and 1526: Background and Influence" by Randolph F. Lumpp
 

Date of Award

1968

Degree Type

Master's Essay - Restricted

Degree Name

Master of Arts (MA)

Department

Theology

Abstract

Any new thinker is doomed to be the victim of both his adversaries and his followers. Those who represent the past from which he emerges denounce his departures and deny his newness. Those who follow, if they are sufficiently removed from what preceded, distort the roots of his thought, press his insights out of context, and often do violence to his original goals and motives. In all this they deprive him of continuity with tradition.

Comments

An essay presented to the Department of Theology of Marquette University in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Share

COinS