Meeting Melanchthon, Scott Leonard Keith
Meeting Melanchthon, Scott Leonard Keith
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Meeting Melanchthon
A Brief Biographical Sketch of Philip Melanchthon and a Few Samples of His Writing

Author: Scott Leonard Keith

Narrator: Jeff Macare

Unabridged: 1 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/27/2019


Synopsis

Most scholars consider Melanchthon to be a Reformation enigma. He, the developer of the Reformation doctrine of forensic justification, is contrarily condemned as a synergist. Known well as the Protestant preceptor of Germany, he was Martin Luther's lifelong friend, colleague, teacher of Greek, and fellow reformer. Upon arriving at Wittenberg, Melanchthon was a theologian neither by trade nor by training. He was a classically trained expert in classical languages, neo-Latin poet, textbook author, Greek scholar, humanist, and above all, an educator Though he was offered a doctorate on several occasions, he was not a doctor of theology. Yet his influence on the protestant reformation of the 16th century is profound, both through the Loci Communes (the first Lutheran systematic theology) and the Augsburg Confession both of which came from his pen. Dr. Scott Keith, who has spent much time studying and translating this great reformer, has written this short biography by way of introduction. Also, Melanchthon speaks for himself in fresh translations of his work.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Kris on August 04, 2024

A helpful mini-biography of Melanchthon for the layman. The audiobook is only about two hours long. The first half discusses Melanchthon's background, upbringing, studies, writings, and interactions with Luther and others during the reformation. The second half consists of translations of Melanchtho......more

Goodreads review by Alex on September 22, 2025

It is a disjointed read due to it being a reprinting of blog posts. The translations Keith provides from Melanchton himself are worth the price of the book. I am reformed so there are some things I naturally differ with Melanchton on. However, I see why John Calvin was eager to call Melanchton "the......more