Luther: In Real Time

A podcast by Ligonier Ministries

Categories:

45 Episodes

  1. May 5, 1521: The End of Luther [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 12/31/2021
  2. April 26, 1521: Judgment Day [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 12/24/2021
  3. April 18, 1521: Here I Stand [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 12/17/2021
  4. April 16, 1521: Bundschuh [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 12/10/2021
  5. April 7, 1521: The Road to Erfurt [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 12/3/2021
  6. March 10, 1521: The Goose and the Swan [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 11/26/2021
  7. February 3, 1521: The Gate to Paradise [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 11/19/2021
  8. January 3, 1521: Excommunication [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 11/12/2021
  9. December 10, 1520: Time’s Up [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 11/5/2021
  10. November 28, 1520: The Articles of Antichrist [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 10/29/2021
  11. November 10, 1520: The Lost Boy [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 10/22/2021
  12. October 16, 1520: The Wild Boar [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 10/15/2021
  13. October 10, 1520: Damnable Heretic [Rebroadcast]

    Published: 10/8/2021
  14. Introducing Season 2

    Published: 9/28/2021
  15. May 5, 1521: The End of Luther

    Published: 5/5/2021
  16. April 26, 1521: Judgment Day

    Published: 4/26/2021
  17. April 18, 1521: Here I Stand

    Published: 4/18/2021
  18. April 16, 1521: Bundschuh

    Published: 4/16/2021
  19. April 7, 1521: The Road to Erfurt

    Published: 4/7/2021
  20. April 2, 1521: Departure

    Published: 4/2/2021

1 / 3

It’s 1520. Martin Luther has been declared a heretic by Pope Leo X, and his books are being burned. How much longer before Luther himself is thrown into the fire? Enter the German Reformer’s dramatic story with Luther: In Real Time. First released 500 years after the events described, this podcast allows you to walk in Martin Luther’s footsteps from his heresy charges to his famous stand for the authority of God’s Word at the Diet of Worms. Share this podcast with people of all ages so they can hear—in Luther’s own words—what Protestants are protesting and why it still matters today.