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Alphabetical    [«  »]
maketh 1
making 4
malfeasance 1
man 76
man-made 2
manage 1
manifest 1
Frequency    [«  »]
80 though
78 many
77 then
76 man
74 above
71 p
70 our
Martin Luther
Open Letter to Christ. Nobility of the German Nation

IntraText - Concordances

man

   Part, Paragraph
1 Intro | learn to know him as the man of God, or the prophet, 2 Cover, 2 | rashness that I, a single, poor man, have undertaken to address 3 Cover, 2 | multitude of an host: a mighty man is not delivered by much 4 1 | Christian or "spiritual" man. Through baptism all of 5 1 | absolving and preaching, such a man would be as truly a priest 6 1 | unto every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake, for 7 1 | knavery. If the fact that one man is set over others were 8 1 | Christ commands that every man shall esteem himself the 9 1 (18) | in 2 Thess. 2:3-10 (the "man of sin, sitting in the temple 10 1 | pope, whether he be a bad man or a good man, cannot err 11 1 | he be a bad man or a good man, cannot err in matters of 12 1 | other hand, an ordinary man may have true understanding; 13 1 | Christian Church to one man, -- which would be nothing 14 1 | himself is judged of no man," II Corinthians 4:13: " 15 1 | to speak by a righteous man against the pope? In like 16 1 | Paul rebukes St. Peter as a man in error. Therefore it behooves 17 1 | to Christendom, the first man who is able should, a faithful 18 1 | has put them above every man. Would it not be an unnatural 19 2 | held by an old or a sick man, or by one with an alleged 20 2 (30) | prescribed that the same man should not hold two livings 21 2 (30) | with the cure of souls. The man who received an office in 22 2 | law, cannot be held by one man at the same time, as for 23 2 (32) | united in the hands of one man. See e.g., note 3, p. 91. ~ 24 2 | the administratio, i.e., a man may have beside his bishopric, 25 2 | possession of them, except the man to whom the seller is willing 26 2 | custom, too, to give another man a benefice and to reserve 27 2 | goes like this. When one man has gotten a benefice at 28 2 | takes it from the first man and gives it to the second.43 29 2 | money-snares, from which a man must extricate himself,49 30 Prop1 | although I am too small a man to make propositions which 31 Prop1 | shalt guard"; to the common man, Tu labora, "Thou shalt 32 Prop1 | guard and work; for the man who is diligent in his calling 33 Prop1 | pope can be called the "man of sin." There is in Christendom 34 Prop1 | duty of the pope, as the man most learned in the Scriptures 35 Prop1 | though a thief were to lay a man under the ban because he 36 Prop1 | no secret sin, of which a man has not been publicly accused, 37 Prop1 | decreed that the soul of man is immortal and that every 38 Prop1 | and skillfully. How can a man rule an empire and at the 39 Prop1 | thing for a poor sinful man to let his feet be kissed 40 Prop1 | exalted, and he would let no man pay him honor until he saw 41 Prop1 | the pope that he too is a man, and is not more than God, 42 Prop1 | He has commanded that a man shall care for his wife 43 Prop1 | it comes to pass that a man makes a pilgrimage to Rome 44 Prop1 | Augustine55 or any other man has decreed; especially 45 Prop1 | they were all open to every man, and every man might remain 46 Prop1 | to every man, and every man might remain in them as 47 Prop1 | 6, "A bishop should be a man who is blameless, and the 48 Prop1 | a result of greed every man has wished to become a priest 49 Prop1 | wife and child! Let the man who has faith enough to 50 Prop1 | what is that but leaving a man and a woman alone and forbidding 51 Prop1 | decrees that no one shall put man and wife asunder, takes 52 Prop2 | spiritual injury, the common man receives two material injuries 53 Prop2 | opposed to God, and harmful to man in body and soul, any community,11 54 Prop2 | decreed, that is the work of man; put it where you will,21 55 Prop2 | like the people; one blind man leads another. (Matthew 56 Prop2 | canonize them. And let every man stay in his own parish, 57 Prop2 | then every pious Christian man should open his eyes, and 58 Prop2 | is not fitting that one man should live in idleness 59 Prop2 | says, 2 Thess. 3:10: "If a man will not work, neither shall 60 Prop2 | has not decreed that any man shall live from another' 61 Prop2 | would henceforth advise a man to become a shepherd or 62 Prop2 | brings in money; one blind man is always leading another. 63 Prop2 | at Rome! Here sitteth the man of whom St. Paul hath said ( 64 Prop2 | himself up as God, -- the man of sin and the son of perdition! 65 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, "" 66 Prop2 | Word only; why should any man ensnare us in his words? 67 Prop3 | sins. ~Why, this wretched man, in his best book, On the 68 Prop3 (2) | in every department. The man who did not know Aristotle 69 Prop3 | solemn obligation that a man who is not a priest may 70 Prop3 | priest must read. A married man, I observe, could be a Doctor 71 Prop3 | and takes it from a good man, sometimes by the treachery 72 Prop3 | priest is over every other man, as St. Ambrose in his See 73 Prop3 (21)| So sol man die Deutschen teuschen und 74 Prop3 | that did not exist many a man would have to leave unbought 75 Prop3 | temptation. ~But now every man is drawn to the priesthood 76 Prop3 | support yourself as a married man, and wish to become a cleric


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