His principal work is his
Examen theologicum acroamaticum (Rostock – afterward Stockholm – and Leipzig, 1707; 7th and 8th eds. by
Romanus Teller, 1750 and 1763). The work is the last of the strict
Lutheran systems of
dogmatics in the era of
Lutheran orthodoxy. Hollatz knows
Pietism, but does not mention it, although he refutes
mysticism. The system is divided into
quaestiones, which are explained by
probationes; these are followed by
antitheses, against which the different
instantia are brought forward. Hollatz also published
Scrutinium veritatis in mysticorum dogmata (Wittenberg, 1711);
Ein gottgeheiligt dreifaches Kleeblatt (Leidender Jesus) (1713); a collection of sermons; and other works. ==Theology==