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  1. Johann Georg Wilhelm Herrmann (6 December 1846 – 2 January 1922) was a Lutheran German theologian. Career. Hermann taught at Halle before becoming professor at Marburg. Influenced by Kant and Ritschl, his theology was in the idealist tradition, seeing God as the power of goodness. Jesus was to be seen as an exemplary man.

  2. Wilhelm Herrmann (born December 6, 1846, Melkow, near Magdeburg, Prussia [now in Germany]—died January 3, 1922, Marburg, Germany) was a liberal German Protestant theologian who taught that faith should be grounded in the direct experience of the reality of the life of Christ rather than in doctrine.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Johann Georg Wilhelm Herrmann war ein deutscher evangelischer Theologe.

  4. 2 de fev. de 2009 · Wilhelm Herrmann remains of importance in present theological debates, particularly those between Bultmann and Barth, two of his most distinguished pupils.

    • Daniel L. Deegan
    • 1966
  5. Nonetheless, at the time of his death in 1922, “Wilhelm Herrmann was the most revered and influential systematic theologian in Germany" (Van Pelt, 1925, 867). In addition to his highly regarded teaching career Herrmann made frequent contributions to the Die Christliche Welt and worked from 1907 to 1917 with Martin Rade as an editor for ...

  6. Quick Reference. (1846–1922), theologian. In 1879 he became professor of systematic theology at Marburg. Though he regarded the Gospels as in some sense the record of a historical personality, he insisted that the Church should teach only those facts about Christ which will act upon human beings, e.g.

  7. This chapter examines how systematic theology professor Wilhelm Herrmann developed a theological system based on a form of Kantian epistemology. Kantian philosophy provided Herrmann the context in which to justify his rigorous distinction between the realms of faith and science.