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Reading Romans through the Centuries: From the Early Church to Karl Barth is unavailable, but you can change that!

In the 16 searing chapters of his Letter to the Romans, Paul gets to the heart of the Law and the Gospel—of how human beings can be saved through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ and attain eternal life. In the process, he touches upon such perennially important topics as predestination, the role of the Jewish people in salvation history, and the responsibility of Christians to those in...

Luther did not invent the curvitas image: it was a well-worn motif in the Augustinian tradition, signifying pride, self-seeking, and rebellion against God. But, as Anders Nygren noted, there is a significant difference in the way Augustine and Luther employ this image. While Augustine speaks of sinners as bent or crooked, curved and bowed down to the earth, Luther makes the self, not just earthly goods, the supreme object of this distorted curvature.25 In other words, Luther deepens and radicalizes
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