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Thomas Davis

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  • Revelation : Is Historical Fulfillment In The First And Fourth Cenuries

    $27.99

    The Revelation message is powerful and understandable when viewed through past historical events. This in-depth, easy-to-read book will cause you to reexamine your traditional beliefs about Revelation’s message to the church.

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  • This Is My Body

    $26.00

    Introduction
    1. His Completely Trustworthy Testament: The Development Of Luther’s Early Eucharistic Teaching, 1517-1521
    2. The Truth Of The Divine Words: Luther’s Sermons On The Eucharist, 1521-1528, And The Structure Of Eucharistic Meaning
    3. An Intermediate Brilliance: The Words Of Institution And The Gift Of Knowledge In Calvin’s Eucharistic Theology
    4. Not Hidden And Far Off: The Bodily Aspect Of Salvation And Its Implications For Understanding The Body In Calvin’s Theology
    5. Preaching And Presence: Constructing Calvin’s Homiletic Legacy
    6. Reflections On A Mirror: Calvin’s Preaching On Preaching (Deuteronomy 5)
    7. He Is Outwith The World…that He May Fill All Things: Calvin’s Exegesis Of The Ascension And It Relation To The Eucharist
    8. The Communication Of Efficacy: Calvin’s 1 Corinthians Commentary And The Development Of The Institutes
    9. Discerning The Body: The Eucharist And The Christian Social Body In 16th Century Protestant Exegesis
    10. Hardened Hearts, Hardened Words: Calvin, Beza, And The Trajectory Of Signification`

    Additional Info
    A leading scholar explores and analyzes the ways Calvin, Luther, and other Reformers understood the presence of Christ in the Eucharist.

    There are many general surveys of the Reformation available, and they all typically devote some space to how theologians such as Martin Luther and John Calvin understood the Lord’s Supper and Christ’s presence in the bread and wine. However, they usually do not provide a great deal of detail about the development of the Reformers’ thoughts or the finer elements of their respective opinions.

    This volume by Thomas Davis fills these gaps with a more narrowly focused study. He devotes several chapters to Luther and to Calvin, examining their use of language and their understanding of the presence of Christ, both in the Lord’s Supper and in the broader sense of his presence in the church.

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