The Sexual Reformation
A Forceful and Fruitful Verse: Genesis 1:28 in Luther’s Thought and Its Place in the Wittenberg Reformation (1521–1531) by Brandt C. Klawitter
A common view is that the sixteenth-century Lutheran Reformers advanced “Scripture alone” as their new test of Christian truth and practice, while the Roman Catholics held on to other sources as well, including the ancient philosophers and the natural law. In A Forceful and Fruitful Verse: Genesis 1:28 in Luther’s Thought and Its Place in the Wittenberg Reformation (1521–1531), Brandt C. Klawitter largely turns that understanding on its head in matters of sex, marriage, and family.
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Allan C. Carlson is the author of numerous books, including Family Questions: Reflections on the American Social Crisis and The American Way: Family and Community in the Shaping of the American Identity. He attends St. Paul Lutheran Church in Rockford, Illinois. He is a senior editor of Touchstone.
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