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Latomus and Luther - The Debate: Is every Good Deed a Sin? (Hardcover)
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Latomus and Luther - The Debate: Is every Good Deed a Sin? (Hardcover)
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Who was Jacob Latomus? What did he write in the series of lectures
to which Luther penned an answer in 1521, an answer which is now so
central to many interpretations of the great reformer? And how is
the reading of that answer affected when it is preceded by an
interpretation of what Latomus wrote? The study goes through the
most important parts of Latomus' treatise against Luther (1521).
The aim is to identify Latomus' theological convictions and thus to
pin down who and what Luther was up against. The second and major
part of the book is a reading of Luther's pamphlet against Latomus
(1521). Parallels are drawn with Latomus' theology in order to
facilitate as much as possible an appreciation of the differences
between the two.The comparison between the two theologians shows
that they speak completely different languages and that their
viewpoints do not square at all. Basically their ways depart in
their understanding of God's word and how it is communicated to
man. This generates two ways of perceiving the matter of theology,
and of speaking theologically -- and prevents mutual understanding.
Latomus cannot understand Luther's view of the autonomy of God's
word and the special character of proclamation, and hence a
theology which is incompatible with natural reason. Even though he
accepts a division between a natural and a supernatural
rationality, and thus admits that natural reason has a limit, he
grants the very same natural reason an important role in the ascent
of cognition towards revelation. Everything else - such as Luther's
theology - is a dehumanisation of the human being. Luther, on the
other hand, regards Latomus' theology as a result of the impulse in
sinful man towards ruling and controlling the word of God with his
own inadequate natural abilities. In Luther's eyes that
proclamation of Christ, which in the shape of a human being comes
to man in contradiction of everything human, here disappears in the
twinkling of an eye.
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