CRRS » Publications » Book Series » Essays and Studies, No. 12
Christian Magistrate and the Territorial Church: Johannes Brenz and the German Reformation
James M. Estes
pp. 243
ISBN 978-0-7727-2034-4
$21.50
(Outside Canada, please pay in US $.)

Please order using this flyer. [PDF]

Further information:
tel: 416-585-4465
fax: 416-585-4584 attn: CRRS
or email the Publications Manager.

As an early reformer in the south German town of Schwäbisch-Hall, Johannes Brenz exercised an enormous impact on the single-most powerful city in the Holy Roman Empire, Nuremberg. Later in life, he became the chief theological advisor to the dukes of Württemberg, influencing Christian worship and theology then as it still does today. Outliving Martin Luther, Philip Melanchthon, and their Wittenberg colleagues, Brenz continued to affect church life and shape the Reformation in German-speaking countries well into the 1560s.
One of Brenz's most important contributions to his age is the chief subject of this book-the relationship between local political authorities and the developing evangelical churches. The wealth of scholarship collected on the subject since the 1982 publication Christian Magistrate and State Church: The Reforming Career of Johannes Brenz warranted this new and updated edition.
Timothy J. Wengert, The Lutheran Theological Seminary of Philadelphia

The Author

JAMES M. ESTES is professor emeritus of history at the University of Toronto and distinguished senior fellow of the Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.

Contents

Illustrations, Preface, Preface to the First Edition
1. Brenz's Career in Brief
2. Background of the Territorial Church
3. Justification of the Territorial Church
4. Organization of the Church in Württemberg
5. Discipline of Morals
6. Resistance and Toleration
Afterward, Bibliography, Index
^^ To top ^^
For more information about the CRRS, contact our Assistant to the Director, Dr. Stephanie Treloar.
This site was originally designed by Michael Ullyot and is now maintained by Alexandra Guerson.
Last updated: 29 June, 2010

Search the CRRS site:
Contents of this site are copyright © 2003-08 Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.
Unauthorized reproduction of any part of this site is prohibited.