Part, Paragraph
1 Intro | Do we not also have the people who need them, while out
2 Intro | for the affliction of his people, and grief turns to wrath
3 Cover, 1 | moment, and to give advice to people of such high intelligence.
4 1 | spiritual" and a Christian people. ~But that a pope or a bishop
5 1 (8) | the unanimous voice of the people of the city. ~
6 1 (16)| so scandalous as to lead people with him by crowds into
7 1 (26)| i.e., A mere gathering of people. ~
8 2 | in Christendom of those people who are called the cardinals?
9 2 | cities decayed, land and people laid waste, because there
10 2 | cities, endowments, land and people are impoverished! We should
11 2 | and should protect the people, whom they are set to rule
12 2 | not permit their land and people to be so sadly robbed and
13 2 | for the German nation has people enough for the fighting,
14 2 | ye leave your lands and people naked to these ravening
15 2 | cardinal or to another oh his people, just as though I were to
16 2 | Is it a wonder that such people fear a reformation and a
17 Prop1 | merit, so that the poor people of the German nation have
18 Prop1 | extorting much money from the people, but by means of them the
19 Prop1 | the Church be decided by people so hardened and blinded
20 Prop1 | plague of God that so many people of understanding have let
21 Prop1 | as a great favor, allows people to kiss his feet, though
22 Prop1 | Barnabas, who would not let the people of Lystra pay them divine
23 Prop1 | golden years,"52 by which the people are excited, stirred up,
24 Prop1 | consider what the common people need for their salvation,
25 Prop1 | hindrance to the common people. For this reason it should
26 Prop1 | living were taught, and people were trained to rule and
27 Prop1 | chose, to help him rule the people of the community62 by means
28 Prop1 | and be at home among the people. Such ministers should be
29 Prop2 | plunder and defame other people, and all the bans are now
30 Prop2 | liberty because the common people take such great offense,
31 Prop2 | would be enough, -- that people run to these places in excited
32 Prop2 | great unbelief among the people; if they truly believed,
33 Prop2 | all concerned to have the people believe and live aright;
34 Prop2 | the rulers are like the people; one blind man leads another. (
35 Prop2 | did in olden times to the people of Israel, when he led them
36 Prop2 | if it were too small, the people in the surrounding villages
37 Prop2 | begging hurts the common people. I have considered that
38 Prop2 | miserably lost, with all his people, because he broke this oath
39 Prop2 | Turk, with so many noble people, because he allowed himself
40 Prop2 | or inquisitor, for those people are utter ignoramuses as
41 Prop2 | and approval by the common people can even now be quite as
42 Prop2 | gradually brought all the people together again in one common
43 Prop3 | profitable training of young people in speaking and preaching.
44 Prop3 | youth and the best of our people, with whom the future of
45 Prop3 | with Christ's unfortunate people. They give them many laws
46 Prop3 | are only a burden to the people, and hinder causes more
47 Prop3 | deal with these poor young people who are committed to us
48 Prop3 | destruction of the daughter of my people, for the youth and the children
49 Prop3 | corrupt; that is why the people who are in the universities
50 Prop3 | trained there are the kind of people they are. For this no one
51 Prop3 | ancient times God make His people of Israel dwell away from
52 Prop3 | not the custom of any one people, that it is hard to break
53 Prop3 | to be controlled? If the people of Israel could exist without
54 Prop3 | why could not Christian people do as much? Nay, how do
55 Prop3 | to consider how the young people might be brought together
56 Prop3 | miserable condition. The young people have no one to care for
57 Prop3 | scholar! They are the right people to persecute the truth,
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