TOPIC INDEXReformation Doctrine (23)
  1. In this episode, the Thinking Fellows discuss the centrality and importance of Christians' doctrinal content and confessions.
  2. In this episode, The Thinking Fellows address the idea that the Reformation is not worthy of celebration but is lamentable.
  3. The Fellows discuss the importance of the Reformation.
  4. Just like we end up walking in circles when lost with no navigation instruments, so does humankind outside of Christ. Nothing has changed since the Reformation. People still suck and God still loves.
  5. The following is an excerpt from Adam Fransisco’s chapter in “Who Am I?” edited by Scott Ashmon (1517 Publishing, 2020).
  6. This episode of the Thinking Fellows opens to the peasants revolt and the radical reform of Thomas Müntzer. To round out the show the Conversation moves to the Bondage of the Will and the begining of Luther’s family life.
  7. As the Biblical text transforms Luther’s positions on grace and justification, he shifts his writing from disputations to letters targeted at the common man, secular rulers, and the Roman church.
  8. The Heidelberg Disputation represents the first time that Reformational theology emerges as a whole.
  9. The Thinking Fellows revisit their very first episode on the doctrine of sin.
  10. The regular hosts are reunited after a summer of teaching and travel. In preparation for the Here We Still Stand Conference the hosts visit some of the theological errors that pushed Luther toward the cross.
  11. Almost every episode of the Thinking Fellows has a handfull of books linked in the show notes.
  12. The Theology of the Cross is a recurring theme on the Thinking Fellows.
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