
Contents
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Biographical Sketch and Works Biographical Sketch and Works
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Medieval Backgrounds Medieval Backgrounds
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Musculus’s Doctrine of Scripture Musculus’s Doctrine of Scripture
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Musculus’s Exegesis Musculus’s Exegesis
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, 621 pp. , 621 pp.
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Commentariorum in Evangelistam Ioannem (1545b, 1548, 1554b), 973 pp. Commentariorum in Evangelistam Ioannem (1545b, 1548, 1554b), 973 pp.
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, 1702 pp. , 1702 pp.
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, 395 pp. , 395 pp.
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, 861 pp. , 861 pp.
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, 374 pp. , 374 pp.
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, 856 pp. , 856 pp.
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, 1 Cor., 782 cols.; 2 Cor., 416 cols. , 1 Cor., 782 cols.; 2 Cor., 416 cols.
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In Epistolas Apostoli Pauli, ad Galatas & Ephesios, Commentarij (1561), Gal., 228 pp.; Eph., 173 pp. In Epistolas Apostoli Pauli, ad Galatas & Ephesios, Commentarij (1561), Gal., 228 pp.; Eph., 173 pp.
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In Divi Pauli Epistolas ad Philippenses, Colossenses, Thessalonicenses ambas, & primam ad Timotheum, Commentarii (1565), 406 pp. In Divi Pauli Epistolas ad Philippenses, Colossenses, Thessalonicenses ambas, & primam ad Timotheum, Commentarii (1565), 406 pp.
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Further Reading Further Reading
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Works Cited Works Cited
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36 Wolfgang Musculus (1497–1563)
Get accessJordan J. Ballor (Dr. theol., University of Zurich; PhD, Calvin Theological Seminary) is Director of Research at the Center for Religion, Culture & Democracy. He is associate director of the Junius Institute for Digital Reformation Research at Calvin Theological Seminary and the Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics at Calvin University. His research focuses on Reformed theology, Christian social thought, and intellectual history. He is author of Covenant & Causality: A Study in the Theology of Wolfgang Musculus (2012).
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Published:19 November 2024
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Abstract
Wolfgang Musculus (1497–1560) was one of the most significant and prolific Reformed commentators on the Bible in the sixteenth century. Musculus’s background in the Benedictine order was formative for his approach to the relationship between Scripture and the Christian life, but after his embrace of Protestantism his lifelong focus on the Bible took the form of a large body of published work. His first commentary was published in 1544, and he would author works on sixteen different biblical books over ten separately published volumes. The order of his exegetical works closely followed a model proposed by his friend and fellow reformer Martin Bucer (1491–1551). Once Musculus began his exegetical labors, he continued them throughout the remainder of his career. His exegetical approach is characterized by a comprehensive and copious style, and his commentaries were renowned in the Reformed tradition for centuries.
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