Part, Paragraph
1 Intro | out of the country, and keep the appointments to bishoprics
2 Cover, 1| and friend. ~The time to keep silence has passed and the
3 2 | that the pope be made to keep them at his own expense.
4 2 | complain that they do not keep their own self-devised canon
5 2 | and they do not intend to keep any of them. All this must
6 2 | nation, they should either keep the annates at home or else
7 2 | since the Romans do not keep the terms of the agreement,
8 2 | you a hundred gulden to keep. This is not called the
9 2 | can longer endure it or keep silence? Almost everything
10 Prop1 | strict command either to keep his distance, or else to
11 Prop1 | for himself, and lets them keep only the name and empty
12 Prop1 | serve tables, but we will keep to preaching and prayer
13 Prop1 | theirs, which they do not keep. For it from the should
14 Prop1 | they may live in luxury and keep the world under their tyranny
15 Prop1 | he made in baptism,53 to keep the commandments of God.
16 Prop1 | great crowd who vow much and keep little. Be not angry, dear
17 Prop1 | is given to very few to keep it, as He himself says,
18 Prop1 | 2:11.72 Thus he should keep his conscience free from
19 Prop1 | consciences; let him take and keep her as his wedded wife,
20 Prop1 | therefore, is bound to keep it, but the pope is responsible
21 Prop2 | should boldly step in and keep the folk away. For what
22 Prop2 | faithless? God hath commanded to keep oath and faith even with
23 Prop2 | children of Israel had to keep the oath which they had
24 Prop2 | This commandment we should keep though the world fall. How
25 Prop2 | these things and let them keep them in the sight of God
26 Prop3 | works. Away with such books! Keep them away from all Christians!
27 Prop3 | many laws and themselves keep none of them, but others
28 Prop3 | others they compel either to keep them or else to buy release. ~
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