[1545]: Mark 6:2 Were astonished, Luther adds: Seiner Lehre.
[1545]: 1 John 5:12 He that hath the Son, Luther adds: Gottes--of God.
[1545]: Matt. 1:18 Omit: Jesus.
[1545] Acts 13:33 reads: andern Psalm.
[1545]: Eph. 3:3: For: he made known, reads: was made known.
[1912]: 1 John 5:7: omits: There are three that bear record . . . and the Holy Ghost.   Eras- mus: Ed. 3-5 has it.   The Complutensian has it.   Tyndale has it, either from the Vulgate or Erasmus 3.
[1545]: Rev. 19:9: possibly omits: the marriage.

p. 147: 1, the Philipistic, of Mel. w/ the RCs and the Ref.ed; 2, the Antinomistic (1537-40, 1556), of Agr.; 3 ...

p. 148: syncretism (1655), pietism (1686), and rationalism (1751), and those connected with the Union, and....
Luther, Melanchthon, ....
The Conservative Pietistic, ..., embraces Hollazius, Starck,
Buddeus, Cyprian, ..., J. G. Walch, Pfaff, Mosheim, Ben-
gel, and Crusius.
..., to the transitional school belong Ernesti,
J. D. Michaelis, Semler, who prepared the way for rationalism,
and Zöllner; the principal members of the rationalistic school
were Greisbach, Koppe, J. G. Rosenmüller, Eich-
horn, Gabler, Bertholdt, Henke, Spittler, Eberhard,
and A. H. Niemeyer.

....
The founder of the distinctive theology of the nineteenth century was


p. 149: Schleiermacher (died 1834), the greatest of the defenders of
the union between the Lut.ran. and Ref.med Churches of
Germany.   Influencing all schools, he can be claimed for none.
Neander may be classed as pietistic supranaturalist, De Wette
as historico-critical rationalist
, Hase as philosophic-‘sthetic
rationalist.
supranaturalism proper, or suprarationalism, by E. G.
Bengel, Flatt, Heubner, Augusti, Hahn, Bohmer; .... The representatives of the "new" or "German" theol-
ogy, of the school of Schleiermacher, of Lut.ran origin, are
Lücke, Nitzsch, Julius Müller, Ullmann, ...,
Umbreit, Bleek, H. A. W. Meyer, Huther, Wieseler, and Tischendorf.

   The representatives of the Lut.ran theology, for the most
part, in its strictest sense, are... Delitzsch, ..., Caspari,
..., Keil, ..., and J. H. Kurtz.

p. 151: The universities...: 1, -- Tübingen, Giessen, Breslau, and Bonn; 2, -- Heidelberg, Greifswalde, Marburg, Königsberg, Halle, Erlangen, and Berlin; 3, -- Leipsic, Rostock, (Wittenberg, transferred to Halle in 1817, Jena, Kiel, and Göttingen; in Denmark, Copenhagen; in Norway, Christiania; in Sweden, Lund and Upsal; in Russia, Dorpat.

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