Hermann Lüdemann (theologian)

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Hermann Lüdemann (born September 15, 1842 in Kiel , † October 12, 1933 in Berlin ) was a German Protestant theologian . In 1884 he became a professor of church history, and in 1891 he also became professor of systematic theology at the University of Bern , where he was rector from 1900 to 1901. His father was the theologian Carl Lüdemann .

Life

When Professor Nippold from Bern succeeded Hase in Jena in 1883 , the government elected Hermann Lüdemann as full professor of church history . He presented the history of philosophy, founded the church history seminar in 1886 and later switched to systematic theology. For him, justification based on faith was the Reformation principle, which led him to warn against overestimating the Anabaptists. On the basis of an epistemology based on Leibniz , he came up with a new conception of dogmatics . He rejected the teachings of original status , hereditary guilt and vicarious satisfaction of Christ and redesigned Christology , soteriology and doctrine of God .

Works

  • The anthropology of the apostle Paul and its position within his doctrine of salvation , Kiel 1872 ( digitized version )
  • What does "Biblical Christianity" mean? , Lecture, Bern 1905
  • Recognition and value judgments , Leipzig 1910
  • The essence of the Reformation , Bern 1917
  • Kant's “Practical Philosophy” , Bern 1924
  • Christian Dogmatics , Bern 1924–1926
    • Vol. 1: Foundation of Christian dogmatics , Bern 1924
    • Vol. 2: System of Christian dogmatics , Bern 1926
  • Free Christianity. Public lectures on the crisis in the Protestant Church , Bern 1932

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/de/articles/010741/2006-11-07/