@article{Gregersen_2010, title={Protestantisme med kød og blod}, volume={73}, url={https://tidsskrift.dk/dtt/article/view/106440}, DOI={10.7146/dtt.v73i4.106440}, abstractNote={<p>In this article, “Protestantism with blood and flesh”, it is argued that a Lutheran theology cannot and should not be reduced to general Protestant principles. Luther’s theology emerged as a result of renewed attentiveness to the basic expressions of the gospel: the audible word of God, the visible sacraments, the bodily aspects of communal life, and the evangelical signs of creation. The so-called Protestant Principles, at their best, are to be regarded as second-order and summarizing expressions of the primary life-utterances of the church, and of the corresponding experiences in ordinary life. Moreover, at a closer inspection the exclusive particles such as solo Christo and sola fide are to be taken as inclusive particles that provide a participation in God, enacted in faith, hope and love.</p>}, number={4}, journal={Dansk Teologisk Tidsskrift}, author={Gregersen, Niels Henrik}, year={2010}, month={dec.}, pages={253–270} }