Part, Paragraph
1 1 (5) | the Christian Church. The right of the laity to administer
2 1 (5) | the law of the Church. The right of the laity to give absolution
3 1 | alone who is always in the right, if the article of The Creed
4 1 | and elders. If, then, that right had belonged to St. Peter
5 1 | if the pope alone had the right to call councils, then all
6 2 | agreement, they have no right to the annates. Therefore
7 2 (14) | cathedral, and to whom the right to elect the bishop normally
8 2 (15) | deals with the abuse of the "right of reservation," i.e., the
9 2 (15) | reservation," i.e., the alleged right of the pope to appoint directly
10 2 (15) | According to papal theory the right of appointment belonged
11 2 (15) | who graciously yielded the right to others under certain
12 2 | a thing which he has no right to do; then it should be
13 2 | robbers; for he has this right by virtue of his office
14 2 (29) | certain endowed benefices the right of nominate the incumbent
15 2 (29) | so-called jus patronum, or "right of patronage. The complaint
16 2 (29) | The complaint that this right is disregarded is frequent
17 2 (42) | the papal theory that the right of appointment to all Church
18 2 (42) | Lib. I, Tit. XXVII) this right is exercised either per
19 2 | he has first bought the right. If that is not a brothel
20 2 | goods has now come to the right place, and spiritual and
21 Prop1 | offices. He has thus lost his right to them, and deserves punishment.
22 Prop1 | foundations without authority and right, and gives and sells them
23 Prop1 | restore to the ordinaries the right and office of ordering these
24 Prop1 | ban or exile when faith or right life is not concerned. Spiritual
25 Prop1 | Rome no one cares what is right or not right, but only what
26 Prop1 | cares what is right or not right, but only what is money
27 Prop1 | which was in olden times the right of the German emperors,
28 Prop1 (35)| powers. For this reason the right of investiture was a bone
29 Prop1 | authority, they took the right and have kept it until now;
30 Prop1 | as if they possessed that right. The chapter "Solite,"38
31 Prop1 (37)| See below, p. 153.) The right to crown an emperor was
32 Prop1 | Who has given him this right? Did Christ, when He said,
33 Prop1 | He has exactly as much right to that kingdom as I have,
34 Prop1 | force and possesses without right.45 Moreover, he has meddled
35 Prop1 (44)| Hobenstaufen. The popes claimed the right to award the kingdom to
36 Prop1 (44)| allegiance to the Holy See. The right to the kingdom was at this
37 Prop1 (47)| which he claimed as his right. See above, p. 108. ~
38 Prop1 | and withal never come to a right understanding of a good
39 Prop1 | this boldly by my jester's right.73 ~You will find many a
40 Prop1 | established such laws without right and against God; before
41 Prop2 | tyrant, for he has no such right and is interfering in the
42 Prop2 | government has not only the right to abolish it and put a
43 Prop2 | But if he has not this right, neither has the pope the
44 Prop2 | neither has the pope the right to sell them at his shameful
45 Prop2 | knavery," which serves them right. ~21. One of our greatest
46 Prop2 | whom, indeed, he has no right to take it. I speak especially
47 Prop2 | than confess that it is right to violate an imperial,
48 Prop2 | Cyprian.54 The pope has no right to oppose such an arrangement,
49 Prop3 | a thing which he had no right to do. Second, because the
50 Prop3 | and scholar! They are the right people to persecute the
51 Prop3 | nobility of the German nation a right spiritual courage to do
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