“The
doctrine which has been taught in the Lutheran Church during these
three centuries has been established by the Scriptures, and defended
against all foes, to the satisfaction of a host of eminent theologians
whose linguistic learning and whose logical acumen have not been
surpassed in any church or in any age. They sifted evidence closely;
they thought upon the subject profoundly; they defended their doctrine
triumphantly. They were not ignorant of the objections which could be
urged against them. These objections were examined and refuted.” —
Matthias Loy, ed.
Special Collection
The Columbus Theological Magazine is one of the specially restored collections of the Lutheran Library.
Legacy MOBI (If EPUB or AZW3 won’t work on your device)
You
can expect your e-book to arrive within a few hours. If it doesn't
arrive, check your spam or junk mail folder. You can also request a copy
of this or any Lutheran Library e-book by sending an email with the book's title and format.
“The
doctrine which has been taught in the Lutheran Church during these
three centuries has been established by the Scriptures, and defended
against all foes, to the satisfaction of a host of eminent theologians
whose linguistic learning and whose logical acumen have not been
surpassed in any church or in any age. They sifted evidence closely;
they thought upon the subject profoundly; they defended their doctrine
triumphantly. They were not ignorant of the objections which could be
...
This
is a highly readable, modern English version of the classic volume of
Protestant Biblical theology. The translation of the Augsburg Confession
is that of Charles P. Krauth, the Small Catechism by Charles F.
Schaeffer, the Large Catechism by Rev. A. Martin, Professor of the
German Language and Literature in Pennsylvania College, the Apology, the
Smalcald Articles and the Formula of Concord were translated by Henry
Eyster Jacobs.
Now available in facsimile PDF form. ...
Joseph
Hocking is the Lutheran Librarian’s favorite Christian novelist. Though
mostly forgotten now, during his lifetime he was widely read and
greatly beloved throughout the English speaking world. Most of his books
deal in some way with the struggles and conflicts of living as a
Christian in the modern world.
The Lutheran Library is republishing many of Joseph Hocking’s novels. If
you are willing to provide copies of any of Hocking’s 50 “lost” books,
please ...
“In
the following pages we present, in a fuller and more detached and
definite form, the historic evidence of the fulfillment of the main
chronologic prophecies of Scripture.” — Henry Grattan Guinness
Please note: This book was written more than a hundred years ago from a
pre-millenial perspective. If these details are kept in mind, there is
much of value in the study of Dr Guinness’s work. — Lutheran Librarian.
Henry Grattan Guinness (1835-1910) was an Irish ...
Over
his lifetime, Joseph Hocking published nearly 100 books. The Lutheran
Library is attempting to preserve all of his books in freely available
electronic form.
We are actively seeking loan or donation of the following books:
If you can help us, you will be helping to preserve and disseminate
Joseph Hocking’s work for current and future generations. Thank you!
Title
year
An Enemy Hath Done This
1914
Andrew Boconnoc’s Will: The Story Of A Crisis
1926
Bevil ...
“The
Cynic puts all human actions into only two classes, — openly bad, and
secretly bad. All virtue, and generosity, and disinterestedness, are
merely the appearance of good, but selfish at the bottom. He holds that
no man does a good thing except for profit.” — H. W. BEECHER.
Joseph Hocking is the Lutheran Librarian’s favorite Christian novelist.
Though mostly forgotten now, during his lifetime he was widely read and
greatly beloved throughout the English speaking world. ...
“(The
purpose of this book) is to prove the truth of revealed religion in
general, and of the Christian in particular, from the completion of
those prophecies in the Old and New Testaments which relate to the
Christian Church, especially to the apostasy of Papal Rome.” — the
author.
Alfred Edersheim (1825-1889), was raised Jewish. He studied at the
University of Vienna and New College, Edinburgh. After finding faith in
the Messiah, he was ordained in the Free Church of ...
No comments:
Post a Comment