RT Article T1 Communicating a Protesting Protestant Heritage JF Dialog VO 56 IS 3 SP 279 OP 289 A1 Rowe, Terra Schwerin LA English PB Wiley-Blackwell YR 2017 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1565622162 AB This article opens by wondering, as many critics did during and after World War II, why a tradition named for its protesting impetus is today often marked by complacency and quietism. In conversation with political theorist William Connolly and Rev. Dr. William Barber's activism, this article suggests that Luther's unique articulation of the communicatio idiomatum might offer a compelling and coherent model for Lutheran ethical-political agency that can provide an alternative to—rather than reinforcing—the modern isolated subject cum homo economicus often associated with idealized images of Luther's protest before the Diet of Worms. K1 Capitalism K1 communicatio idiomatum K1 Martin Luther K1 President Trump K1 Secularism K1 Two Kingdoms K1 William Barber K1 William Connolly DO 10.1111/dial.12339