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Gisle Johnson

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951:. His revivalism and experientialism remains tethered to confessional and biblical qualities, and his work contains copious quotations from the original Hebrew and Greek of the Old and New Testaments in tandem with Latin quotations from Confessions and Creeds, along with the occasion quotation from a Lutheran figure (such as Luther himself) in German. This underlying structuring from confessional and biblical material seems to indicate that his theology proceeds along an objective canonical and traditional level even though constructed subjectively and inductively from the presuppositions of faith. Helpfully, Preus has observed that, for Erlangen theologians, "personal experience was merely the starting point, not the vindication." Likewise, this helps explain the "groundwork" or "outline" nature of his thought, which is dense and almost scholastic in efficiency, proceeding from point to point with clear wording, focused logical progression of concepts, and copious footnoting of biblical and confessional material in the original languages. Even the focus on faith sets itself apart from similar treatments by Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard, and Dorner, revolving strongly around assumptions of ontological and essential properties cast in a classically Lutheran Law/Gospel paradigm. Gisle's theology would go on to reshape the theological landscape of Norway and, subsequently, influence a generation of Norwegian immigrants to America. As such, although his writing and charisma seems to have waned toward the end of his career, Nostbakken concludes his analysis of Gisle's theological influence by stating "...the fact remains that Johnson has been the single most influential theologian in Norway's history. A wider knowledge of his works is deserved" (Nostbakken, 226). 551:
inductive, once again worked out from the order of faithful knowing, beginning with soteriology, moving onto anthropology, and ending with theology proper, which he sees as the pinnacle of faith's exploration (s. 61). As confessionally Lutheran, it is unsurprising to see that Gisle immediate proceeds from faith to justification, which he believes to be a once-for-all objective and forensic reality of double-imputation: "justification is an act of judgement on God's part, whereby He in His heart looks upon, considers, recognises and declares the sinner, who in himself is unrighteous, to be righteous," a work which "finds its source in the grace of God" (s. 64). Here Gisle extends a family analogy to justification by way of adoption, lending it a personal quality and defining it from Romans 5:19 as "the objective restoration of his fellowship with God, previously disturbed by sin. The justified sinner is thus objectively reconciled to God and reunited with Him" (s. 64).
736:), which he outlines in three parts: "1) according to its principle, 2) according to its development or activity and 3) according to its purpose" (p. 5). Using agricultural language, Gisle describes the ethical Faithlife as growing and blossoming like a sprout, also moving into a family analogy by way of comparison between a child and father. The Christian faith "manifests itself through love," and as such, "The believer's love for God is essentially the love of the child of God for his heavenly Father in Christ, grateful love in return for the God of love, gratitude to God for His grace revealed in Christ and accepted in faith" (pp. 5-6). The virtue-principle of the Faithlife is what Gisle designates "Faithlove" ( 625:
the power of God's Word to bring grace, work faith, enlighten and quicken, but also of the unique authority and perfection of the Word of God. It sees in the Word of Scripture the only absolutely pure source of truth: the generative principle for all that it otherwise, can possess of the "Word of God" - the basic source for all Christian understanding and the foundation for all Christian faith. Indeed, as the pure source of truth, this Word essentially also is the unshakeable and infallible rule, norm and touchstone for all Christian understanding and proclamation of truth, and, as the sure foundation of the Church's faith, essentially also the invariable norm for its faith" (
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itself as the fruit of the development, is potentially present from the beginning, a sprout, which thus forms the starting point, the basis for the entire development, yes, is the subject of the development itself, that which in and through the development unfolds of itself the content of its hidden life and thus carries the whole development forward by its inner power. If the church doctrine is now the same as the church's confession of faith developed by reflection, it is thus a given that the starting point of the development, its living, fruitful sprout, can only be this church's confession in its original, basic form, independent of all reflection ("Introduction").
224:. It was a Haugean, Ole Pedersen Noe, who would influence Johnson to pursue vocational ministry. Likewise, Christian Thistedal (1813–1876), a teacher at the Christiansand Latin School, was also a profound theological influence on Johnson, educating him in the more formal aspects of theology including Greek, Hebrew, and Syriac prior to his entrance to the university, and acquainting him with Lutheran dogmaticians and confessionalism. During his time in the university Gisle excelled in his studies, reading well beyond his required course of study and digesting literature from 686:
Trinity revealed in the cosmos. The Son appears in the stewardship of salvation as the one Mediator between God and man, precisely because in God's causal relationship to the world He has from the beginning been in the position of Mediator between God and the world. In the same way, the Spirit appears in the former as the indwelling principle of the new life in the hearts of believers precisely because in the latter He has from the beginning been the inherent principle of life in the world" (s. 158).
584:...hat gracious act of God whereby He by His Spirit creates faith in Christ in the sinner' s heart, and, in the same moment in which He thus has opened it for His gift of grace, also in the Spirit, takes up residence in the heart and bestows upon i t of the fulness of His life. Regeneration thus becomes a union of two factors, of which the one (the gift of faith) is the necessary prerequisite for justification, and the other (the gift of the Holy Spirit) its necessary sequel. 821:
controversies, and thus wished to take himself out of the spotlight in light of new and emerging beliefs from Continental Europe (Nostbakken 267). As such, "His material was in order and systematically presented, but he seemed to have lost the dynamic presentation that had characterized his early lectures" (Nostbakken 222). Ousland thus states that "when he took over church history in the mid-70s, his influence as a lecturer was also over" (Ousland, 41).
147: 38: 732:: "The Task of Ethics thus becomes, more precisely, that of recognizing the Christian Faith-Life, as it emerges with inner necessity from the Essence of Faith in the specifically expressed Form, in which this is presented to us in both of the prior main parts of the Systematic Theology" (p. 3). Ethics thus proceeds as a principled expansion of the new life of faith afforded by the Holy Spirit, his "Faithlife" ( 489:
Author and Preserver, and about himself as its transgressor, becomes also for the Christian unshakeable truth. Nevertheless, there is one point at which Christian faith becomes diametrically opposed to legalistic faith. While man in the latter sees himself to be the object of God's wrath because of his sin, in the former he is convinced in spite of his sin that he is the object of God's grace. (s. 53)
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for mankind." Here Gisle mirrors Kierkegaard by outlining his own the three stages of faith: the Egotistic, Legalist, and Christian (or Ethical) Faith, and moved toward traditional Lutheran categories of salvation by grace alone through faith alone. As such, although faith is a natural state of humanity, saving, Christian faith is both continuous and discontinuous with the prior stages of faith:
934:'s statement of exigency, that "emergency situations break all laws" (Koren, vi). Although his teaching on this was meant to appeal to both high and low church alike, it has been variously received, and Nostbakken notes that "In attempting to fuse two different elements within the church Johnson never really succeeded In pleasing anyone" (Nostbakken 234). 350:
serious events in his life." Likewise, Nostbakken considers that Gisle's reticence to address certain issues and his recension from the public eye in later years may have been due to this naturally-withdrawn character: He was timid and cautious. He had a natural tendency to rely on the authority of others" (Nostbakken 267).
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the Formula Concord, which he believes to have helpfully preserved the mystery of God's will and the free agency of human volition, leaving God free from being the author of sin (p. 350). Similar constructive maneuvers are found throughout the work, handling source material from patristic period past the Reformation.
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Confessionalism and Pietism are, in fact, the defining theological controls for Gisle's system: "...the basic controlling assumptions that molded and shaped the theology and churchmanship of Gisle Johnson, are to be found within these two movements." As such, although fitting generally within the school of
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What we would most like to denote with this expression is the childlike awe of God, the holy respect for his absolute majesty, which in the believer's heart is the subjective reflection of God's objective majesty and glory. The believer's love for God is not love for an inferior being or for a fellow
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Already as Trust in God, the Believer's love of God essentially refers to the Future; when the heart willingly places all its affairs in God's hand and lets him advise, it essentially loves God for what he still has in mind to do. The believer's trust in God is his love for Him as the one who will do
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Here, too, the Holy Spirit appears as the 'Spirit of life.' He is the principle of Life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, enters the world and is immediately present and active in it. The Trinity of God, as revealed in the plan of salvation, finds its necessary basis and prerequisite in this
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And just as this life is a spiritual life, so also is its communication first and foremost a work of the Spirit of God, depending on God’s gift of his Spirit to the sinner. By taking up residence in heart of the sinner and uniting with his spirit, but sinking down into the inner, central point of the
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Gisle intentionally begins with what amounts to a prolegomena to theology based on the presuppositions of human faith: "As Christian Pistics, it is the task of systematic theology to understand that unique form of man' s personal being that is known as Christian faith, as something true and necessary
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As such, Nostbakken evaluates, "Johnson, as a person was quiet and shy, his preaching was quiet and restrained, but its effect was to cause a religious awakening, to sweep through country" (Nostbakken, 227). In his personal life, it is notable that Johnson is depicted as being personally generous and
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Nonetheless, Gisle's passion for theological experience lent his preaching and lecturing career a great deal of charisma. J.C. Heuch had recorded that "he was so gripped by the forcefulness and the interest of Johnson's lectures that on more than one occasion he caught himself sitting with mouth open
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Gisle Johnson's dogmatic distinguishes itself on several levels. Svein Åge Christoffersen describes Gisle's theological personality as a unique blend of a revivalist theology, an experiential theology, and a confessional theology within the Lutheran tradition. Indeed, Trygve Skarsten has argued that
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is a careful and concerted integration of the historical theological debates that he believed undergirded and vindicated the truth of the Lutheran Confessionalism. Likewise, whereas the former two works focused on dogmatic and ethical integration of biblical, theological, and philosophical concepts,
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he development of the ecclesiastical doctrine is an organic development. But an organic development necessarily includes a sprout, from which the development emerges. Also the organic development of the ecclesiastical doctrine presupposes a sprout, in which that which, after the development presents
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The concept of ecclesiastical doctrine, which is the rediscovery of the dogma of history, is the church's common confession of faith as it exists in a conceptually developed and determined form mediated by scientific and theological reflection. Insofar as theology sets itself the task of recognizing
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This divine intervention in the order of nature can only bring with it a disturbing influence, in so far as it already previously has been disturbed by the corrupting influence of sin. Since the natural order is a work of God, it must rather be said to be predisposed for the supernatural, miraculous
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The progress of the work itself is keen to analyze theological and controversial writings cross-denominationally, but through the lens of Lutheran Confessionalism. The chapter on predestination, for example, is highly critical of the thought of Zwingli and Calvin, responding from the perspective of
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This fear of God is profoundly doxologically-oriented, revolving around a recognition of the goal of all things in glorifying God: "The relevant revelation of this believer's childlike awe of God is the tribute that he gives to Him, that he honors Him as his God, gives Him the honor due to Him, and
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Faithlife also proceeds along lines of trust and hope. "Just as the believer's love for God in general is the subjective reflection of God's love for him in Christ, so, in particular, his childlike trust in God is also the reflection of the faithfulness and omnipotence of the divine Father's love."
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The order of grace is different from the order of nature. The restoration of the original world order disturbed by sin, which is the goal of God's grace, cannot be the result of a divine activity that limits itself to the preservation and continuation of the natural forces and laws once established
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Structurally, it is interesting that Gisle returns to a consideration of faith prior to his final discussion of theology proper. According to Gisle, this is because of the radical change that Christian faith undergoes from its prior legalist state (s. 147). God is conceived of, from the perspective
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As such, Gisle's theology of faith and regeneration carefully balances both subjective and objective realities, with obvious Pietistic and revivalist qualities. Yet Gisle's ecclesiology extends his considerations of this new life principle of faith to the social and corporate level, an extension of
240:, and others. In 1845 Johnson passed his university exit examinations "with distinctions," and was soon after offered the post of lecturer of theology, which he turned down in favor of a scholarship to study theology abroad in Germany beginning in 1846. There, he became profoundly influenced by the 719:
Christian ethics we call ‘systematic theology,’ insofar as it appears as the systematic recognition of the Christian life of faith or of faith as a principle for a new moral life. It is the essential other side of the Christian faith, which here becomes the object of consideration, the side, after
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We can also go no further. It is not possible for us to come to any living picture of God's triune essence, as long as we walk in faith. To that extent it will thus always remain for the believer an impenetrable mystery, an enigma of the faith which can only be fully revealed when believing itself
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Here, in a large footnote, Gisle cites classic prooftexts for the infallibility of Scripture (e.g. 2 Timothy 3:16 & 2 Pt. 1:21) along with Lutheran Confessional material (Form. Cone., S.D., Article II, 14. Article XI, 12; Apol., Pref., IX; Article II, 108; Augsb. Conf., Article XXVIII, 49). He
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ability not only to effect the saving activity of God's Word, but also to correct the ecclesiastical proclamation of the Word and purity of those elements of human error which could become mixed into it. In this way, the Church believes itself to have a word which is in full possession not only of
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As Christ receives individual sinners into life fellowship with Himself, He thereby at the same time places them in a characteristic organic relationship with each other, which we call the "communion of the saints." In so doing He brings them together out of the world into a new human society, and
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The relationship between legalistic faith and Christian faith excludes any possibility of immediate transfer from one to the other. True, Christian faith finds its definite basis in legalistic faith. That which man through the mediation of the Law has understood about its content, about God as its
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with a discussion of the Trinity, which he believes to be the pinnacle of the revelation of the economy of God in relation to the Christian faith. Here he distinguishes between the salvific Trinity and the Trinity of the Cosmos, the latter of which being deduced from causality (s. 158). Even here
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portion, then, it is unsurprising to see that Gisle extends this scientific and ordered consideration of faith to the realm of theological propositions, which he believes to be the necessary objective relation to the subjective essence of faith (s. 61). Here, Gisle's order of theology is somewhat
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Finally, for Gisle, the entirety of the self-revelation of God's grace in history is directed toward the manifestation of his glory: "God's plan for the world, on the other hand, is a product of His absolute freedom and an expression of His absolute glory. Its goal is to reveal this glory in the
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the formal perfection of Scripture belongs in part its organic unity in the inner continuity and harmonic agreement between all its various parts. To this perfection belongs in part also a clarity which certainly does net exclude all obscurity, but nevertheless makes it possible not only for the
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From the three basic connections in which it is objectively perceived by the conscious mind, systematic theology is divided into three parts. These may be called Christian Pistics or the teaching concerning the nature of faith, Christian dogmatics, or the teaching concerning the truth-content of
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s. 86-89). As such, in the preface to the 1898 publication (actually a publication of Gisle's lecture notes from 1890-1891), Wølner-Hansen writes, "Professor Dr. Gisle Johnson’s lectures on the history of dogma have rightly been regarded as one of the best of the late, highly esteemed teacher's
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It is hard, then, to conclude with Nostbakken that Gisle held to only a salvific view of Scripture. On the contrary, the "material perfection" and "formal perfection" of Scripture is viewed as significant for the organic growth of the church's confession and the certainty of the believer on the
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People poured into the meeting place and sat spellbound while he spoke, often for as long as two hours. His words seemed to grip his hearers with an almost mystic power. He was not an emotional preacher, but he was a strong preacher of repentance. One is reminded of the awakening under Jonathan
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a work which incorporates a Kierkegaardian-style prolegomena on faith in its three stages, followed by a dogmatic account stemming from realities of justification and regeneration. It was this focus on faith and the new birth that would prove to be a particular element of emphasis in Johnson's
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As such an organic development, the development of the teaching concept also appears as a, as it has been called, dialectical development. It is organic in its content, dialectical in its form. Dialectical is a development that progresses through contradictions, and whose result appears as the
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In 1875 Gisle Johnson left the Chair of Theology at the University of Kristiana and took up the Chair of History. The reason for this move is variously evaluated; Nostbakken considers that Johnsons was burnt-out from his involvement in the revival movement as well as his involvement in various
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This future orientation of the Christian Faith character, taking it out of this world and directing it toward the next: "The believer's hope gives his whole life of will a heavenly direction and as it thus determines the goal of his endeavor, it also bestows upon him the power of steadfast and
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The Christian Faithlove can thus be said to be the principle for the believer's voluntary life in a double meaning, 1) insofar as the immediate feeling of desire for God that moves the will is the determining motive of the relevant voluntary life, its motive, but secondly 2) also insofar as it
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With regards to Gisle's doctrine of Scripture, Nostbakken has asserted that Gisle held to a salvific or functional, but not formal or material, view of biblical authority (Nostbakken, 184-193). Yet Gisle speaks directly about the "purity" of Scripture, that "it can truly become the unshakeable
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Gisle Johnsons' personality is depicted as reserved and yet conscience-driven. Ousland writes of his earliest youth, that "Gisle had a sensitive mind as a child, and he retained this character trait throughout his life. He could easily be overwhelmed by change, as happened several times during
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demonstrates his broad and eclectic exposure to figures from Nestorius to Chemnitz. The dogmatic historical analysis in these late lectures thus may provide a clearer picture into the objective doctrinal and confessional backbone that Gisle aimed toward in his subjective constructions in the
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On July 17, 1894 he died in his sleep. During his last days he spoke of the nearness of his salvation in Christ. On the day before his death when questioned as to whether or not he held firmly to reconciliation in Christ, he answered, "Ja visselig" (yes, certainly). Those were his last words
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The peculiarity of Johnson's Ethics lies in his attempt to find a purely religious and Christian foundation for it. He presents the matter as a part of his theological system not merely as something which is appended, but as an integral part. The doctrine of Christian moral life-activity is
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Every other Saturday evening the theological students had a standing invitation to come to the home of Gisle Johnson. These gatherings were not just theological 'bull sessions' with the professor. From Gisle Johnson's side, they were an attempt to lead the students into a personal type of
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of the Christian faith, as a God of grace, and this leads Gisle to recount God's historical dealings with his people, including a consideration of Israel, the covenants, and the historical transmission of Scripture (s. 152). Here Gisle's discussion turns cosmic, considering the
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Sticking close to classical theological categories, Gisle goes on to state that the church is "both an invisible and visible fellowship," and "essentially a holy one," "the only one of its kind, and therefore also universal," citing the Apostolic and Nicene Creeds (ss. 87–88).
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human being or for a merely relatively superior being, it is love for an object that is absolutely exalted above the loving subject. For the believer as a child of God receives God as the heavenly Father, to whom he owes everything he is and has, his Creator, Savior and Lord.
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Gisle's ethics is thus somewhat unique in its relationship to dogmatics and faith on the one hand, and its implementation of strongly pietist and revivalist characteristics on the other. Rooting ethics in dogmatics was nothing new during his time, the ethics of
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Over and against the Grundtvigian position of experience over Scripture and tradition, Gisle argued for the sufficiency and authority of Scripture and the need for Lutheran Confessionalism, referring to it as "fanaticism" (Christoffersen, 194). Together with
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This University offered me such a rich assortment (samling) of all that could possibly have been of interest and meaning for my studies, that ... if I had been able to spend another half year abroad would in a moment have thought of nothing other than
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sinner’s personal existence as living, inviolable seed, the Holy Spirit makes him a new spiritual man. But this whole activity that brings God’s Spirit and life appears at this point to the believer’s consciousness as mediated through Christ (s. 73).
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goes on to state that, "Its material perfection consists in the fact that it contains an absolutely faithful and trustworthy reproduction of Christ's Word which is at once absolutely complete and absolutely pure," and describes its perspicuity as
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Nostbakken observes that here Gisle "made some attempt at a union between Christianity and culture" and that his ethical emphases in society tended toward "bringing together widely divergent elements in the society of his day" (Nostbakken, 218).
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inseperable from the conception of faith as living. The Pistics establishes the origin and the essence of faith; the Dogmatic presents the content of faith; and the Ethic presents the practice of faith active in love" (Nostbakken, 219).
465:("for use in lectures as presented by Gisle Johson"), also indicates the strong association between the work and Gisle's lecturing career and points to their nature as introductory materials, or 'essentials,' for students of divinity. 505:, s. 7), the development of which he holds is organically related to the individuals and proceeds by way of existential conflict. As such, although other theologians had attempted a more traditional exploration of fiath as a separate 452:
can variously be translated "groundworks," "outlines," "essentials," "elements," or "foundations," and was used by other Scandinavian theologians to denote introductory sketches to the field of dogmatics, e.g. Thomas Ralston's 1851
185:. He was a son of engineer and architect Georg Daniel Barth Johnson (1794–1872). His grandfather, also Gisle Johnson (d. 1829), was an Icelandic minister who immigrated to Norway after theological training in Copenhagen. He studied 850:
Implementing more organicist language, Johnson desires to tie confessionalism to the organic growth of the faith of the individual in relation to the society of the church; using an agricultural metaphor found also in the
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determines the basic direction of the will itself from this feeling is a peculiar new Volitional-life in its real Beginning, a positive Life Force, which out of itself produces the corresponding relevant Life Movement.
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Although reserved for the end of the work, Gisle's doctrine of the Trinity thus stands as an apex of his dogmatic, wherein the prior elements of his faith-system converge. This is the highest mystery of faith, and as
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ecclesiastical doctrinal concepts in the form in which they actually exist at the present time, it receives the name of 'ecclesiastical symbol' which it has become, what it is now, it is usually called dogma-history.
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world and its voluntary or involuntary recognition by the world - in salvation or perdition," going on to describe "the development of the world to its goal" as "the revelation of His glory" (s. 155). Gisle ends his
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At the close of the work Gisle makes special application of ethics in its societal elements, considering the Christian's duty to the world as a sort of extension of the grace-restores-nature concept found in the
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patient endurance in this endeavor, under all the tribulations of this world" (p. 16). Yet Faithlife also contains an aspect of the fear of God, which is akin to reverence and not mutually-exclusive from love:
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Such a new and organic society finds its manifestation in the person of Christ the Mediator, which is Gisle's grounds for considering the centrality of the work and person of Christ, following the traditional
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Nonetheless, the switch to a dogmatic history fits Gisle's overall doctrinal direction toward a stalwart Lutheran confessionalism and the tendencies of the Erlangen school, where Thomasius had also written a
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Church as a whole, but also for each individual who possesses the necessary natural and spiritual subjective prerequisites, to find satisfaction in it for his need for an inspired Word from God (s. 115).
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Edwards when one reads about Johnson that when in a thin and quiet voice he read the words 'There is no peace for the ungodly, saith my God' a visible tremor ran through the audience (Nostbakken, 227).
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intended originally as the final installment of his broader dogmatic treatment but published posthumously, begins by continuing his own consideration of faith as a scientific theological endeavor:
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of Christ as prophet, priest, and king. It is here that Gisle will also consider biblical inspiration and authority, sacraments, and church offices, representative of Lutheran Christocentrism.
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of the discovery of a definite goal promised by God himself in the Word, which the heart has thus grasped in advance, as if it were already present, there it receives the name of hope (p. 14).
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is highly experiential, it is also intended to establish a definite ontological basis for the construction of his dogmatic in the second part. Gisle's method is self-consciously "scientific" (
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As such, instead of considering the switch to dogmatic history a recension for Gisle, it might be more helpful to consider it a more concerted culmination of his theological aims. Unlike the
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During his lifetime Johnson was known not only as a theologians and revivalist, but also involved himself in the various ideological debates of his day at as what would today be called a
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From justification Gisle then turns to regeneration and the reality of this new life of faith. This he sees as consisting in two parts: the creative initiation of the new life principle (
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preaching ministry, which focused on the need for God's grace in the heart, a ministry which appealed to laypeople and ministers alike and which became known as the Johnsonian Revivals.
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When Johnson returned to Norway, he brought with him an eclectic mix of German theology, pietism, and Lutheran Confessionalism, which emerges in his most significant theological work,
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thereby makes them members of a spiritual body of which He is the head: the organic, living life-communicating central point, controlling all things and directing all things (s. 86).
244:, which appealed to his own theological sensibilities by its appeal to Scripture, Confessions, and religious experience as its threefold religious principles. He later reflected, 373:
Christianity and a living faith. The sessions were always informal, full of fun and laughter. Toward the close of the evening Gisle Johnson would usually lead in devotions.
1278:"An Outline of Systematic Theology," trans. Johan Koren, in Johan Koren, "A Teacher and Two Students: Gisle Johnson and His Influence on Norwegian-American Lutheranism." 354:
and pen fallen on the desk completely fascinated by the address" (Nostbakken, 223). In fact, with regards to his preaching ministry and revivalism, he was likened to
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Johnson's work is thus not meant to be a comprehensive dogmatic theology, but an introductory framework for the task of confessional theology. The subtitle,
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faith, and Christian ethics, or the teaching concerning the life of faith. Systematic theology finds its total content in these three disciplines... (s. 1)
1331:"Gisle Christian Johnson: the first Kierkegaardian in theology?" in Kierkegaard's Influence on Theology: Anglophone and Scandinavian Protestant Theology 1385: 571:). The causal realities of this process he wishes to allocate properly to the Holy Spirit, with keen attention to the united work of the Trinity: 1410: 1395: 301: 1405: 923:, he worked diligently to translate both Scripture and the Book of Concord into Norwegian for accessibility to pastor and layperson alike. 616:
foundation for the Church's faith, the unceasing source and infallible basic norm for its realisation of faith and proclamation of truth" (
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Trust conjoins virtues such as perseverance and patience, whereas hope has a telic and eschatological outlook, and the two are related:
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As such, in reflecting on the life of his father, Jonathan Johnson recounted several stories in reflecting on Gisle's sense of humor.
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comprise three volumes of what Gisle envisioned to be a full dogmatic treatment of the Christian faith; in the introduction to his
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In the introduction, Gisle attempts to situate the importance of his work within the greater sphere of his dogmatic project:
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Likewise, and with the issue of lay preaching, Gisle attempted to come to a confessionally-consistent application of the
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which it shows itself to be active in life, intervenes in the life of will as a controlling and determining power (p. 1).
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Raised in a Pietist Lutheran family, Johnson was deeply influenced from an early age by the revivalistic preaching of
1375: 1226: 829:). The move toward articulating doctrine within historical progress thus fits well with what he had written in his 385:
Gisle's theology was contained over the course of three volumes, a compact consideration of faith and dogma in his
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in the world. It necessarily requires a new divine creation, God's intervention in the existing world (s. 154).
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The Theology of Johan Christian Konrad von Hofmann with Special Reference to His Hermeneutical Principles
778:, His Glory" (p. 17). It is in his consideration of the fear of God that Gisle exposits a taxonomy from 308:
in 1866 and made a Commander 1st class in 1882. In 1879, he was conferred an honorary doctorate by the
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The theology of Gisle Christian Johnson: an inquiry into its sources, its nature and its significance
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Here, Gisle's thought merges organicist concepts of being with Hegelian concepts of becoming:
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pertaining to the organic growth and development of the church in relation to the Word (
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everything well for him in the future. Where now this trust in God appears as confident
1003: 912: 294: 290: 237: 221: 194: 666:
As such, God's grace properly conceived does not supersede creation, but restores it:
1222: 1218: 1152: 920: 869:
product of the overcoming and cancellation of these contradictions ("Introduction").
305: 278: 210: 1108:(Dissertation). Princeton, NJ: Princeton Theological Seminary. pp. 34, 43, 227. 567:
lit. 'rebirth'), and the ongoing sanctifying process, which he designates renewal (
321: 233: 1008: 944: 908: 681:
Gisle extends his organic concepts of being and life to the work of the Trinity:
241: 1043: 1210: 800: 214: 1359: 931: 313: 77: 1280:. Plymouth, MN: Association Free Lutheran Theological Seminary. p. 10. 178: 1027: 1086:
Gisle Johnson: A Study of the Interaction of Confessionalism and Pietism
536:
or "living faith" / "Faith-life," and likening it to a blossoming tree.
157:(10 September 1822 – 17 July 1894) was a leading 19th-century Norwegian 1137: 182: 158: 174: 1299:] (in Norwegian). Kristiana, Norway: Jacob Dybwabs. pp. 1–5. 329: 202: 146: 517:
Gisle represents a unique blend of emphasis on ontology and being (
317: 198: 186: 81: 948: 1348:. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Theological Seminary. pp. 30–31. 1246:(in Norwegian). Oslo: Lutherstiftelsens Forlgag. pp. 12-13. 1244:
En kirkehøvding: professor Gisle Johnson som teolog og kirkemann
827:
Die christliche Dogmengeschichte (History of Christian Dogmatics
37: 283:
Theologisk Tidskrift for den evangelisk-lutherske Kirke i Norge
170: 150:
Gisle Christian Johnson monument at VĂĽr Frelsers gravlund, Oslo
1318:] (in Norwegian). Kristiana: Jacob Dybwads. Introduction. 1088:. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago. pp. 2, 54, 82. 437:
also published posthumously, which will be discussed below.
479:
bear the marks of a sophisticated ordered dogmatic. In the
325: 285:
which he edited until 1891. Religiously he followed strict
803:
being just a few examples. Nonetheless, Nostbakken notes,
440: 501:) and his concern is to ascertain the essence of faith ( 1154:
13 profiler ved Det teologiske fakultet gjennom 180 ĂĽr
1127:] (in Norwegian). Kristiana, Norway: Jacob Dybwabs. 426:
A potential fourth element of Johnson's thought is the
320:, Norway. Both Gisle Johnsons plass in the district of 812: 700: 169:
Gisle Christian Johnson was born at Fredrikshald (now
855:
he likens this historical growth to that of a sprout:
563:) in the heart of the sinner, formally regeneration ( 657:
of God's economy and the restoration of all things:
463:
til Brug ved ForelĂŚsninger udgivet af Gisle Johnson
899:although more work needs to be done in this area. 269:), in 1863 the Lutheran Church Official Journal ( 1357: 1041: 647: 493:Significantly, although this initial section on 201:at the University of Christiania, and in 1860 a 1401:Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters 1209: 302:Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters 273:) and in 1867 the Norwegian Luther Foundation ( 1328: 620:s. 114). Gisle goes on to speak of Scripture's 368:gracious with students. Skarsten recounts that 197:) and graduated in 1845. In 1849 he became a 774:thus actually and practically recognizes His 521:) and existential elements (using the Danish 902: 304:from 1858. He was appointed a Knight in the 1257:Johnson, Jonathan. "Gisle Johnson intime". 1103: 393:, 1898) and lectures on dogmatic history ( 36: 671:activity of His restoring grace (s. 154). 580:He then goes on to define this rebirth as 277:). In 1858 he established, together with 1386:Academic staff of the University of Oslo 1183:Det norske lutherske Indremisjonsselskap 1083: 391:(ForelĂŚsninger over den kristelige Ethik 145: 1309: 1293:ForelĂŚsninger over den kristelige Ethik 1290: 1275: 1241: 1118: 1411:Burials at the Cemetery of Our Saviour 1396:19th-century Norwegian Lutheran clergy 1358: 961:Grundrids af Den systematiske theologi 554: 389:(1878), along with lectures on ethics 387:Grundrids af Den Systematiske Theology 255:Grundrids af den Systematisk Theologi, 1343: 1121:Grundrids af den Systematisk Theologi 724:As such, ethics is a product of both 1099: 1097: 1095: 1079: 1077: 1075: 610: 1256: 1009:Erlangen Theology (Neo-Lutheranism) 13: 1406:Recipients of the St. Olav's Medal 1329:Christoffersen, Svein Åge (2012). 335:Of his death, Nostbakken recounts, 281:, an annual publication entitled 14: 1422: 1312:ForelĂŚsninger over dogmehistorien 1092: 1072: 395:ForelĂŚsninger over dogmehistorien 267:Christiania Indremissionsforening 263:Christiania Inner Mission Society 16:Norwegian theologian and educator 136:Lay Preaching Dogmatics of Faith 109:Lutheran Theologian and educator 1337: 1322: 1303: 1284: 1269: 1250: 1235: 1203: 1189: 1174: 1125:Outlines of Systematic Theology 965:Outlines of systematic theology 442:Outlines of Systematic Theology 1391:Norwegian Lutheran theologians 1160: 1146: 1131: 1112: 1058: 1035: 1021: 344: 222:Hans Nielsen Hauge (1771–1824) 1: 1014: 648:Theology Proper and Cosmology 589:his "organic" view of faith: 435:Lectures on Dogmatic History, 1316:Lectures on Dogmatic History 1297:Lectures on Christian Ethics 1044:"Georg Daniel Barth Johnson" 991:Lectures on Christian Ethics 978:Lectures on dogmatic history 937: 814:Lectures on Dogmatic History 702:Lectures on Christian Ethics 539: 328:and Gisle Johnsons gate in 164: 161:, revivalist, and educator. 7: 1142:(Norsk biografisk leksikon) 997: 696:becomes beholding (s. 159). 530:over den Kristelige Ethics, 380: 242:Erlangen School of Theology 10: 1427: 1259:Norsk Teologisk Tidsskrift 1104:Nostbakken, Roger (1962). 713:over den kristelige Ethik, 468: 275:Den norske Lutherstiftelse 19:For the Scout leader, see 18: 1381:University of Oslo alumni 1344:Preus, Christian (1948). 1333:. Routledge. p. 191. 1084:Skarsten, Trygve (1968). 1066:Gisle Johnson (1822–1894) 987:over den kristelige Ethik 903:Theological Controversies 332:were named in his honor. 312:. He died during 1894 at 191:University of Christiania 140: 132: 120: 113: 105: 101:University of Christiania 97: 89: 66: 47: 35: 28: 1376:Clergy from Kristiansand 1242:Ousland, Godvin (1950). 1046:. Norsk kunstnerleksikon 954: 546:In the beginning of the 455:Grundrids til Theologien 310:University of Copenhagen 287:Confessional Lutheranism 261:In 1855, he founded the 177:, Norway. He grew up at 21:Gisle Johnson (Scouting) 1310:Johnson, Gisle (1897). 1291:Johnson, Gisle (1898). 1276:Johnson, Gisle (1984). 1197:Gisle Christian Johnson 1185:(Store norske leksikon) 1170:(Luthersk Kirketidende) 1119:Johnson, Gisle (1897). 1029:Gisle Christian Johnson 300:He was a member of the 155:Gisle Christian Johnson 61:Halden, Østfold, Norway 1140:Gisle Johnson - Teolog 1068:(lokalhistoriewiki.no) 1042:Jens Christian Eldal. 1031:(tore norske leksikon) 949:Thomasius's kenoticism 871: 862: 848: 810: 771: 761: 747: 722: 698: 688: 673: 664: 641: 631: 596: 586: 578: 491: 424: 375: 365: 342: 251: 151: 866: 857: 843: 805: 780:Johan Albrecht Bengel 766: 752: 742: 717: 693: 683: 668: 659: 636: 622: 591: 582: 573: 486: 419: 397:1898). Together, the 370: 360: 337: 271:Luthersk Kirketidende 246: 149: 121:Tradition or movement 1215:Trondheim Byleksikon 885:what is seen in the 42:Gisle Johnson (1889) 928:Augsburg Confession 555:Rebirth and Renewal 207:systematic theology 128:Johnsonian Revivals 124:Lutheran orthodoxy 1181:Tarald Rasmussen: 1004:Lutheran orthodoxy 971:ForelĂŚsninger over 838:excellent works." 532:defining faith as 428:ForelĂŚsninger over 340:(Nostbakken, 236). 295:Lutheran orthodoxy 291:Hans Nielsen Hauge 195:University of Oslo 152: 126:Erlangen Theology 58:September 10, 1822 1219:Kunnskapsforlaget 945:Erlangen Theology 921:Carl Paul Caspari 909:public theologian 611:View of Scripture 475:Nonetheless, the 411:kristelige Ethiks 306:Order of St. Olav 279:Carl Paul Caspari 213:and from 1875 in 211:Dogmatic theology 144: 143: 1418: 1350: 1349: 1341: 1335: 1334: 1326: 1320: 1319: 1307: 1301: 1300: 1288: 1282: 1281: 1273: 1267: 1266: 1254: 1248: 1247: 1239: 1233: 1232: 1207: 1201: 1193: 1187: 1178: 1172: 1164: 1158: 1150: 1144: 1138:Bernt Oftestad: 1135: 1129: 1128: 1116: 1110: 1109: 1101: 1090: 1089: 1081: 1070: 1062: 1056: 1055: 1053: 1051: 1039: 1033: 1025: 913:N.F.S. Grundtvig 356:Jonathan Edwards 115:Theological work 73: 57: 55: 40: 26: 25: 1426: 1425: 1421: 1420: 1419: 1417: 1416: 1415: 1356: 1355: 1354: 1353: 1342: 1338: 1327: 1323: 1308: 1304: 1289: 1285: 1274: 1270: 1255: 1251: 1240: 1236: 1229: 1221:. p. 210. 1211:Bratberg, Terje 1208: 1204: 1194: 1190: 1179: 1175: 1165: 1161: 1151: 1147: 1136: 1132: 1117: 1113: 1102: 1093: 1082: 1073: 1063: 1059: 1049: 1047: 1040: 1036: 1026: 1022: 1017: 1000: 957: 940: 905: 818: 706: 650: 613: 561:nyt Livsprincip 557: 544: 473: 446: 431:dogmehistorien, 383: 347: 167: 85: 75: 71: 62: 59: 53: 51: 43: 31: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1424: 1414: 1413: 1408: 1403: 1398: 1393: 1388: 1383: 1378: 1373: 1368: 1352: 1351: 1336: 1321: 1302: 1283: 1268: 1249: 1234: 1227: 1213:, ed. (1996). 1202: 1188: 1173: 1159: 1145: 1130: 1111: 1091: 1071: 1057: 1034: 1019: 1018: 1016: 1013: 1012: 1011: 1006: 999: 996: 995: 994: 981: 974:dogmehistorien 968: 956: 953: 939: 936: 904: 901: 892:Dogmehistorien 887:Dogmehistorien 817: 811: 801:Herman Bavinck 738:TroskjĂŚrlighed 705: 699: 649: 646: 612: 609: 556: 553: 543: 538: 499:vitenskapelige 472: 467: 445: 439: 382: 379: 346: 343: 215:church history 166: 163: 142: 141: 138: 137: 134: 130: 129: 122: 118: 117: 111: 110: 107: 103: 102: 99: 95: 94: 91: 87: 86: 76: 74:(aged 71) 68: 64: 63: 60: 49: 45: 44: 41: 33: 32: 29: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1423: 1412: 1409: 1407: 1404: 1402: 1399: 1397: 1394: 1392: 1389: 1387: 1384: 1382: 1379: 1377: 1374: 1372: 1369: 1367: 1364: 1363: 1361: 1347: 1340: 1332: 1325: 1317: 1313: 1306: 1298: 1294: 1287: 1279: 1272: 1264: 1260: 1253: 1245: 1238: 1230: 1228:82-573-0642-8 1224: 1220: 1216: 1212: 1206: 1200: 1199:(Allkunne AS) 1198: 1192: 1186: 1184: 1177: 1171: 1169: 1163: 1157: 1156:(folk.uio.no) 1155: 1149: 1143: 1141: 1134: 1126: 1122: 1115: 1107: 1100: 1098: 1096: 1087: 1080: 1078: 1076: 1069: 1067: 1061: 1045: 1038: 1032: 1030: 1024: 1020: 1010: 1007: 1005: 1002: 1001: 992: 988: 985: 984:ForelĂŚsninger 982: 979: 975: 972: 969: 966: 962: 959: 958: 952: 950: 946: 935: 933: 932:Martin Luther 929: 924: 922: 916: 914: 910: 900: 898: 893: 888: 884: 880: 875: 870: 865: 861: 856: 854: 847: 842: 839: 836: 832: 828: 822: 815: 809: 804: 802: 798: 792: 789: 783: 781: 777: 770: 765: 760: 758: 751: 746: 741: 739: 735: 731: 727: 721: 716: 714: 711: 710:ForelĂŚsninger 703: 697: 692: 687: 682: 679: 672: 667: 663: 658: 656: 645: 640: 635: 630: 628: 621: 619: 608: 606: 605:munus triplex 600: 595: 590: 585: 581: 577: 572: 570: 566: 562: 552: 549: 542: 537: 535: 531: 528: 527:ForelĂŚsninger 524: 520: 516: 512: 508: 504: 500: 496: 490: 485: 482: 478: 471: 466: 464: 460: 456: 451: 443: 438: 436: 432: 429: 423: 418: 416: 412: 408: 404: 400: 396: 392: 388: 378: 374: 369: 364: 359: 357: 351: 341: 336: 333: 331: 327: 323: 319: 315: 311: 307: 303: 298: 296: 292: 288: 284: 280: 276: 272: 268: 264: 259: 256: 250: 245: 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 218: 216: 212: 208: 204: 200: 196: 192: 188: 184: 180: 176: 172: 162: 160: 156: 148: 139: 135: 133:Notable ideas 131: 127: 123: 119: 116: 112: 108: 106:Occupation(s) 104: 100: 96: 92: 88: 83: 79: 70:July 17, 1894 69: 65: 50: 46: 39: 34: 30:Gisle Johnson 27: 22: 1345: 1339: 1330: 1324: 1315: 1311: 1305: 1296: 1292: 1286: 1277: 1271: 1262: 1258: 1252: 1243: 1237: 1214: 1205: 1196: 1191: 1182: 1176: 1167: 1162: 1153: 1148: 1139: 1133: 1124: 1120: 1114: 1105: 1085: 1065: 1060: 1048:. 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Index

Gisle Johnson (Scouting)

Nøtterøy
Vestfold

theologian
Halden
Østfold
Kristiansand
Vest-Agder
theology
University of Christiania
University of Oslo
lecturer
professor
systematic theology
Dogmatic theology
church history
Hans Nielsen Hauge (1771–1824)
Kierkegaard
Bengel
Gesenius
Vitringa
Erlangen School of Theology
Christiania Inner Mission Society
Carl Paul Caspari
Confessional Lutheranism
Hans Nielsen Hauge
Lutheran orthodoxy
Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters

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