The bondage of the will: a treatise by Martin Luther, against Erasmus of Rotterdam

Moscow, Idaho: Canon Classics. Edited by Henry Cole & Douglas Wilson (2020)
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Abstract

"a man cannot be thoroughly humbled until he comes to know that his salvation is utterly beyond his own powers, counsel, endeavors, will, and works, and absolutely depending on the will, counsel, pleasure, and work of another, that is, of God only." So speaks Luther in his greatest book, On the Bondage of the Will. In this book, Luther replies to the arguments of Erasmus of Rotterdam, who had pointed to all the commands in Scripture, and believed that they implied that man could obey them. Luther replied that such an argument emptied the Gospel of its power. Luther throwing plenty of entertaining bombshells and insults along the way, but he also gets right to the heart on issues such as grace, human sinfulness, predestination, and man's need for absolute grace and forgiveness.

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On the Freedom of the Will.Desiderius Erasmus - 1969 - In Martin Luther, Desiderius Erasmus, E. Gordon Rupp & Philip S. Watson (eds.), Luther and Erasmus: Free will and salvation. Philadelphia,: Westminster Press. pp. 35--100.
The Lutheran Riposte.Philip S. Watson - 1969 - In Martin Luther, Desiderius Erasmus, E. Gordon Rupp & Philip S. Watson (eds.), Luther and Erasmus: Free will and salvation. Philadelphia,: Westminster Press. pp. 12--28.

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