Description

Book Synopsis

In this book, Roger Whittall argues that Luther’s teaching on the common priesthood (the “priesthood of believers”) was a persistent element of Luther’s ecclesiology and closely related to his understanding of the church as the communion of saints. Whittall’s focus is the common priesthood’s activity in the Christian community, moving beyond its contested relationship to the church’s ordained ministry, or the views that limit its appearance to Luther’s early polemical writings. Rather, the common priesthood stands alongside the public ministry. They are equal partners in the church’s mandate to receive and speak God’s word, to respond in prayer, praise, and joyful service of God’s world and all its people. This wide-ranging investigation features later material not often considered in relation to the common priesthood. For Luther “priesthood” was a biblical expression of Christian spiritual life, worship, and service, forming both the personal faith of individual Christians and the corporate nature of the Christian community. Whittall also examines Luther’s use of key biblical texts to link church and priesthood through the themes of unity and community, equality, and participation. Understood in this way, this priesthood still speaks powerfully to the identity and mission of the church today.



Trade Review

Whittall brings a perceptive analytical review of the current scholarly debate and a careful contextual assessment of Luther’s own utterances on the complex of ideas involved in the calling of the baptized as priests who bring the gospel to others. Whittall’s careful chronological tracing of the development of Luther’s views of this calling of the baptized and the church’s public ministry in several literary genres not only illuminates the historical witness of the reformer but also provides resources for encouraging all Christians to take seriously both the role of the shepherds of Christ’s people and believers’ responsibility to witness to Christ in daily life.

-- Robert Kolb, professor emeritus, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1: Church and Priesthood in Luther’s First Lectures

Chapter 2: Luther’s Early Ecclesiology, Its Substance and Form

Chapter 3: Luther’s Early Teaching on The Common Priesthood, to 1525

Chapter 4: The Biblical Data for The Common Priesthood

Chapter 5: Luther’s Ecclesiology and the Challenge of Reform, from 1524

Chapter 6: The Response to Rome: Next Instalment

Chapter 7: The Common Priesthood in Luther’s Old Testament Writings, 1524–46

Chapter 8: The Common Priesthood in Luther’s New Testament Preaching, 1522–46

Conclusions: Martin Luther’s Common Priesthood: Its Boundaries and Horizons

We Are All Priests: The Ecclesiological

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A Hardback by Roger Whittall

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    View other formats and editions of We Are All Priests: The Ecclesiological by Roger Whittall

    Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
    Publication Date: 15/12/2023
    ISBN13: 9781978715424, 978-1978715424
    ISBN10: 1978715420

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    In this book, Roger Whittall argues that Luther’s teaching on the common priesthood (the “priesthood of believers”) was a persistent element of Luther’s ecclesiology and closely related to his understanding of the church as the communion of saints. Whittall’s focus is the common priesthood’s activity in the Christian community, moving beyond its contested relationship to the church’s ordained ministry, or the views that limit its appearance to Luther’s early polemical writings. Rather, the common priesthood stands alongside the public ministry. They are equal partners in the church’s mandate to receive and speak God’s word, to respond in prayer, praise, and joyful service of God’s world and all its people. This wide-ranging investigation features later material not often considered in relation to the common priesthood. For Luther “priesthood” was a biblical expression of Christian spiritual life, worship, and service, forming both the personal faith of individual Christians and the corporate nature of the Christian community. Whittall also examines Luther’s use of key biblical texts to link church and priesthood through the themes of unity and community, equality, and participation. Understood in this way, this priesthood still speaks powerfully to the identity and mission of the church today.



    Trade Review

    Whittall brings a perceptive analytical review of the current scholarly debate and a careful contextual assessment of Luther’s own utterances on the complex of ideas involved in the calling of the baptized as priests who bring the gospel to others. Whittall’s careful chronological tracing of the development of Luther’s views of this calling of the baptized and the church’s public ministry in several literary genres not only illuminates the historical witness of the reformer but also provides resources for encouraging all Christians to take seriously both the role of the shepherds of Christ’s people and believers’ responsibility to witness to Christ in daily life.

    -- Robert Kolb, professor emeritus, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis

    Table of Contents

    Introduction

    Chapter 1: Church and Priesthood in Luther’s First Lectures

    Chapter 2: Luther’s Early Ecclesiology, Its Substance and Form

    Chapter 3: Luther’s Early Teaching on The Common Priesthood, to 1525

    Chapter 4: The Biblical Data for The Common Priesthood

    Chapter 5: Luther’s Ecclesiology and the Challenge of Reform, from 1524

    Chapter 6: The Response to Rome: Next Instalment

    Chapter 7: The Common Priesthood in Luther’s Old Testament Writings, 1524–46

    Chapter 8: The Common Priesthood in Luther’s New Testament Preaching, 1522–46

    Conclusions: Martin Luther’s Common Priesthood: Its Boundaries and Horizons

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