Tag: Luther

Major Works

  • “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx”

    - Rotstem, Abraham. “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx.” Interpretation, Vol. 8 (1979), pp. 79-102.
    Excerpt: ” Nothing might seem more dubious than the attempt to bring together the rabid foe of the peasants with the evangelist of the proletariat.1Their doctrines lay more than three centuries apart, while their goals were liter ally, worlds apart. The… More

Other Works

  • “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx”

    - Rotstem, Abraham. “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx.” Interpretation, Vol. 8 (1979), pp. 79-102.
    Excerpt: ” Nothing might seem more dubious than the attempt to bring together the rabid foe of the peasants with the evangelist of the proletariat.1Their doctrines lay more than three centuries apart, while their goals were liter ally, worlds apart. The… More

Commentary

  • “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx”

    - Rotstem, Abraham. “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx.” Interpretation, Vol. 8 (1979), pp. 79-102.
    Excerpt: ” Nothing might seem more dubious than the attempt to bring together the rabid foe of the peasants with the evangelist of the proletariat.1Their doctrines lay more than three centuries apart, while their goals were liter ally, worlds apart. The… More

Multimedia

  • “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx”

    - Rotstem, Abraham. “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx.” Interpretation, Vol. 8 (1979), pp. 79-102.
    Excerpt: ” Nothing might seem more dubious than the attempt to bring together the rabid foe of the peasants with the evangelist of the proletariat.1Their doctrines lay more than three centuries apart, while their goals were liter ally, worlds apart. The… More

Teaching

  • “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx”

    - Rotstem, Abraham. “Lordship and Bondage in Luther and Marx.” Interpretation, Vol. 8 (1979), pp. 79-102.
    Excerpt: ” Nothing might seem more dubious than the attempt to bring together the rabid foe of the peasants with the evangelist of the proletariat.1Their doctrines lay more than three centuries apart, while their goals were liter ally, worlds apart. The… More