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This volume makes a distinctive contribution to the upcoming 500th anniversary of Luther's reformation by looking back to the previous centennial in 1917 and tracing forward the enduring impact of the questions raised by Lutheran scholars then to contemporary research in religious studies, history, and theology. The great flourishing of interest in Luther's religious experience and thought in Berlin at the turn of the twentieth century was known as the Lutherrenaissance, an extraordinarily generative moment of scholarly creativity within the Lutheran tradition. Thinkers such as Holl, Harnack and Otto took up questions that would reverberate throughout twentieth century religious and theological inquiry, on the nature of history, for instance, dialectical theology, and the question of mysticism in religious experience. The Lutherrenaissance also planted the seeds of a political theology that contributed to the alliance of Lutheran theologians with National Socialism. Contributors to this volume, attentive to both to the rich contributions of the Lutherrenaissance and its darker consequences, open an unprecedented conversation across the century. Then and now, the study of religion and theology were in periods of transition; then and now, scholars were working at the very foundations of the various disciplines of religious inquiry across the social sciences and humanities. Contributors aim to bring the critical insights of that period to bear on key questions in the study of religion and theology today, with particular attention to the global context within which present day scholars work. It exemplifies new perspectives in Luther scholarship today, the rich and fertile grounds of the Lutheran tradition, in its engagement with unprecedented global circumstances.
About the author
Christine Helmer, Professor Religious Studies and Adjunct Professor of German, Northwestern University, born 1965, Ph.D. from Yale University (1997), taught at the Claremont School of Theology and at Harvard Divinity School, member of the AAR (American Academy of Religion) and ESWTR (European Society of Women in Theological Research), recipient of fellowships from the DAAD and Humboldt-Stiftung.
Bo Kristian Holm, Associate Professor at the Department of Systematic Theology, Aarhus University, Denmark, born 1970, Ph.D. from Aarhus University (2001), recipient of fellowships from Carlsbergfondet and The Danish Council for Independent Research, Vice-President of Luther-Akademie Sondershausen-Ratzeburg E.V, member of the steering committee for the Nordic Luther Network.