Lunchtime Lecture: On Martin Luther's hymn A Mighty Fortress is Our God

Speaker(s): Evan Kreider
Date: Fall 2017
Length: 55m
Product ID: RGDL4702AJ

Purchase Options:

MP3 Download - $5.00

Description

In honour of the 500 year anniversary of the Reformation, Dr. Kreider will be considering Martin Luther's hymn A Mighty Fortress is Our God, and its significance to the Protestant Reformation.

See All Audio by Evan Kreider

Evan Kreider is Professor Emeritus of Music at the University of British Columbia (2007). As a musicologist and music historian, J. Evan Krieder began teaching at the UBC School of Music in 1975. His research encompassed studies of Renaissance chant, early music notation, liturgical music, and the editing of Renaissance and Baroque keyboard music. Other projects included a critical edition of the secular works of Pierre de la Rue (d. 1518) and the investigation of politics and theology in music attributed to Martin Luther. He is co-editor of La Rue's Opera Omnia, and has published in the Corpus of Early Keyboard Music, Musica disciplina, Notes, Renaissance and Reformation, and elsewhere.

Related Audio

Details / Buy

Adam and the Genome: Rethinking the 'Historical' Adam

Speaker: Scot McKnight

Details / Buy

Five Hundred Years Later: The Clarity of Scripture Reassessed: Public Lecture and Book Launch

Speaker: Iain Provan

Details / Buy

The Truth's Superb Surprise: How Poetry Can Open Your Eyes and Deepen Your Thought

Speaker: Malcolm Guite

Details / Buy

Martin Luther and the Dilemmas of Sola Scriptura

Speaker: Mark Noll

Details / Buy

The “Environment,” Climate Change, and Covid-19: An Opportunity for Serious Reflection

Speaker: Iain Provan

Details / Buy

Uniting Heaven and Earth: The Reformation after 500 Years

Speaker: Hans Boersma

Details / Buy

The Bible in the Modern Artistic Imagination

Speaker: Adrienne Dengerink Chaplin

Details / Buy

Lived Faith: The Challenge of Christian Ethics

Speaker: Jeffrey Greenman

Details / Buy

Imago Mundi Poems Lecture

Speaker: Loren Wilkinson