Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile
Lutheran Quarterly

@lqjournal

Lutheran Quarterly is a scholarly journal publishing articles on the history and theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church everywhere.

ID: 784367633143623681

linkhttp://www.lutheranquarterly.org calendar_today07-10-2016 12:19:51

136 Tweet

913 Followers

504 Following

Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Oswald Bayer receiving his copy of Promissio in English – his own groundbreaking work available to a new audience as Lutheran Quarterly’s thirtieth book in our series.

Oswald Bayer receiving his copy of Promissio in English – his own groundbreaking work available to a new audience as Lutheran Quarterly’s thirtieth book in our series.
Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Oliver K. Olson, founding editor of Lutheran Quarterly (new series) and president of its Board of Directors for decades, died peacefully in Minneapolis on August 5, 2025.  He was 98 years old.

Oliver K. Olson, founding editor of Lutheran Quarterly (new series) and president of its Board of Directors for decades, died peacefully in Minneapolis on August 5, 2025.  He was 98 years old.
Hopkins Press (@jhupress) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congratulations are in order! Read William G. Fredstrom's "Wendell Berry and Martin Luther on Creatureliness in a Technological Age" in the Spring 2025 issue of Lutheran Quarterly It's free to read, #S2O #OpenAccess via Project MUSE muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/…

Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In honor of Bayer's Promissio coming into English with LQ Books, we've been gathering photos and quotes to celebrate Bayer's work. Here's one from his visit to Princeton in 2001 with Paul Rorem, editor.

In honor of Bayer's Promissio coming into English with LQ Books, we've been gathering photos and quotes to celebrate Bayer's work. Here's one from his visit to Princeton in 2001 with Paul Rorem, editor.
Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bayer: “I was struck by the fact that Bultmann, like Schleiermacher, only wanted to speak of God in the mirror of the human recipient, while Luther, on the other hand, insists that it is necessary to define the human recipient on the basis of the God who speaks.”

Bayer: “I was struck by the fact that Bultmann, like Schleiermacher, only wanted to speak of God in the mirror of the human recipient, while Luther, on the other hand, insists that it is necessary to define the human recipient on the basis of the God who speaks.”
Lutheran Quarterly (@lqjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The promise is therefore to be understood primarily in the present sense and only secondarily in the future sense. It is not a promise that will only be fulfilled in the future. Rather, it is a speech act that as such enacts reality, constitutes reality, brings it about." –Bayer

"The promise is therefore to be understood primarily in the present sense and only secondarily in the future sense. It is not a promise that will only be fulfilled in the future. Rather, it is a speech act that as such enacts reality, constitutes reality, brings it about." –Bayer