Part, Paragraph
1 Intro | with the request that be read it and suggest changes.
2 Intro | our fathers? Who has ever read or heard of such monstrous
3 Intro | know the true Luther must read more than one of his writings;
4 Intro | not by any chance omit to read the Open Letter to the Christian
5 1 | pious hearts! Unless I had read it myself,22 I could not
6 1 | means of a council. ~Thus we read in Acts 15:6 that it was
7 2 | no one has ever heard or read about. ~Second, In case
8 Prop1 | It vexes me that we must read and learn such shameless,
9 Prop1 | rule and to preach? So we read that St. Agnes58 went to
10 Prop1 | has borne, we see, hear, read and learn more and more
11 Prop2 | the nose. If they had only read the Scriptures to as good
12 Prop2 | good purpose as they have read their damnable canon law,
13 Prop3 (3)| Or, "I have read him." Luther's lesen allows
14 Prop3 | as Cicero's Rhetoric is read without commentaries and
15 Prop3 | Aristotle's Logic should be read as it is, without such a
16 Prop3 | leave the Bible in peace and read the Sentences. I should
17 Prop3 | not a priest may indeed read may indeed the Bible, but
18 Prop3 | Sentences a priest must read. A married man, I observe,
19 Prop3 | that his laws are to be read and used in the schools
20 Prop3 | however little of them, often read, that make men learned in
21 Prop3 | the holy fathers should be read only for a time, in order
22 Prop3 | Scriptures. As it is, however, we read them only to be absorbed
23 Prop3 | sometimes by heredity, as we read of the Kingdoms of Persia
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