Project Wittenberg

Welcome to Project Wittenberg!

Project Wittenberg is home to works by and about Martin Luther and other Lutherans. Here you will find all manner of texts from short quotations to commentaries, hymns to statements of faith, theological treatises to biographies, and links to other places where words and images from the history of Lutheranism live.

Project Wittenberg is the first step towards an international electronic library of Lutheranism. Project Wittenberg documents are available in several places on the internet. This site mirrors texts from Project Wittenberg's official website, www.ProjectWittenberg.org. For the latest versions of our texts, many of which are still being assembled and refined, drop in at Project Wittenberg's Electronic Lutheran Web.

More About Project Wittenberg

Reverend Bob Smith

Walther Library

Concordia Theological Seminary

II. SELECTED WORKS OF MARTIN LUTHER, 1483 - 1546

III. SELECTED HISTORIC WORKS FROM OTHERS:

IV. HYMNALS

V. THE BOOK OF CONCORD (1580)

Additions to this section will begin with the Handbook of the Lutheran Hymnal.

VI. RESEARCH REVIEWS

The Luther Letter: A Commentary on Martin Luther, the Reformation and the Modern World, edited by Reverend William R. Russell, Ph.D.

VII. THE LUTHERAN CHURCH - MISSOURI SYNOD

VIII. SERMON NOTES ON THE RUSSIAN GOSPELS, DR. HAROLD BULS (1920-1997)

IX. WITTENBERG DISCUSSION LISTS:

WITTENBERG - The Lutheran History Discussion List: [Description] and [Wittenberg List Archive]

X. MEET REVEREND BOB SMITH . . .

ICLnet first met Reverend Bob in connection with his work on Project Wittenberg. Bob is an avid scholar in the Lutheran tradition and has done much to increase that interest amongst the internet community. A bibliography of his published works is available on his home page (noted below). Bob's vision is to use networking as a "highway of light" to promote the Lord's work. He is the Christian who forever signs his e-mail notes, "Peace" - G. Bogart (NJB at ICLnet) Bob Smith's Home Page



The Electric Lutheran: How the Internet Can Enhance the Study of American Lutheranism

The Internet Bible

XI. Additional LCMS Locations:

XII. Project Wittenberg Mirror Sites:

XIII. Style Guides:

XIV. More Resources On Line:

The sites below include the Lutheran Electronic Archve at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne (formerly the Project Wittenberg Gopher site), the Project Wittenberg FTP archive at ICLnet, and additional sites that we think you will find to be edifying.

Reverend Bob Smith

smithre@mail.ctsfw.edu

Ft. Wayne, Indiana

This document results from a cooperative effort between Project Wittenberg and ICLnet , Reverend Bob Smith, Project Coordinator. Document revised, 2004:Aug.26