05-bound | bowin-extor | extra-maria | marke-retur | revea-werke | where-zinsk
Part, Paragraph
1 Prop1 (1) | See [nobility.05; note 11], p. 84, note 1. ~
2 Prop1 (21)| subject of the first of the 102 Gravamina of 1521 )WREDE,
3 Prop1 (36)| Emperors Henry IV and V (1056-1125). ~
4 Prop1 (47)| his right. See above, p. 108. ~
5 Prop3 (18)| imperial power (cf. above, p. 109). On the whole subject see
6 Prop2 (46)| the battle of Varna, Nov. 10th, 1444, the Hungarians were
7 Prop1 (36)| Emperors Henry IV and V (1056-1125). ~
8 Prop1 (49)| I, p. 18, and below, p. 114. ~
9 1 (6) | The Decretum of Gratian (1142), the Liber Extra (1234),
10 Cover (8) | Frederick Barbarossa (1152-1190). ~
11 Prop3 (14)| See above, p. 118, note 2. ~
12 Prop1 (68)| congregation. See above, p. 119. ~
13 Cover (8) | Frederick Barbarossa (1152-1190). ~
14 Prop1 (44)| the Emperor Frederick II (1200-1260) and the popes, and
15 Prop1 (74)| degree of consanguinity. In 1204 the prohibition was restricted
16 1 (15) | England by Innocent III in 1208. Interdicts of more limited
17 Cover (9) | Frederick II (1212-1250), grandson of Barbarossa
18 Prop1 (55)| founded by St. Dominic (died 1221), and the Augustinians Hermits,
19 Prop2 (59)| theologian of the XIII. Century (1225-74), whose influence is
20 Prop1 (55)| Francis of Assisi (died 1226), the Dominican (the "preaching
21 1 (6) | 1142), the Liber Extra (1234), the Liber Sextus (1298),
22 Cover (9) | Frederick II (1212-1250), grandson of Barbarossa
23 Prop1 (44)| Emperor Frederick II (1200-1260) and the popes, and played
24 Prop2 (43)| See above, p. 128, note 5. ~~
25 Prop3 (7) | his heart." Boniface VIII (1294-1303) had decreed, Romanus
26 1 (6) | 1234), the Liber Sextus (1298), the Constitutiones Clementinae (
27 Prop1 (52)| instituted by Boniface VIII in 1300, and it was the intention
28 Prop3 (7) | heart." Boniface VIII (1294-1303) had decreed, Romanus Pontifex
29 Prop3 (4) | Duns Scotus, died 1308. In the XV and XVI Centuries
30 2 (41) | from the time of John XXII (1316-1334), would have been regarded
31 1 (6) | Constitutiones Clementinae (1318 or 1317), and the two books of Extravagantes, --
32 1 (6) | Constitutiones Clementinae (1318 or 1317), and the two books
33 1 (21) | Augustinus Triumphus (died 1328) in his Summa de potestate
34 2 (41) | time of John XXII (1316-1334), would have been regarded
35 Prop1 (52)| hundredth year a jubilee. In 1343 the interval between jubilees
36 2 (6) | Gesch. der Papste IV, I, 137. Cf. Hutten's Vadiscus (
37 Prop2 (23)| destroyed the church in 1383. It was alleged that at
38 Prop1 (52)| jubilees was fixed at fifty, in 1389 at thirty-three, in 1473
39 Prop2 (50)| See above, p. 140, note 1. ~
40 Prop2 (23)| resort for pilgrims. In 1412 the archbishop of Prague,
41 Cover (6) | especially those of Constance (1414-18), and of Basel (1431-
42 Prop1 (45)| Cambridge Modern History, I, 104-143; 219-252, and literature
43 Prop2 (49)| Council of Basel succeeded (1434) in reconciling the more
44 Prop1 (43)| genuineness was not disputed. In 1440, however, Laurentius Valla,
45 Prop2 (46)| Sultan to sue for peace in 1443. At the instigation of the
46 Prop2 (23)| Erfurt, Pope Eugenius IV in 1446 granted special indulgences
47 2 (58) | expense by Eugenius IV (1431-1447), and his successors. ~
48 Prop2 (26)| Grimmenthal in Meiningen began in 1449. An image of the Virgin,
49 Prop2 (31)| Archbishop of Florence (died 1459). He was canonized, May
50 Prop1 (52)| 1389 at thirty-three, in 1473 at twenty-five years. Cf.
51 1 (27) | Luther und die Kg., pp. 148 ff. ~
52 2 (45) | Built by Innocent VIII (1484-1490). ~
53 Prop2 (24)| Blood" was displayed after 1491. Cf. Benrath, pp. 104 f. ~
54 2 (36) | Ingenwinkel received, between 1496 and 1521, no fewer than
55 1 (11) | MIRBT, Quellen, 2d ed., No. 150). The Council of Trent in
56 Prop3 (30)| The Diets of Augsburg (1500) and Cologne (1512) had
57 Prop2 (48)| of Cambray, negotiated in 1508 for war against Venice.
58 Prop2 (48)| for war against Venice. In 1510 Venice made terms with the
59 Prop3 (29)| Fugger in Rom, I, 3). In 1511 a certain Bartholomew Rem
60 2 (21) | Administrator of Halberstadt; in 1514 he became Archbishop of
61 Prop1 (17)| Lateran Council (Dec. 19, 1516) passed a decree abolishing
62 2 (27) | Luther to Spalatin, June 25, 152. (ENDERS, II, 424; SMITH,
63 Prop1 (28)| by his authorization. In 1522 Luther translated this bull
64 Prop1 (45)| and the Emperor Charles V (1526-1527). See Cambridge Modern
65 Prop1 (45)| Emperor Charles V (1526-1527). See Cambridge Modern History,
66 Prop1 (37)| Roman Empire. (See below, p. 153.) The right to crown an
67 2 (11) | of Parliament (April 10, 1532) ~
68 Prop1 (43)| 332). Luther subsequently (1537) issued an annotated translation
69 Cover (7) | in Vadiscus (BOCKING, IV, 156). ~
70 1 (11) | XXIII. Session, July 15, 1563. (MIRBT, No. 312), defined
71 Intro | long delayed, but on the 15th of June, midway between
72 Intro (8) | documents in St. Louis Ed., XV, 1630 ff. ~
73 Prop3 (29)| insignificance beside the 1634 percent by which the fortune
74 2 (15) | Quellen, 2d ed., NO. 261, pp. 167 f.). It provides that livings,
75 Prop3 (37)| the Church. See below, pp. 170 ff. ~
76 Prop1 (43)| Donation (Erl. Ed., XXV, pp. 176 ff.).
77 Prop2 (40)| sacraments, but see also p. 177. ~
78 Prop3 (34)| this edition, Vol. I, pp. 184 ff.; see especially pp.
79 1 (23) | 1519 (Weimar Ed., II, pp. 185 ff., and in the German treatise
80 Prop2 (60)| this time, see below, pp. 187 ff. ~
81 2 (6) | s Vadiscus (Bocking IV, 188). ~
82 Intro | editions of K. Benrath (Halle, 1883) and E. Lemme (Die 3 grossen
83 Intro | KIRCHEN HISTORIKER, Gutersloh, 1897; Kohler, L'S SCHRIFT AN
84 Intro | in Wittenberg before the 18th of August.10 It is surmised11
85 Intro | KIRCHENGESCHICHTE, Erlangen, 1900. Extensive comment in all
86 Prop1 (64)| Sacerdotal Celibacy, 3d ed. (1907), I, pp. 59 ff. ~
87 Prop3 (22)| Cambridge Mediaeval History, I (1911), pp. 244 f. ~
88 Prop3 (32)| Luther's theol. Quellen, 1912, ch. I. ~
89 Prop3 (29)| Zeitalter der Fugger, I, 195), pales into insignificance
90 Prop1 (66)| s Vadiscus (BOCKING, IV, 199). ~
91 2 (11) | robbery" (ed. Bocking, IV, 207). In England the annates
92 1 (15) | is laid (Realencyk., IX, 208 f.). Its use was not uncommon
93 Prop1 (57)| See Realencyk., Vi, pp. 212 ff.), and Luther had himself
94 2 (42) | cheating" (ed. Bocking, IV, 215). ~
95 Prop1 (39)| 1520). Weimar Ed., II, pp. 217 ff.; Erl. Ed., op. var.
96 2 (17) | not crowned until October 22d. ~
97 Prop2 (30)| s Vadiscus (Bocking, IV, 232). ~
98 Prop1 (58)| als Kirchenhistoriker, p. 235. ~
99 Cover, 1 | John the Baptist (June 23d), ~in the year fifteen hundred
100 Intro | evidently not yet begun. On the 23rd Luther sent the manuscript
101 Prop2 (10)| Good Works", Vol. I, pp. 240 f. ~
102 Prop3 (22)| Mediaeval History, I (1911), pp. 244 f. ~
103 2 (3) | 73, note 5; and below, p. 246. Vol. II.-6. ~
104 1 (9) | Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, 247-258, is said to have consented
105 Prop2 (54)| Bishop of Carthage, 249-258 A.D. ~
106 Prop1 (45)| History, I, 104-143; 219-252, and literature cited pp.
107 2 (15) | MIRBT, Quellen, 2d ed., NO. 261, pp. 167 f.). It provides
108 Intro (8) | II, 415,443; SMITH, Nos. 269,279, and documents in St.
109 Intro | appeared in print on the 26th of the month,3 and the composition
110 2 (27) | ENDERS, II, 424; SMITH, NO. 271). ~
111 Intro | 404-469; Erl. Ed., XXI, 277-360; Walch Ed., X, 296-399;
112 Intro (8) | 415,443; SMITH, Nos. 269,279, and documents in St. Louis
113 Prop3 | rode upon it. (Number 22:28). Would God that we were
114 2 (36) | Die Fugger in Rom, I, pp. 282 ff. Between 1513 and 1521,
115 1 (25) | Prierias. In 1518 (Nov. 28th) Luther had appealed his
116 Intro | 266-351; Berlin Ed., 1,203-290; Clemen 1,363-425. The text
117 Intro | 277-360; Walch Ed., X, 296-399; St. Louis Ed., X,266-
118 Prop1 (48)| were added by Luther to the 2nd edition; see Introduction,
119 2 (6) | the new appointees about 300,000 ducats. Needless to
120 Prop2 (47)| 6th, 1415, the latter May 30th, 1416. Hus had come to Constance
121 1 (11) | July 15, 1563. (MIRBT, No. 312), defined the correct Roman
122 Intro | especially KOSTLIN-KAWERAU I, 315 ff. ~CHARLES M. JACOBS. ~
123 Intro (6) | and notes, Weimar Ed., VI, 328 ff.; Erl. Ed., op. var.
124 Intro (7) | Weimar Ed., VI, 329. ~
125 Prop1 (43)| treatise (Cf. ENDERS II, 332). Luther subsequently (1537)
126 1 (16) | Rome is!" (Weimar Ed., VI, 336). ~
127 Prop3 (23)| Reichstagsakten, II, 335-341. ~
128 Prop3 (30)| WREDE, op. cit., II, pp. 343f.), but the Diet adjourned
129 Prop1 (61)| Papacy at Rome, Vol. I, p. 345, note 4. See also Dass eine
130 Prop2 (23)| Cf. Realencyk, xxi, pp. 347 ff. ~
131 1 (21) | Ed., op. Var./ arg., I, 348). In the Epitome he had
132 Intro | 399; St. Louis Ed., X,266-351; Berlin Ed., 1,203-290;
133 Prop1 (41)| Papacy at Rome, Vol. I, pp. 357 f. ~
134 Intro | 469; Erl. Ed., XXI, 277-360; Walch Ed., X, 296-399;
135 Intro (11)| Clemen, I, 362 ~
136 Intro | Ed., 1,203-290; Clemen 1,363-425. The text of the Berlin
137 1 (8) | Ambrose, bishop of Milan from 374-397, had not yet been baptized
138 Prop3 | that account (1 Kings 1:38 f.); Elisha too had one
139 Intro | sources, See Weimar Ed., VI, 381-391; Schafer, LUTHER ALS
140 Intro (9) | ff., and Weimar Ed., VI, 381ff. ~
141 2 (59) | the Church. Cf. CLEMEN, I, 384, note 15. ~
142 Prop1 (64)| Pope Siricius and dated 385. See H. C. LEA, History
143 1 (23) | at Rome (Vol. I, pp. 337-394). ~
144 1 (7) | of Hippo in Africa from 395-430. ~
145 Intro (14)| See title B, ibid., 398. ~
146 Intro | 277-360; Walch Ed., X, 296-399; St. Louis Ed., X,266-351;
147 Prop1 (64)| of Sacerdotal Celibacy, 3d ed. (1907), I, pp. 59 ff. ~
148 Intro | The first edition of 4000 copies came off the press
149 Intro | found in Weimar Ed., VI, 404-469; Erl. Ed., XXI, 277-
150 Prop1 (61)| etc. Weimar Ed. XI, pp. 408 ff. ~
151 Prop3 (19)| sacked by the Visigoths in 410. ~
152 Intro (5) | to John Hess, ENDERS, II, 411; SMITH, I, No, 265. ~
153 Intro (2) | ENDERS, II, 414; SMITH, L's Correspondence,
154 Intro (8) | See ENDERS, II, 415,443; SMITH, Nos. 269,279,
155 2 (6) | livings. See Weimar Ed., VI, 417, note I, and PASTOR, Gesch.
156 Cover, 2 | children of Benjamin slew 42,000 Israelites11 because
157 Prop1 (60)| celebrated Church Father (died 420). The passages referred
158 Intro (15)| an appendix in Clemen, I, 421-425. ~~
159 Prop3 (36)| to Staupitz, Vol. I, p. 43. ~
160 Prop2 (41)| in Realencyk., III, pp. 434 ff.; LEA, Hist. Of Conf.
161 Prop2 (41)| than 100 (Realencyk., III, 437). In 1519 Degenhard Peffinnger,
162 2 | parishes, 7 priories and 44 canonries besides, -- all
163 Intro (8) | See ENDERS, II, 415,443; SMITH, Nos. 269,279, and
164 Prop2 (27)| there. (Weimar Ed., VI, 447, note 1). For another explanation
165 Prop2 (58)| Hussites, Cf. Realencyk., III, 452, 49. ~
166 Prop2 (47)| Inquisition in the MA, II, pp. 453 ff. ~
167 Intro (10)| publication withheld (ENDERS, II, 461,463). ~
168 Intro (10)| withheld (ENDERS, II, 461,463). ~
169 Prop2 (49)| time. See Realencyk., III, 465-467. ~
170 Prop2 (49)| See Realencyk., III, 465-467. ~
171 Intro | found in Weimar Ed., VI, 404-469; Erl. Ed., XXI, 277-360;
172 Prop2 (41)| Conf. And Indulg, III, pp. 470 ff. ~
173 Prop2 (58)| Cf. Realencyk., III, 452, 49. ~
174 Prop3 (29)| Wucher, in Berl. Ed., VII, 494-513. ~
175 1 (18) | LOOFS, Dogmengeschichte, 4th ed., p. 649). ~
176 Prop2 (27)| 1519, and within a month 50,000 pilgrims are said to
177 Prop3 (29)| in Berl. Ed., VII, 494-513. ~
178 2 (2) | complains. See Realencyk., X, 532, and literature there cited. ~
179 2 (11) | Catholic Encyclopedia, I, pp. 537 f. Luther here alleges that
180 2 (36) | and 1521, Zink received 56 appointments, and Ingenwinkel
181 Prop1 (60)| Migne, XXII, 656, and XXVI, 562. ~
182 Cover (1) | nach. See Introduction, p.57. ~
183 Prop3 (29)| II, 842, note 4; III pp. 574 f.). On Luther's view of
184 Prop3 (25)| See WREDE, op. cit., III, 576. ~
185 1 (16) | Epitome (see Introduction, p. 58), Prierias had quoted this
186 2 (33) | Cf. Cath. Encyc., Vi, pp. 588f. ~
187 1 (13) | and Prot. Realencyk., Vi, 594. ~~
188 Intro (12)| Below, pp. 63-90. ~
189 1 (18) | Dogmengeschichte, 4th ed., p. 649). ~
190 1 (19) | See above, p. 65. ~
191 Prop2 (35)| cit., II, 678, 688, III, 651, and Benrath, loc. cit. ~
192 Prop2 (45)| op. cit., II, 673, III, 653. ~
193 Prop1 (60)| referred to are in Migne, XXII, 656, and XXVI, 562. ~
194 2 (16) | MEYER in Realencyk., IV, 658. ~
195 2 (4) | Cambridge Mod. Hist., I, pp. 659 f. ~
196 1 (24) | Pp. 66 ff. ~
197 2 (11) | Nurnberg (WREDE, op. Cit., III, 660). Hutten calls the annates "
198 Prop2 (46)| Hist. of the Papacy, III, 67. ~
199 Prop1 (11)| WREDE, op. Cit., II, pp. 675f.) ~
200 2 (23) | WREDE, op. Cit., II, pp. 677 f.) ~
201 Prop2 (35)| See WREDE, op. cit., II, 678, 688, III, 651, and Benrath,
202 Prop1 (53)| Confession, Vol. I, pp. 68 ff., 98. ~
203 1 (15) | Kaiser Karl V., II, pp. 685 f, III, 665. ~
204 Prop2 (28)| pilgrimage (WREDE, op. cit., II, 687). ~
205 Prop2 (35)| WREDE, op. cit., II, 678, 688, III, 651, and Benrath,
206 1 (30) | spiritual estate"; see above, p.69.~
207 Prop1 (28)| pope. (Weimar Ed., VIII, 691). On Luther's earlier utterances
208 Prop1 (22)| 100 (WREDE, op. cit., II 694-703). ~
209 Prop2 (47)| the stake, the former July 6th, 1415, the latter May 30th,
210 Prop1 (22)| WREDE, op. cit., II 694-703). ~
211 Prop1 (45)| and literature cited pp. 706-713; 727 f. ~
212 2 (30) | in the Appendix (ibid., 708). ~
213 2 (40) | name (WREDE, op. Cit., II, 712). ~
214 Prop1 (45)| literature cited pp. 706-713; 727 f. ~
215 Prop1 (19)| WREDE, op. cit., I, 672,718. ~
216 Prop1 (45)| literature cited pp. 706-713; 727 f. ~
217 Prop3 (30)| the recommendation (ibid., 737) Vol. II-11 ~
218 Intro (6) | Ed., op. var. arg., II, 79 ff. ~
219 Prop2 (41)| fraternities, Cologne of 80, Hamburg of more than 100 (
220 Prop3 (18)| Pope Leo III in the year 800 AD. He was a German, but
221 2 (8) | Constance (see above, p. 82, note 2) was more generous.
222 Prop3 (29)| public (WREDE, op. cit., II, 842, note 4; III pp. 574 f.).
223 Prop3 (29)| Bartholomew Rem invested 900 gulden in the Hochstetter
224 Prop1 (17)| famous monastery of Cluny (918), but it was almost universal
225 Prop1 (8) | See above, pp. 92 f. ~
226 Prop1 (59)| German convents, founded in 936. ~
227 2 (10) | where reference is made to 949 offices, exclusive of those
228 2 (60) | BENRATH, p. 88, note 18; p. 95, note 36. ~
229 Prop2 (54)| Bishop of Carthage, 249-258 A.D. ~
230 1 | souls that would thereby be abandoned and it astray. ~It must
231 Prop2 | possession of certain abbots, abbesses and prelates also, and causes
232 2 (11) | German nation agreed to abide by the decision of Constance.
233 Prop1 | thinking those who have the ability and the inclination to help
234 2 | destroyer of Christendom and an abolisher of God's worship, because
235 Prop3 | could exist without such an abomination, why could not Christian
236 Intro | little that they allow such abominations to gain the upper hand,
237 Intro | madness and to increase the abounding misery, until no hope is
238 1 | better. In the olden days Abraham had to listen to Sarah,
239 Prop3 | Poetics retained or used in an abridged form as text-books for the
240 2 | bishoprics should be nominally abroad, but that their land and
241 1 (5) | the principle that in the absence of the appointed official
242 Prop2 | dispensation to eat butter and to absent yourself from mass, then
243 Prop1 (64)| The first absolute prohibition of marriage
244 1 (6) | medieval theory of papal absolutism, which accounts for the
245 Intro | discussed make it a work of absorbing interest and priceless historical
246 2 | Paul says, I Thess. 5:21: "Abstain from all outward shows,
247 Prop1 | who of their own accord abstained from matrimony, to the end
248 Prop3 | Scriptures, in which we are abundantly instructed about all things,
249 1 (9) | said to have consented to accept the office only when the
250 Prop2 | nay, it would be more acceptable to God and far better --
251 2 (41) | position thus secured, and the acceptance of money for such a purpose
252 Prop1 | themselves be talked into accepting such likes as these, which
253 2 | apostate, renegade monk,31 who accepts five or six gulden a year
254 Prop2 (35)| insurance against disease, accident, etc. They were classified
255 Intro | seem to bear more than an accidental resemblance to similar passages
256 2 (53) | of the services of this accommodating firm. They were the pope'
257 Prop1 | fathers who of their own accord abstained from matrimony,
258 Prop3 | We must give a terrible accounting for our neglect to set the
259 1 (6) | papal absolutism, which accounts for the bitterness with
260 Prop2 (28)| large part of this revenue accrued to the bishop of the diocese,
261 Prop2 (41)| participate in the benefits accruing from these "good works"
262 2 | tribute, and have not only accumulated no treasure, but have used
263 Prop2 | to approve of it and to acknowledge that it was well done. Nay,
264 Prop1 | presents and gifts, and thereby acquire the habit of selling justice
265 2 | possession of all property acquired by theft or robbery is legalized.
266 | across
267 Prop3 (30)| the Diet adjourned without acting on the recommendation (ibid.,
268 1 | a council or confirm its actions;25 for this is based merely
269 Prop1 (45)| It resulted at last in actual war between Pope Clement
270 | actually
271 Prop3 (18)| Leo III in the year 800 AD. He was a German, but regarded
272 Prop3 | to us and to all men in Adam, Gen. 3:17 ff.: "Accursed
273 2 (11) | of Worms (1521), with the additional allegation that the amount
274 Intro | whom the Open Letter is addressed.9 ~The first edition of
275 Intro | Kohler, L'S SCHRIFT AN DEN ADEL. . .IM SPIEGEL DER KULTURGESCHICTE,
276 Prop3 (30)| pp. 343f.), but the Diet adjourned without acting on the recommendation (
277 Prop1 | practices -- his commends,3 adjutories;4 reservations,5 gratiae
278 Prop2 (56)| Hussites. The Roman Church administered to the laity only the bread,
279 Prop3 | preaching, teaching and administering the sacraments, in which
280 2 | of the "glosses" is the administratio, i.e., a man may have beside
281 Prop2 | Not obstinacy but the open admission of truth must make us one.
282 Prop2 | provide for its own poor, and admit no foreign beggars by whatever
283 Prop1 | which they make so much ado in the Bull Coena Domini,28
284 Prop1 (47)| feet was a part of the "adoration" which he claimed as his
285 2 (58) | market-place, restored and adorned at great expense by Eugenius
286 Prop1 (45)| peninsula to a point on the Adriatic south of Venice, including
287 Prop1 | drunken peasant could lie more adroitly and skillfully. How can
288 Prop3 | by other sins, -- murder, adultery, stealing, irreverence and
289 Prop2 | and broke the good and advantageous treaty which he had sworn
290 1 (25) | which he foresaw would be adverse, to the decision of a council
291 1 (13) | enforce laws which in any way affected the Church. See LEA, Studies
292 1 | bishop or priest whom it affects; whoever is guilty, let
293 1 | law.6 It was in the manner aforesaid that Christians in olden
294 Prop1 | not with forced avarice. Afterward, however, they hedged them
295 Prop2 | suspension, irregularity, aggravation, reaggravation, deposition,
296 2 (42) | pectore that "it is an easy, agile and slippery thing, and
297 2 (11) | 1448) the German nation agreed to abide by the decision
298 Prop1 | the pope agree as Christ agrees with Lucifer, heaven with
299 2 (33) | theological curriculum. Their aim is chiefly to show how the
300 Prop3 | not understand their false aims and purposes, nevertheless,
301 Intro | Theological Seminary ~Mount Airy, Philadelphia~
302 1 | Nicaea -- the most famous of all-was neither called nor confirmed
303 1 | timid and stupid, has been allayed. They, like all of us, are
304 2 (11) | 1521), with the additional allegation that the amount demanded
305 1 | power; and although they allege that this power was given
306 2 (11) | pp. 537 f. Luther here alleges that the annates are not
307 Prop1 (45)| entangled them in political alliances with the European powers
308 Prop2 (49)| Bohemians (the Calixtines) by allowing the administration of the
309 Cover, 2 | forced me even now to cry aloud that God may inspire some
310 | amongst
311 Prop1 | friends, sells them for large amounts of money, and uses them
312 Prop2 | the Bohemians were given ample cause for bitterness; and
313 Prop2 (28)| medals which were worn as amulets, the fees for masses at
314 Prop1 | territories in the Mark of Ancona, in Romagna, and in other
315 Prop3 | it by robbery, or made it anew. It is all God's ordering,
316 2 (23) | Gravamina of 1521, NO. 20, Von anfechtung der cordissanen (see above,
317 Prop1 | chaste life,71 but only angelic power and celestial might.
318 Prop1 (72)| Angelica fortitudo et coelestis virtus. ~
319 Prop2 | that on the holy days we anger God more than on other days,
320 Prop2 | by which God is deeply angered, and that their only purpose
321 Prop2 | into an abuse, and which angers rather than reconciles God.
322 Prop1 | and keep little. Be not angry, dear lords! Truly, I mean
323 Prop3 | certainly the traffic in annuities26. If that did not exist
324 Prop2 | presumption with which they annul oaths and vows which have
325 Prop3 | had one of his servants anoint Jehu King of Israel, and
326 Intro | Of this I will say more anon, if this Romanist comes
327 Prop2 (35)| their patron saints, St. Anthony, St. Hurbert, St. Valentine,
328 Prop1 | an unchristian, nay, an anti-Christian thing for a poor sinful
329 Prop2 | him also. In this way St. Antoninus of Florence31 and certain
330 2 | more scandalous. Venice, Antwerp, Cairo44 are nothing compared
331 2 | and make a fool and an ape of anybody -- all this he
332 Cover, 1 | intelligence. I shall offer no apologies, no matter who may chide
333 1 | St. Peter who called the Apostolic Council, but the Apostles
334 Intro | already in press, for it appeared in print on the 26th of
335 Prop1 | the holier and better he appears to be in his outward works
336 2 | hastens, with insatiable appetite, to get possession of them
337 2 (15) | alleged right of the pope to appoint directly to vacant church
338 2 (6) | have received from the new appointees about 300,000 ducats. Needless
339 2 (42) | cases the exercise of the appointing power was limited by rules,
340 Prop2 | wrathful judgment by which He appoints the devil to lead us hither
341 2 (11) | complaint of extortion in their appraisement and collection was frequently
342 2 | nor emperor can equal or approach him, and that he who claims
343 Prop2 | otherwise, then an election and approval by the common people can
344 Prop1 | to hold the primates and arch-bishops to these things, and to
345 2 (24) | Dist. C.c. 1) that the archbishop-elect must secure the pallium
346 2 (4) | II, held at one time the archbishopric of Avignon, the bishoprics
347 2 | everything is ruled by the archknaves at Rome; soon they will
348 Prop2 (57)| a necessity, but see the argument in the Babylonian Captivity,
349 1 (27) | for the settlement of the Arian controversy. Luther's statement
350 Prop1 | blasphemy of God's name arid such abuse of Christian
351 Prop2 | people believe and live aright; the rulers are like the
352 Prop1 | case, or when a controversy arises among themselves, such a
353 Prop1 (6) | Complaint of the evils arising out of the practice was
354 Prop2 (49)| Bohemia, and resisted with arms all attempts to force them
355 Prop1 | Roman See has increased this army, so that the priests and
356 Prop3 | and pride and envy are aroused and increased among us,
357 Intro | scathing quality, it is a sane arraignment of those who "under the
358 Prop3 | simplicity to serve their own arrogance and tyranny, and they call
359 Prop3 | could not subdue to his arrogant will the Greeks and the
360 Prop3 | emperor so arbitrarily and arrogantly that it is pity to tell
361 1 | binding and loosing of they arrogate to themselves is mere invention
362 2 (59) | collection of ancient works of art. Luther is hinting that
363 1 | estate"; princes, lords, artisans, and farmers the "temporal
364 Prop3 | universities may make Doctors of Arts, of Medicine, of Laws, of
365 Prop2 | longer! And yet they are not ashamed of their knavery, leading
366 Prop3 | years ago,20 then in time Asia and Africa fell away, and
367 Intro | theoretical or theological aspects of the Reformation, the
368 Intro | poverty we must enrich the ass-drivers and stable-boys, nay, the
369 1 (27) | councils of the Church, assembled in 325 for the settlement
370 1 (11) | the opinion of those who assert that the priests of the
371 1 (25) | Prierias discusses this appeal, asserting, among other things, that "
372 Intro | boldest and baldest possible assertion of the very theory of papal
373 Prop1 | sold to gross, ignorant asses and knaves at Rome, while
374 Prop2 | government in taxes, imposts and assessments, what is stolen by the Roman
375 Prop1 (55)| founded by St. Francis of Assisi (died 1226), the Dominican (
376 2 | a coadjutor's i.e., an "assistant," for the coadjutor's benefit,
377 Prop2 (41)| virtue of membership in the association each member is believed
378 Prop2 (41)| the XVI Century. They are associations for devotional purposes.
379 1 | nothing from them. They assume for themselves sole authority,
380 Prop2 (47)| Luther is in error when he assumes that Jerome had a similar
381 Prop3 | of the Sentences; but be assured that no one will make a
382 1 (16) | Luther's comment is: "Be astonished, O heaven; shudder, O earth!
383 1 (25) | hold (nullum ligant vel astringunt) unless they are confirmed
384 Prop1 | one shall put man and wife asunder, takes precedence of the
385 Prop2 | a devil's work to try to atone for one sin with many greater
386 2 (41) | earlier days as the most atrocious simony. ~
387 Prop3 | thought impossible and have attacked many things too sharply.
388 2 (23) | applied to the practice of attacking titles to benefices. (WREDE,
389 1 | the same way, if the enemy attacks a city, he who first rouses
390 1 | ourselves, and once more attain God's favor. ~Against the
391 Prop3 | his decretals, and he has attempted it, by many evil wiles,
392 Prop1 | general consistory, with auditors and chancellors, which should
393 Prop1 (57)| between two parties in the Augustinian order. ~
394 Prop3 (31)| Sie wollen ausbuben, so sich's vielmehr hineinbubt. ~
395 1 (10) | Was ausz der Tauff krochen ist. ~
396 Intro | its plan already in the author's mind. The threat to write
397 Prop1 (28)| from the pope, or by his authorization. In 1522 Luther translated
398 1 (20) | of a Master's degree was authorized to expound the subject named
399 2 (54) | choose his own confessor and authorizing the confessor to absolve
400 2 (53) | well as the temporal lords, availed themselves regularly of
401 Prop1 | grant dispensations from his avaricious and tyrannical laws for
402 2 (4) | time the archbishopric of Avignon, the bishoprics of Bologna,
403 Prop1 | council to marry, for the avoidance of temptation and sin. Gal.
404 Prop3 | much more misery would be avoided if our curiosity would only
405 2 | Robbery has not been able to await the time when all the benefices,
406 2 | bans. Let us, therefore, awake, dear Germans, and fear
407 Cover, 2 | our head and thereby has awakened great hopes of good in many
408 1 | of the enemy from hell, awakens the Christians, and calls
409 Prop1 (44)| popes claimed the right to award the kingdom to a ruler who
410 Prop3 | every one may learn what an awful responsibility it is to
411 Prop3 | princes, Daniel, Hananiah, Azariah and Mishael; much more then
412 Intro (14)| See title B, ibid., 398. ~
413 Intro | and true to her name of Babel, an everlasting confusion;
414 Prop3 | and is put aside when the bachelor's degree is reached, and
415 2 | goes into the bottomless bag. They lie and deceive, make
416 Intro | which is the boldest and baldest possible assertion of the
417 2 (53) | They were international bankers, "the Rothschilds of the
418 Prop2 | blood, which suffers all bannings and threatenings rather
419 2 (59) | palace notorious as the banqueting-hall of Alexander VI (1492-1503),
420 Cover, 1 | the Eve of St. John the Baptist (June 23d), ~in the year
421 1 | of necessity any one can baptize and give absolution,5 which
422 1 | charge him with the office of baptizing, saying mass, absolving
423 Prop1 (74)| which might serve as a bar to lawful marriage. See
424 Prop2 | honor of St. Ottilia or St. Barbara or some other saint, according
425 2 | benefices, and the driving of bargains in spiritual goods has now
426 Prop3 | give them enough to say, bark, shout and write, since
427 Prop1 | to do it; like Paul and Barnabas, who would not let the people
428 2 | There is buying, selling, bartering, trading, trafficking, lying,
429 Prop3 (29)| I, 3). In 1511 a certain Bartholomew Rem invested 900 gulden
430 Prop1 | violence to the facts and base their decisions on their
431 Intro | against the tyranny and baseness of the Roman curia." The
432 2 | sale to the clergy; here bastards can become legitimate; here
433 Prop1 | seals and letters, to a cold bath. They would then take note
434 Prop2 (46)| the war in 1444. At the battle of Varna, Nov. 10th, 1444,
435 2 | though I were to teach that a bawdy-house keeper should have the name
436 2 | us? It would all be more bearable if in this way they only
437 2 (42) | and slippery thing, and bears no comparison to any other
438 Prop3 | the German emperors. How beautifully we Germans have been taught
439 | becoming
440 Prop2 | both sides may cease. As befits my folly, I shall be the
441 | beforehand
442 Prop3 | sake of your own soul, I beg of you not to become a cleric,
443 2 | think sufficient, he now begins to transfer this trade and
444 2 | justly hang thieves and behead robbers, why should we let
445 | behind
446 1 (16) | heaven; shudder, O earth! Behold, O Christians, what Rome
447 1 | man in error. Therefore it behooves every Christian to espouse
448 Prop2 | other way around. Everyone believes and lives as he pleases,
449 Prop2 | because there is no danger in believing that bread is there or is
450 2 | the office of sexton and bell-ringer in all the churches. All
451 Cover, 1 | question which one will put the bells on the other.3 I must fulfill
452 2 | that, for Campoflore,58 and Belvidere59 and certain other places
453 Prop3 | idle in the dust under the bench,11 to the end that the pope'
454 Prop1 | by a bowing cardinal on bended knee? As though the holy
455 2 | shamefully than the heathen beneath the cross treated the garments
456 2 (7) | The famous Benedictine monastery just outside the
457 Prop2 | thousand every year, for each benefactor a special mass, without
458 Prop2 | vigil and mass for all its benefactors, rather than hold them by
459 Prop3 | Germans, for which honor and benevolence he is said to have justly
460 Cover, 2 | themselves. The children of Benjamin slew 42,000 Israelites11
461 2 | dispose of them, or to whom he bequeaths his rights at death. Besides,
462 Prop3 (29)| Kaufshandlung und Wucher, in Berl. Ed., VII, 494-513. ~
463 1 (9) | surrounded his house and besought him to yield to their entreaties. ~
464 Prop2 | all the gifts which God bestows are the common and equal
465 Prop3 | hereditary Roman Emperor, he bethought himself of this device,
466 Prop2 (55)| jar haben, literally, ""Bid him good-day." ~
467 2 | the same nature. The pope binds many such benefices together
468 Intro | Extensive comment in all the biographies, especially KOSTLIN-KAWERAU
469 Prop3 | help on one. O, what a rare bird will a lord and ruler be
470 Prop3 | Himself about red or brown birettas13 or other decorations,
471 Prop1 | well. It is the truth, and bitter-sweet, and it is this, -- the
472 2 (42) | limited by rules, which though bitterly complained of (see above,
473 Prop1 | bishop should be a man who is blameless, and the husband of but
474 Intro | Farewell, unhappy, hopeless, blasphemous Rome! The wrath of God hath
475 Prop1 | punished because they so blasphemously misuse the ban and the name
476 Prop1 | endure and to praise such blasphemy of God's name arid such
477 Intro | treatise. It is not only "a blast on the war-trumpet," but
478 2 (52) | Ja wend das blat umb szo findistu es -- The
479 Prop3 | human wits, but on God's blessing. I commend this to the men
480 Prop1 | by people so hardened and blinded by great avarice, wealth
481 1 (4) | sacred"; in modern German, "a blockhead." ~
482 Prop1 (74)| law prohibited marriage of blood-relatives as far as the seventh degree
483 Cover, 2 | what was it that raised the bloodthirsty Julius II10 to such heights?
484 Prop3 | decretals, were utterly blotted out. The Bible contains
485 1 | overthrown, that we may blow down these walls of straw
486 Prop2 (41)| indulgences. In 1520 Wittenberg boasted of 20 fraternities, Cologne
487 Prop3 | this title is too proud and boastful and no one ought to be proclaimed
488 2 | vermin yonder in Rome, all boasting that they are "papal," that
489 1 | Christ has not two different bodies, one "temporal ," the other "
490 1 | work may be done for the bodily and spiritual welfare of
491 Intro | Martin Luther,6 which is the boldest and baldest possible assertion
492 2 | sticks, and by virtue of this bond they are all regarded as
493 Prop1 (35)| right of investiture was a bone of contention between popes
494 Prop1 | thing would be to make a bonfire of it.75~But if you say
495 Prop3 | ghost in their mothers' bosom." This pitiful evil we do
496 Prop2 | asked, then let them not bother any more about him55 and
497 Prop2 (35)| Botschaften, interpreted by Benrath (
498 2 | all of it goes into the bottomless bag. They lie and deceive,
499 Prop2 | sake and because they are a bounden duty. Now it is not possible
500 2 | must say that too. Since boundless Avarice has not been satisfied
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