08/01/2025
Editor’s Introduction: Ethics of Marriage and Family on the 500th Anniversary of Katie and Martin’s Wedding
[1] The Wedding of Katharina von Bora and Martin Luther on June 13, 1525 was an event that re-formed the understanding of marriage and family. This issue of the Journal of Lutheran Ethics explores what this wedding meant to Luther, to Bora, and to us today. [2] The first essay is an abridged version of […]
For Congregational Discussion: Ethics of Marriage and Family on the 500th Anniversary of Katie and Martin’s Wedding
For Congregational Discussion: This year marks the 500th anniversary of the wedding of Katharina Von Bora and Martin Luther. We at the Journal of Lutheran Ethics invite congregations to celebrate this event and discuss its meaning. Below is a four part series meant to help those organizing adult education in congregations to embrace this anniversary […]
Shocking and Necessary: The Marriage of Katharina von Bora and Martin Luther as an Act of Love and Resistance
Introduction [1] How should a paper on the marriage of Katharina von Bora and Martin Luther begin? You might expect it to begin with the colorful and well documented escape of twelve nuns, including Katharina, on Easter Eve, April 4, 1523, from the Cistercian convent of Marienthron, near Grimma, about 100 kilometers from Wittenberg, which […]
Luther’s Vision for Christ-centered Families and Brave, Equipped Congregations
[1] In 1525, Martin Luther encountered both the horror of the Peasants’ War and the joy of marriage. In his work, he acknowledges this—this constant presence of evil in the world and the comfort and joy of a loving home. This article presents lessons from Luther on the importance of acknowledging the existence of real […]
Coparenting with Jesus: How I’m Tackling the Hardships of Being a Single Parent with God‘s Grace
[1] Martin Luther said that parenting was holy work. He also admitted it was hard work. He was not a single parent, but Katie was after he died. Not only did she care for her own children, but those Martin and Katie had adopted children who were orphaned. This article is about the difficulties of […]
Families Raising Children into Safe, Healthy, and Equal Relationships
Introduction [1] For many years, I’ve been doing training about safe and healthy relationships in our ELCA churches. Often when I ask, “Who taught you about safe and healthy relationships?” I hear a lot of stammering “…uh…my parents, kinda…my teacher in health class…TV…the internet?” This was my experience as well, although we didn’t have the […]
Book Review Introduction: August/September 2025
In this edition we include two book reviews that are primarily reflections on ministry and history. Thomas Johnston’s review of Lowell Almen’s book, A Dream Eclipsed: A Fractured Quest for Greater Lutheran Unity, explores the history and trajectory of the formation of the ELCA from the perspective of a central figure in contemporary Lutheranism. Almen […]
Book Review: A Dream Eclipsed: A Fractured Quest for Greater Lutheran Unity by Lowell G. Almen
[1] As Lutheranism in North America undergoes a discernible identity crisis and rediscovery, no one has seen the developments of the Lutheran church like Lowell Almen, who served over 20 years as the Secretary of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Almen, ordained into the American Lutheran Church in 1967, oversaw the changing demographics of the Lutheran […]
Book Review: Montgomery: A White Preacher’s Memoir by Robert S. Graetz
[1] Robert Graetz’s memoir echoes through the years, from mid-1950’s Alabama, to the present. And we would do well to note the resonances in 2025, the 70th anniversary of the Montgomery bus boycott. [2] Graetz wrote his memoir in his early 60s, reflecting on the tumultuous events that had happened 35 years prior. He could’ve […]