Part, Paragraph
1 Cover, 2| rashness that I, a single, poor man, have undertaken to
2 2 | share the fate of all the poor souls who are so lamentably
3 Prop1 | wisdom and merit, so that the poor people of the German nation
4 Prop1 | for the salvation of the poor souls who must go to ruin
5 Prop1 | ensnare and confuse many poor consciences to the intolerable
6 Prop1 | cause ensnare and burden poor, ignorant consciences. But
7 Prop1 | the bishops and injuring poor souls, therefore the emperor
8 Prop1 | study and care for the poor? Yet these are the duties
9 Prop1 | anti-Christian thing for a poor sinful man to let his feet
10 Prop1 | no worthy that a pope, a poor stinking sinner, should
11 Prop1 | his own family or on his poor neighbors. But if he wishes
12 Prop1 | has fallen, and how many a poor priest is overburdened with
13 Prop2 | 15. Nor must I forget the poor convents! The evil spirit,
14 Prop2 | at Rome, with which the poor folk are deceived and robbed
15 Prop2 | and labor, and to lead the poor folk by the nose. If they
16 Prop2 | were left in peace, and the poor folk not lead astray! What
17 Prop2 | should provide for its own poor, and admit no foreign beggars
18 Prop2 | city could support its own poor, and if it were too small,
19 Prop2 | be known who were really poor and who not. ~There would
20 Prop2 | warden who knew all the poor and informed the city council
21 Prop2 | think that in this way37 the poor would not be so well provided
22 Prop2 | necessary. He who wishes to be poor should not be rich; and
23 Prop2 | earth! It is enough if the poor are decently cared for,
24 Prop2 | contributed money to feed the poor or to help somebody in some
25 Prop3 | unjustly we deal with these poor young people who are committed
26 Prop3 | that can be done for the poor Church. Amen. ~Wittenberg,
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