EN Edition/root.log_EN4 root.log | Jan Hus on the Church: Scripture Alone as the Only Foundation Jan Hus on the Church: Scripture Alone as the Only FoundationThe previous installment of [root.log] examined the life of Jan Hus. This one turns to his theology. If his biography establishes Hus as a forerunner of the Reformation, his theological writings make the case beyond dispute. The organizing principle of his entire body of work is the same rallying cry that would define the Reformation a.. 2026. 5. 25. root.log | The Goose Who Sang at the Stake: Jan Hus and the Reformation's Forgotten Prologue The Goose Who Sang at the Stake: Jan Hus and the Reformation's Forgotten PrologueChurch historians generally agree that the late medieval church reached its nadir of corruption in the century before Luther. What is less often acknowledged is that the fire Luther would set in Wittenberg had already been kindled—twice—before he was born. We examined the first of those sparks in an earlier root.log.. 2026. 4. 25. root.log | Why Reformed Churches Do Not Observe Lent There are aspects of Korean church culture that settle into the background so gradually, you barely notice them — until one day you do. Lent was one of those moments for me. The church I attend holds to the confessional standards of the Reformed tradition, so Lent was never front and center. Yet as Easter approached each year, the observance of Holy Week had long been a settled fixture of congre.. 2026. 3. 25. root.log | The Morning Star of the Reformation: The Theology of John Wycliffe The man who carried the lamp before the Reformation’s flameAt the close of the fourteenth century, the Roman Catholic Church stood at the height of its power. A single word from the Pope could determine the fate of kings, and the Bible remained sealed away from ordinary believers — considered too dangerous, too sacred for common hands. Into this darkness, John Wycliffe (1330–1384) stepped forwar.. 2026. 2. 27. 이전 1 다음