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Lutheranism, branch of Christianity that traces its interpretation of the Christian religion to the teachings of Martin Luther and the 16th-century movements that issued from his reforms. It is the second largest Protestant denomination, after the Baptist churches.
- Eastern Europe and Scandinavia
Lutheranism - Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, Reformation: In...
- Organization
Lutheranism - Church, Doctrine, Reformation: The polity of...
- North American Lutheranism
Lutheranism - North American, Reformation, Doctrine: Several...
- History
Lutheranism - Reformation, Doctrine, Europe: In 1517, when...
- Pietism
Pietistic movements have appeared throughout Christian...
- Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches
Other articles where Association of Evangelical Lutheran...
- Eastern Europe and Scandinavia
Lutheranism is a major branch of Protestantism, identifying primarily with the theology of Martin Luther, the 16th-century German monk and reformer whose efforts to reform the theology and practices of the Catholic Church launched the Protestant Reformation.
Lutheranism soon became a wider religious and political movement within the Holy Roman Empire owing to support from key electors and the widespread adoption of the printing press. This movement soon spread throughout northern Europe and became the driving force behind the wider Protestant Reformation .
30 de nov. de 2021 · Martin Luther (l. 1483-1546) was a German priest, monk, and theologian who became the central figure of the religious and cultural movement known as the Protestant Reformation.
- Joshua J. Mark
Lutheranism is one of the five major strands of Protestantism. It is rooted in the teachings of the 16th-century theologian Martin Luther. Lutheranism’s tenets—at odds with many aspects of Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy —include the rejection of the hierarchical split between clergy and laity, in favor of Scripture as the ...
For five hundred years, the term “Lutheran” has served variously as a badge of confession for a specific definition of Christian, for Martin Luther’s supporters, as a word of insult used by foes to condemn a variety of views opposed to their own, or as a merely cultural designation for those whose thought has little to do with Luther’s but who h...