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Luther's Large Catechism (Deutsche Katechismus)

Martin Luther·German·1529·Catechism
CatechismSpeculum
In the original — German
Wir sollen Gott über alle Dinge fürchten, lieben und vertrauen.

Our renderingWe are to fear, love, and trust in God above all things.

What it is

The Large Catechism, published in April 1529, arose from Luther's Saxon parish visitations and was addressed to pastors and educated adults in princely households who required deeper catechetical grounding than the Small Catechism provided. Luther himself testified to reading it every morning alongside the Psalms, intending it as a devotional commentary to be re-read regularly rather than studied once. Incorporated into the 1580 Book of Concord as a binding confessional standard, it became the document to which Lutheran princes attached their public subscription, making it simultaneously a devotional text and an act of political-religious identity. Its five parts — Commandments, Creed, Lord's Prayer, Baptism, and Eucharist — constitute a complete map of the Christian life.

Why it still matters

Its extended meditations on each commandment and creed article reward a structured week-by-week reading program for serious adult Christians seeking theological depth in their devotional life; it remains in print and freely available online.

Kept alongside

Speculum

Luther's Small Catechism

Der Kleine Katechismus

Written in 1529 as a household guide for fathers to teach their children the essentials of Protestant faith, the Small Catechism covers the Ten Commandments, Apostles' Creed, Lord's Prayer, Baptism, the Lord's Supper, and daily prayers in a question-and-answer format designed for memorization. Duke Albrecht von Hohenzollern commissioned its translation into Old Prussian in 1545, printed by Hans Weinreich in Königsberg — the oldest printed books in that language — making vernacular catechetical instruction a cornerstone of the duchy's Reformation. Frederick the Great's 1763 General-Land-Schul-Reglement explicitly mandated Luther's Small Catechism in all Prussian schools, cementing it as the primary doctrinal formation text for Hohenzollern subjects across three centuries. It remains the most widely used Protestant catechism in the world and a living document in Lutheran congregations globally.

1529German·House of Hohenzollern · Saxe-Coburg-Gotha +6Confirmed
Speculum

Augsburg Confession (Confessio Augustana)

The Augsburg Confession was presented by Lutheran princes and city delegates to Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, drafted primarily by Melanchthon with Luther's close oversight from Coburg. It functioned simultaneously as a political document, a confessional identity statement, and a catechetical summary of evangelical doctrine in 28 articles. Subscription to it became the basis of membership in the Schmalkaldic League, embedding this text in the constitutive political and devotional identity of Protestant dynastic life for generations. It was incorporated as the first item in the Lutheran Book of Concord (1580), which every subscribing territorial prince formally affirmed as the doctrinal basis of his territory.

1530Latin and German·Wettin (Saxony) · Hohenzollern (Brandenburg) +5Confirmed
Speculum

Loci Communes Rerum Theologicarum

The Loci Communes was the inaugural systematic theology of Protestantism and Melanchthon's most consequential contribution to Protestant formation, circulating in over fifty editions in his lifetime. Used at courts and universities throughout the Lutheran world, it trained Protestant princes, their tutors, and court theologians in the doctrinal structure of the Reformation from its very first years. Melanchthon revised the work substantially in 1535 and again in 1543, each revision reflecting the evolving theological controversies of the age, and it served as the basis of the theological curriculum in the gymnasia he helped found across the Empire. Its famous opening sentence — that to know Christ is to know his benefits — set the pastoral tone that distinguished Lutheran theology from scholastic abstraction.

1521, multiple revised editions through 1559Latin (German translations appeared from 1520s)·Wettin (Saxony) · Hohenzollern (Brandenburg) +3Confirmed