Part, Paragraph
1 1 | of all of us. For what is common to all, no one dare take
2 2 (30)| vacancy. The practice was most common in the case of abbacies.
3 2 | speak of things which are common talk, and yet I have not
4 2 | done their duty and with common consent have written and
5 Prop1 | Thou shalt guard"; to the common man, Tu labora, "Thou shalt
6 Prop1 | against the pope as against a common enemy and destroyer of Christendom,
7 Prop1 | walk in the straight and common path of God's commandments;
8 Prop1 | important to consider what the common people need for their salvation,
9 Prop1 | offense and hindrance to the common people. For this reason
10 Prop1 | either way. I leave that to common Christian order and to everyone'
11 Prop2 | the spiritual injury, the common man receives two material
12 Prop2 | this liberty because the common people take such great offense,
13 Prop2 | thing and its advantage were common property. So entirely, in
14 Prop2 | which God bestows are the common and equal property of all
15 Prop2 | or at least make them the common property of all churches.
16 Prop2 | universal begging hurts the common people. I have considered
17 Prop2 | besides these there are the common beggars, the "stationaries"35
18 Prop2 | election and approval by the common people can even now be quite
19 Prop2 | people together again in one common doctrine. They will assuredly
20 Prop3 | stop it; it has become too common, and has got too firmly
21 Prop3 | maintain among us open and common houses of prostitution,
22 Prop3 | sins which have become very common, neither boy nor maid should
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