(L)Martin...
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Martin Luther's world view was summed up by a highly technical term, "ubiquity." Forged in the heat of sacramental controversy which tried to locate heaven and hell and Jesus in terms of up and down, Luther enjoyed simply proclaiming that Jesus was at the right hand of the Father (creed) and God obviously was in, with, and under every atom of all creation, upholding and nurturing. Christ is "ubiquitous." But there are masks hiding and disguising Christ through all creation except where the Word has promised to remove the masks, i.e., Word and Sacrament. This theology was an echo of the psalmist in Psalm 139, "If I make my bed in Sheol, thou art there" ... wherever I go, you are there. Paul's great word of hope read so often in funeral liturgies majestically proclaims the same: nothing (no thing) "... will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord."
- Cobb
Martin Luther's world view was summed up by a highly technical term, "ubiquity." Forged in the heat of sacramental controversy which tried to locate heaven and hell and Jesus in terms of up and down, Luther enjoyed simply proclaiming that Jesus was at the right hand of the Father (creed) and God obviously was in, with, and under every atom of all creation, upholding and nurturing. Christ is "ubiquitous." But there are masks hiding and disguising Christ through all creation except where the Word has promised to remove the masks, i.e., Word and Sacrament. This theology was an echo of the psalmist in Psalm 139, "If I make my bed in Sheol, thou art there" ... wherever I go, you are there. Paul's great word of hope read so often in funeral liturgies majestically proclaims the same: nothing (no thing) "... will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord."
- Cobb
