Michael B Aune | Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary (original) (raw)

Michael B Aune

I am a retired professor who taught the theologies and practices of Christian liturgy for 36 and a half years.
Address: Berkeley, California, United States

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Papers by Michael B Aune

Research paper thumbnail of A History of Lutheranism

Research paper thumbnail of What’s Needed in Theology?

Anticipating God's New Creation

Research paper thumbnail of Book Review: Holy People: A Liturgical EcclesiologyHoly People: A Liturgical Ecclesiology. By LathropGordon W., Minneapolis: Fortress, 1999. Pp. ix + 246. $29

Research paper thumbnail of The Changing World of Liturgy / Response

Anglican Theological Review, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Liturgy and theology : Rethinking the relationship

Research paper thumbnail of Liturgy and theology : Rethinking the relationship

Research paper thumbnail of The Corporate and Confessional Character of Worship: The Common Service Debate

Research paper thumbnail of �But only say the word�: Another look at Christian worship as therapeutic

Pastoral Psychology, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of ?But only say the word?: Another look at Christian worship as therapeutic

Pastoral Psychology, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of Using the Fictions of Ole Rolvaag and Arturo Islas to Reconsider Lutheran Identity in America

Dialog: A Journal of Theology, 2003

Lutheran Christianity needs a cultural medium just as the sacraments need physical elements. Yet,... more Lutheran Christianity needs a cultural medium just as the sacraments need physical elements. Yet, what happens when we become torn between cultural worlds, as immigrant bodies or migrant souls? Classroom wrestling with two novels, Ole Rølvaag's Giants in the Earth about Norwegian-Americans and Arturo Islas's Migrant Souls about Mexican-Americans discerns the dramatic tensions of living a hypenated existence.

Research paper thumbnail of The New Book of Concord

Dialog: A Journal of Theology, 2001

The New Book of Concord EDITOR'S NOTE:

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles. Part III: Rewriting the History of Protestant Theology in the 1920s

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2006

Abstract: This essay, the third in a series introducing “the veritable renaissance” of scholarly... more Abstract: This essay, the third in a series introducing “the veritable renaissance” of scholarly attention to Protestant theology in Germany in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, examines the larger context of Protestant theology in the 1920s and the question of whether it was now continuous or discontinuous with what had gone before. Then, using the study by Matthias Wolfes, Protestantische Theologie und moderne Welt, we look at the work of three hitherto and long forgotten theologians—Horst Stephan, Georg Wehrung, and Georg Wobbermin—each of whom developed distinctive approaches to theology and ask about their significance for us in the present.

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles . Part II: Rereading Theological Directions, 1900-19141

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles: Part I, Recent Scholarship on the History of Early 20th Century German Protestant Theology

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2004

This essay introduces ''the veritable renaissance'' of scholarly attention devoted to the theolog... more This essay introduces ''the veritable renaissance'' of scholarly attention devoted to the theologies of the early twentieth century. This ''renaissance'' challenges us to discard the ''Barthian spectacles'' through which we have been reading the theological history of this time and to examine more closely the complex context-social, political, churchly, cultural-in which theology was done.

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles: Conclusion?Might We Be "Liberals" After All

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2007

An image, a photograph, a quiz-and now, to introduce this fourth and final installment of "Discar... more An image, a photograph, a quiz-and now, to introduce this fourth and final installment of "Discarding the Barthian Spectacles," a recent report by R. R. Reno of Creighton University illustrating a still all-too-common perception of the liberal tradition in Christian theology in spite of "the veritable renaissance" of scholarly attention that it has received in recent decades.

Research paper thumbnail of A History of Lutheranism

Research paper thumbnail of What’s Needed in Theology?

Anticipating God's New Creation

Research paper thumbnail of Book Review: Holy People: A Liturgical EcclesiologyHoly People: A Liturgical Ecclesiology. By LathropGordon W., Minneapolis: Fortress, 1999. Pp. ix + 246. $29

Research paper thumbnail of The Changing World of Liturgy / Response

Anglican Theological Review, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Liturgy and theology : Rethinking the relationship

Research paper thumbnail of Liturgy and theology : Rethinking the relationship

Research paper thumbnail of The Corporate and Confessional Character of Worship: The Common Service Debate

Research paper thumbnail of �But only say the word�: Another look at Christian worship as therapeutic

Pastoral Psychology, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of ?But only say the word?: Another look at Christian worship as therapeutic

Pastoral Psychology, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of Using the Fictions of Ole Rolvaag and Arturo Islas to Reconsider Lutheran Identity in America

Dialog: A Journal of Theology, 2003

Lutheran Christianity needs a cultural medium just as the sacraments need physical elements. Yet,... more Lutheran Christianity needs a cultural medium just as the sacraments need physical elements. Yet, what happens when we become torn between cultural worlds, as immigrant bodies or migrant souls? Classroom wrestling with two novels, Ole Rølvaag's Giants in the Earth about Norwegian-Americans and Arturo Islas's Migrant Souls about Mexican-Americans discerns the dramatic tensions of living a hypenated existence.

Research paper thumbnail of The New Book of Concord

Dialog: A Journal of Theology, 2001

The New Book of Concord EDITOR'S NOTE:

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles. Part III: Rewriting the History of Protestant Theology in the 1920s

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2006

Abstract: This essay, the third in a series introducing “the veritable renaissance” of scholarly... more Abstract: This essay, the third in a series introducing “the veritable renaissance” of scholarly attention to Protestant theology in Germany in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, examines the larger context of Protestant theology in the 1920s and the question of whether it was now continuous or discontinuous with what had gone before. Then, using the study by Matthias Wolfes, Protestantische Theologie und moderne Welt, we look at the work of three hitherto and long forgotten theologians—Horst Stephan, Georg Wehrung, and Georg Wobbermin—each of whom developed distinctive approaches to theology and ask about their significance for us in the present.

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles . Part II: Rereading Theological Directions, 1900-19141

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles: Part I, Recent Scholarship on the History of Early 20th Century German Protestant Theology

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2004

This essay introduces ''the veritable renaissance'' of scholarly attention devoted to the theolog... more This essay introduces ''the veritable renaissance'' of scholarly attention devoted to the theologies of the early twentieth century. This ''renaissance'' challenges us to discard the ''Barthian spectacles'' through which we have been reading the theological history of this time and to examine more closely the complex context-social, political, churchly, cultural-in which theology was done.

Research paper thumbnail of Discarding the Barthian Spectacles: Conclusion?Might We Be "Liberals" After All

Dialog-a Journal of Theology, 2007

An image, a photograph, a quiz-and now, to introduce this fourth and final installment of "Discar... more An image, a photograph, a quiz-and now, to introduce this fourth and final installment of "Discarding the Barthian Spectacles," a recent report by R. R. Reno of Creighton University illustrating a still all-too-common perception of the liberal tradition in Christian theology in spite of "the veritable renaissance" of scholarly attention that it has received in recent decades.

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