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Architecture --- Church architecture --- Lutheran churches --- History
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"In 1945, Karl Lutze was a young white pastor assigned to an African American church in Muskogee, Oklahoma. His experiences ministering to Black congregations there and, later, in Tulsa provide a unique perspective on the early civil rights movement in Oklahoma and within the Missouri Synod of the Lutheran Church"--Provided by publisher.
Life --- Philosophy, Modern --- Speculative Philosophy --- Philosophy --- Philosophy & Religion --- Modern philosophy --- Lutze, Karl E. --- Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod --- LCMS (Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod) --- Li︠u︡teranskai︠a︡ T︠S︡erkovʹ - Sinod Missuri --- Missouri Synod (Lutheran) --- Лютеранская Церковь - Синод Миссури --- American Association of Lutheran Churches --- National Evangelical Lutheran Church (U.S.) --- Synod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches --- International Lutheran Council --- Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio, and Other States --- Lutheran Council in the USA --- Lutheran Churches of the Reformation --- Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches (U.S.) --- Lutheran Church (Canada) --- Muskogee (Okla.) --- Tulsa (Okla.) --- Oklahoma --- Oklahoma Territory --- O.T. (Oklahoma Territory) --- OT (Oklahoma Territory) --- Ekelahema --- State of Oklahoma --- Sooner State --- Ogalahoma --- Oklahumma --- US-OK --- OK --- Okla. --- Territory of Oklahoma --- Indian Territory --- City of Muskogee (Okla.) --- Muscogee (Okla.) --- Muskogee, Okla. --- Race relations. --- Whites --- Lutheran Church --- African Americans --- Civil rights movements --- African American churches --- Clergy --- Civil rights --- History --- White people
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What was the effect of the Reformation movement on the parishioners of the German countryside? This book examines the reform movement at the level of its implementation - the rural parish. Investigation of the Reformation and the sixteenth-century parish reveals the strength of tradition and custom in village life and how this parish culture obstructed and frustrated the efforts of the Lutheran reformers. The Reformation was not passively adopted by the rural inhabitants. On the contrary, the parishioners manipulated the reform movement to serve their own ends. Parish documentation reveals that the system of parish rule diffused the disciplinary aims of the church and rendered the pastors impotent. A look at parish beliefs suggests that the nature of parish thought worked to undermine the main tenets of the Lutheran faith, and that the legacy of the Reformation was a dialogue between these two realms of experience.
Reformation --- Germany --- Brandenburg (Germany) --- History --- 16th century --- Ansbach --- Kulmbach --- Arts and Humanities --- Parishes --- Lutheran Church --- Bavaria (Germany) --- Social conditions. --- Church history --- Lutheranism --- Christian sects --- Church polity --- Protestant Reformation --- Counter-Reformation --- Protestantism --- Lutheran churches --- Bagoaria (Germany) --- Baiern (Germany) --- Bayern (Germany : Land) --- Beieren (Germany) --- Land Bayern (Germany) --- Freistaat Bayern (Germany) --- Baviera (Germany) --- Bavarska (Germany) --- Free State of Bavaria (Germany) --- Bavaria (Kingdom)
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the emergence of Christianity and denominations --- Adventist Churches --- Baptist Churches --- Brethren Churches --- Catholic Churches --- Christian Churches --- Congregational Churches --- Episcopal and Anglican Churches --- Friends (Quakers) Churches --- Fundamentalist, Bible, and Conservative Evangelical Churches --- Holiness Churches --- Lutheran Churches --- Mennonite Churches --- Methodist Churches --- Orthodox Churches --- Pentecostal Churches --- Presbyterian Churches --- cults --- Reformed Churches
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Adventist Churches --- Baha'i --- Baptist Churches --- Brethren Churches --- Pietist Churches --- Catholic Churches --- Christian Churches --- the Stone-Campbell Movement --- Congregational Churches --- Episcopal Churches --- Anglican Churches --- Friends --- Quakers --- Fundamentalist Churches --- Bible Churches --- Holiness Churches --- Hutterian Brethren --- Islam --- Jehovah's Witness --- Judaism --- Latter-day Saints --- Mormons --- Lutheran Churches --- Mennonite Churches --- Methodist Churches --- Native American religion --- Orthodox Churches --- Oriental Orthodox Churches --- Pentecostal Churches --- Presbyterian Churches --- Reformed Churches --- Salvation Army --- Schwenkfelder Church --- Spiritualism --- Theosophy --- Triumph the Church and Kingdom of Christ, International --- Unification Church --- Unitarian Universalist Association --- Unity School of Christianity and Association of Unity Churches --- Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches --- Worldwide Church of God --- United States --- denominations
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Clergy --- Christianity and politics --- Clergy members --- Clergymen --- Diocesan clergy --- Ecclesiastics --- Indigenous clergy --- Major orders --- Members of the clergy --- Ministers (Clergy) --- Ministers of the gospel --- Native clergy --- Ordained clergy --- Ordained ministers --- Orders, Major --- Pastors --- Rectors --- Secular clergy --- Religious leaders --- Political activity. --- Political activity --- Evangelical Lutheran Church in America --- Episcopal Church --- Protestant Episcopal Church in the U.S.A. --- Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America --- American Episcopal Church --- Protestant Episcopal Church --- Protestantlich-Bischöfliche Kirche der Vereinigten Staaten --- Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America --- ELCA --- American Lutheran Church (1961-1987) --- Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches (U.S.) --- Lutheran Church in America --- Commission for a New Lutheran Church --- ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) --- North American Lutheran Church
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