05-bound | bowin-extor | extra-maria | marke-retur | revea-werke | where-zinsk
Part, Paragraph
501 Prop1 | him on a golden rod by a bowing cardinal on bended knee?
502 Prop3 | become very common, neither boy nor maid should take the
503 Prop3 | Scriptures, and for the young boys the Gospel. And would to
504 Prop1 (48)| three paragraphs enclosed in brackets were added by Luther to
505 2 (21) | In 1513 Albrecht of Brandenburg was made Archbishop of Madgeburg
506 Prop1 | wanton, useless bulls and braves.29 ~All priests ought rightly
507 2 | anybody -- all this he does brazenly and openly, and yet he wishes
508 Intro | when he recognized that the breach between him and the papal
509 1 | Christ, if a fire of offense breaks out, whether in the papal
510 Cover (5) | Grav. Der Deutschen Nation, Breslau, 1895. ~
511 Prop1 (29)| The breve is a papal decree, of equal
512 Prop1 | hold his stirrup or the bridle of his mule when he mounts
513 Prop3 | it were ruled by its own brief laws, as the lands were
514 2 | rain from heaven fire and brimstone and to sink Rome in the
515 2 (56) | word is used here in the broad sense, and means dispensations
516 Prop2 | proper station" might be so broadly interpreted that a whole
517 Intro | I am minded to issue a broadside to Charles and the nobility
518 2 | a brothel above all the brothels one can imagine, then I
519 Prop2 | hands to one another in brotherly humility, and not standing
520 Prop3 | concern Himself about red or brown birettas13 or other decorations,
521 Prop3 (18)| On the whole subject see BRYCE, Holy Roman Empire, 2d ed. (
522 Intro | translation in Wace and Buchheim, LUTHER'S PRIMARY WORKS (
523 2 | benefices together like a bundle of sticks, and by virtue
524 Prop1 (23)| signaturae justitiae were the bureaus through which the pope regulated
525 Prop2 | these devices, -- should be buried ten fathoms deep in the
526 Prop2 | heretics with books, not with burning; for so the ancient fathers
527 Prop3 | Everyone not unceasingly busy with the Word of God must
528 Prop2 | letters of indulgence, "butter-letter,"42 mass-letters,43 dispensations,
529 Prop3 (26)| prohibition of usury. The buyer purchased an annuity, but
530 2 | scandalous. Venice, Antwerp, Cairo44 are nothing compared to
531 Prop2 (49)| among the Bohemians (the Calixtines) by allowing the administration
532 Intro | wrath in the effort to be calm. For all its scathing quality,
533 Prop2 (48)| The League of Cambray, negotiated in 1508 for
534 2 (58) | The Campo di Fiore, a Roman market-place,
535 2 | inquire about that, for Campoflore,58 and Belvidere59 and certain
536 Prop1 | ought to be forbidden and canceled, and the commandments of
537 2 (42) | LANCELOTTI, Institutiones juris canonici, Lib. I, Tit. XXVII) this
538 2 (42) | According to the theory of the canonists (LANCELOTTI, Institutiones
539 Prop2 | longer to hold more than one canonry or prebend. He must be content
540 Prop3 (25)| Century. The discovery of the cape-route to India had given the Portuguese
541 Prop3 (29)| f.). On Luther's view of capitalism see ECK, Introduction to
542 2 (53) | the greatest of the German capitalists in the XVI Century. They
543 Prop3 | to be dependent upon the caprice of the pope and his followers,
544 2 | the hands of Rome, and the cardinalate will be paid for dearly
545 2 (20) | Des Papstes und der Cardinale Gesinde, i.e., all those
546 Prop2 | the new bishop should be careful that no discord arise because
547 Prop3 (20)| Luther is characteristically careless about his chronology. By
548 Prop2 (34)| Dominicans, Augustinians, Carmelites and Servites. ~
549 1 | tailors, cobblers, masons, carpenters, pot-boys, tapsters, farmers,
550 Prop1 | is the same way when he carries the sacrament in procession.
551 Prop1 | who by this pilgriming carry on endless knaveries and
552 2 (57) | Equivalent to "carrying coals to Newcastle." ~
553 Prop1 (71)| Fragilitas humana non permittit caste vivere. ~
554 2 | mere patch-work, and like casting a single devil more into
555 Prop1 (70)| Celibacy. Non promitto castitatem. ~
556 Prop1 | fools everybody. ~6. The casus reservati,27 the "reserved
557 2 (36) | above, p.88, note 2. For a catalogue of papal appointments bestowed
558 2 (33) | corpus juris itself. Cf. Cath. Encyc., Vi, pp. 588f. ~
559 Prop2 | their reason, like herds of cattle; for this cannot possible
560 Prop3 | way than agriculture or cattle-raising, in which increase of wealth
561 Prop2 (49)| Basel. Though they soon ceased to be a factor in the political
562 Prop3 | many hundred years without ceasing? It does not follow that
563 Prop2 | knows well what it is to celebrate mass. ~I am not speaking,
564 Prop2 (13)| Kirchweihen, i.e., the anniversary celebration of the consecration of a
565 Prop1 | but only angelic power and celestial might. 2 Pet. 2:11.72 Thus
566 Prop3 (7) | in scrinio pectories sui censetur habere," "the Roman pontiff
567 Prop1 | ban or an ecclesiastical censure, it should be disregarded,
568 Prop1 (22)| means of ecclesiastical censures. The charges against these
569 Prop2 (28)| demand at least 25 to 33 per cent of the offerings made at
570 2 (44) | The three chief centers of foreign commerce in the
571 Prop1 | pope, no one pays Him such ceremonious honor. That they can endure!
572 Prop3 (32)| s theol. Quellen, 1912, ch. I. ~
573 Prop1 | consistory, with auditors and chancellors, which should have control
574 Intro | that be read it and suggest changes. The two weeks immediately
575 Prop3 | and it is He alone Who changeth kingdoms, tosseth them to
576 Cover, 1 | Scripture, I am glad for the chant to fulfill my doctor's oath
577 Prop3 (20)| Luther is characteristically careless about his chronology.
578 1 | But now they have invented characters indelebilis,11 and prate
579 Prop1 (22)| ecclesiastical censures. The charges against these courts are
580 Prop2 | wax and parchment, your chariot will soon go to pieces,
581 Prop1 | frailty does not permit a chaste life,71 but only angelic
582 2 (55) | eat milk, eggs, butter and cheese on fast days. ~
583 Cover, 1 | apologies, no matter who may chide me. Perchance I owe my God
584 2 (33) | curriculum. Their aim is chiefly to show how the law applies
585 2 | be his last morsel, and choke him. The pope has a noble
586 1 | wilderness they were to agree in choosing one of themselves, married
587 Prop2 | wailing of organs and of choral singers, and to dead, cold
588 1 | should it happen that one chosen for such an office were
589 Prop1 (61)| note 4. See also Dass eine christl. Gemeine Recht und Mach
590 1 | shall come in My Name false Christs and false prophets, and
591 2 (53) | territorial rulers, who were in a chronic state of need. In return
592 Prop3 (20)| characteristically careless about his chronology. By the "Turkish Empire"
593 Prop2 | feast-days, church-treasures and church-adornment. For it is evident that
594 Prop2 | injurious, such as feast-days, church-treasures and church-adornment. For
595 Prop3 | should be abolished, and as Cicero's Rhetoric is read without
596 Intro | but which, from that very circumstance, is all the more open to
597 Prop1 | over any benefice, so as to cite pious priests to Rome, harass
598 Prop1 (22)| administration of justice by citing into their courts cases
599 Prop2 (12)| i.e., City-council. ~
600 1 (13) | the jurisdiction of the civil courts, This is the so-called
601 2 (54) | absolve him from certain classes of "reserved" sins; referred
602 Prop2 (35)| accident, etc. They were classified according to the names of
603 1 | ruling. ~To make it still clearer. If a little group of pious
604 Intro | suggested with sufficient clearness to show that its materials
605 1 (6) | 1298), the Constitutiones Clementinae (1318 or 1317), and the
606 Prop1 | however, they have become so clever that they make the three
607 1 | wonders. Therefore we must cling with firm faith to the words
608 1 | Antichrist18 or a sign that he is close at hand. ~The second wall19
609 Prop3 | merchants.24 In the matter of clothes, as we see, everybody wants
610 Prop1 (17)| the famous monastery of Cluny (918), but it was almost
611 2 (57) | Equivalent to "carrying coals to Newcastle." ~
612 1 | and to protect die good. A cobbler, a smith, a farmer, each
613 1 | clergy, then the tailors, cobblers, masons, carpenters, pot-boys,
614 Prop1 (72)| Angelica fortitudo et coelestis virtus. ~
615 Prop1 | so much ado in the Bull Coena Domini,28 and which are
616 1 | back the ban on him, and coerce him as best we could. For
617 Prop1 | 19:11 ff., 1 Cor. 7:7, Col. 2:20) I would have all
618 2 | they send out legates to collect money for use against the
619 1 (6) | authority of the popes, and collected in the so-called Corpus
620 1 (6) | Corpus includes the following collections of cannons and decretals:
621 Prop2 (35)| the terminarii, i.e., the collectors of alms sent out by the
622 Cover, 1 | buy me a cap or cut me my comb.2 It is a question which
623 Prop1 | themselves for still smaller, combating one another with unspeakable
624 2 | to transfer or sell this combination of two lines of business
625 Prop1 | nor deprive them of the comfort which is their due, I say
626 Prop2 | labor, or be rich and live comfortably at the cost of another's
627 2 (30) | Commendation was one of the practices
628 2 (33) | are the earliest form of commentary on the Bible. The glosses
629 Prop3 (30)| edicts against drunkenness. A committee of the Diet of Worms (1521)
630 2 | I hold to be almost the commonest and widest road for bringing
631 1 (6) | XXIV, and the Extravagantes Communes. The last pope whose decrees
632 Prop1 | the pope has broken the compact and made the annates a robbery,
633 Prop2 (49)| refused to subscribe the Compactata of Basel. Though they soon
634 Prop3 (25)| monopoly of this trade. A comparative statement of the cost of
635 Prop1 | honor of their holiness? Compare the two -- Christ and the
636 Prop2 | would also advise against compelling them to abolish both kinds
637 Prop1 | that devilish pride which compels the emperor to kiss the
638 2 (24) | regarded as the necessary complement of his election and consecration,
639 2 | the devil to rule them so completely that they have maintained
640 Intro | Spalatin, above mentioned, and completion of the Open Letter, Leo
641 Intro | when the Open Letter was composed. In the conclusion to the
642 Prop1 | are led away into a false conceit and a misunderstanding of
643 Prop3 | heart that this damned, conceited, rascally heathen has with
644 2 | worse, a thing I can neither conceive nor believe. ~1. It is a
645 2 (41) | The "heresy of Simon" was conceived to be the greatest of all
646 Intro | for Christ, and His honor concerns them so little that they
647 2 (53) | they received monopolistic concessions by which their capital was
648 1 | council, but an heretical conciliabulum.26 Even the Council of Nicaea --
649 2 | Christians, only so the concord of Christians should not
650 Prop3 | me of exaggeration, or of condemning what I do not understand!
651 Prop2 (41)| 434 ff.; LEA, Hist. Of Conf. And Indulg, III, pp. 470
652 2 (41) | position which is formally conferred by a ritual act of the Church.
653 2 (24) | election and consecration, conferring the "plenitude of the pontifical
654 1 | pope or a bishop anoints, confers tonsures; ordains, consecrates,
655 Prop3 | practice, and the pope, by confirming it,27 has injured the whole
656 Prop2 (49)| attempts to force them into conformity with the Roman Church. The
657 Prop1 | ravening tyrants ensnare and confuse many poor consciences to
658 Prop2 | spirit, who by human laws now confuses all estates in life, and
659 2 | Compositions" indeed! rather "confusions"! Oh, what a modest tax
660 Prop3 (33)| In the Conitendi Ratio Luther had set the
661 Intro | the war-trumpet," but a connecting link between the thought
662 Prop3 | yet this dead heathen has conquered and obstructed and almost
663 1 (9) | 247-258, is said to have consented to accept the office only
664 2 (10) | The papal court or curia consisted of all the officials of
665 Prop1 (45)| Church." The attempt to consolidated the States and make the
666 Prop3 (7) | the canon law (c. I, de const. In VI to (I, 2)). ~
667 Prop2 | history for its nobility, its constancy and fidelity, to be inconstant,
668 2 (14) | to a cathedral church who constituted the "chapter" of that cathedral,
669 1 (6) | Liber Sextus (1298), the Constitutiones Clementinae (1318 or 1317),
670 1 (6) | the popes ("decretals," "constitutions," etc.), promulgated by
671 Prop1 | eat thy bread." They have construed this to mean that their
672 2 (24) | 604) mentions it as prisca consuetude (Dist., C.c. 3). The cannon
673 1 | and it burn on and on and consume everything that could burn,
674 Prop2 | wares, and what is uselessly consumed. Thus it seems to me one
675 Intro | vom J. 1520; Gotha, 1884) contain a modernized test and extensive
676 Prop3 | utterly blotted out. The Bible contains more than enough directions
677 Prop1 | order to decide contests and contentions, it might be possible for
678 Intro | For full discussion of the contents of the work, especially
679 Prop1 | injustice is inevitably done the contestants. ~Moreover, the outrageous
680 Prop2 (53)| dioceses of these bishops were contiguous to that the Archbishop of
681 Prop1 (37)| during the Middle Ages as a continuation of the Roman Empire. (See
682 Prop2 | were a fraternity which contributed money to feed the poor or
683 Prop2 (35)| an alms, would enroll the contributor in the list of beneficiaries
684 Prop1 | so many persecutions and controversies with heretics, there were
685 Prop1 (43)| 306-337). The Donation conveyed to the pope title to the
686 Prop2 (47)| and Jerome of Prague were convicted of heresy by the Council
687 Prop2 (57)| had not yet reached the conviction that the administration
688 Intro | The first edition of 4000 copies came off the press of Melchior
689 2 (23) | 20, Von anfechtung der cordissanen (see above, p.88, note 3),
690 2 (23) | note 3), where the name cordissei is applied to the practice
691 Prop3 | the Fuggers and similar corporations;29 and that, too, by another
692 Intro (2) | ENDERS, II, 414; SMITH, L's Correspondence, I, No. 266. ~
693 Prop3 | Word of God must become corrupt; that is why the people
694 1 | been the cause of terrible corruption throughout all Christendom. ~
695 Prop1 | at Rome. It increases the costs, and moreover the judges
696 Prop2 | ban should be met with a counter-ban. ~If, however, it were desired,
697 Prop1 | He might almost be the "Counter-Christ" whom the Scriptures call
698 Prop2 | they will -- are but as counters compared with guldens. But
699 Prop2 | sixty times a year, not counting what is given to the government
700 Prop2 | the temple at Jerusalem to countless other places, though he
701 Prop1 | and customs of the various countries, so that they often do violence
702 2 | present the sacred trickery of coupling together ten or twenty prelacies
703 Prop1 (73)| The court-jester was allowed unusual freedom
704 Prop1 | Christian faith, but the courtiers have been kept thereby from
705 2 (4) | bishoprics of Bologna, Lausanne, Coutances, Viviers, Mende, Ostia and
706 Prop2 (30)| which was sufficiently coveted to make local Church authorities
707 Cover (2) | comparison of the monks' cowl and tonsure with the headgear
708 1 | sin, bringing to light the craft and deceit of the devil,
709 1 | them in all these knavish, crafty deceptions.3 ~Josh. 6:20
710 2 | it goes on. They skim the cream off the bishoprics, monasteries
711 2 | reservation" of the pope creates in Rome a state of affairs
712 2 | all these to Rome than by creating cardinals and giving them
713 2 (6) | The creation of new cardinals was a lucrative
714 Prop2 (25)| Trier" was believed by the credulous to be the seamless coat
715 1 | right, if the article of The Creed is correct: "I believe one
716 Prop2 | But now the custom has crept in, that masses are said
717 2 | consent have written and cried out against these things;
718 2 | the heathen beneath the cross treated the garments of
719 2 (11) | ostensible purpose, viz. , the Crusade. This charge is repeated
720 2 (12) | On the crusading -- indulgences, see Vol.
721 Cover, 2 | or reason. Such works He crushes ruthlessly to earth, as
722 Cover, 2 | proceed by our own might and cunning, without God's help. ~
723 2 (30) | hold two livings with the cure of souls. The man who received
724 2 | purses eased and their itch cured. Another of the "glosses"
725 Prop2 (26)| alleged to work wonderful cures, especially of syphilis. ~
726 2 (33) | part of the theological curriculum. Their aim is chiefly to
727 Prop2 | lightnings, thunderings, cursings, damnings and the rest of
728 2 | nation would be a better custodian for it than the pope; for
729 Cover, 1 | one need buy me a cap or cut me my comb.2 It is a question
730 Prop2 | thunderings, cursings, damnings and the rest of these devices, --
731 Prop2 | is perhaps too novel an daring, especially for those who
732 Prop1 (61)| p. 345, note 4. See also Dass eine christl. Gemeine Recht
733 2 (35) | Dataria is the name for that department
734 Prop1 | with him several priests or deacons, who might also be married
735 Prop3 (9) | the XII Century. With the decay of the feudal system and
736 2 | churches drawn to Rome, cities decayed, land and people laid waste,
737 Prop3 | became slaves of the most deceitful tyrants; we have the name,
738 Prop1 | accursed money, shamelessly deceives and fools everybody. ~6.
739 2 | trading, trafficking, lying, deceiving, robbing, stealing, luxury,
740 2 (15) | June, August, October and December, shall be filled by the
741 Prop3 | suffering of unspeakable deception and insult. We have the
742 Prop1 | Therefore, in order to decide contests and contentions,
743 Prop1 | faith and the Church be decided by people so hardened and
744 Prop2 (46)| 1444, the Hungarians were decisively defeated, and Wladislav
745 Prop1 | live in celibacy, but shall declare to the bishop that he has
746 Prop1 | of the devil, as St. Paul declares in I Timothy 4, "There shall
747 Prop3 | brown birettas13 or other decorations, nor does He ask whether
748 Prop2 | should be buried ten fathoms deep in the earth, so that there
749 Prop2 | mockery, by which God is deeply angered, and that their
750 Prop2 | use the ban to plunder and defame other people, and all the
751 Prop2 (46)| Hungarians were decisively defeated, and Wladislav and Caesarini
752 2 | degrees or has some other defect.48 Oh! what a taxing and
753 1 | which they have hitherto defended themselves in such wise
754 Prop2 | on this subject, with due deference to every one who may understand
755 Prop2 | united by force, nor by defiance, nor by haste; it will take
756 1 (11) | 1563. (MIRBT, No. 312), defined the correct Roman teaching
757 Prop2 (40)| below, pp. 291 f.) Luther definitely excludes penance from the
758 Prop2 (41)| Realencyk., III, 437). In 1519 Degenhard Peffinnger, of Wittenberg,
759 2 (41) | punishable by deposition and degradation. The "heresy of Simon" was
760 Cover, 1 | Nation, in the hope that may deign to help His Church through
761 Intro | upon Luther had been long delayed, but on the 15th of June,
762 Cover, 2 | host: a mighty man is not delivered by much strength." On this
763 2 (4) | The Cardinal della Rovere, afterwards Pope
764 Prop1 | order cannot but harm and delude simple souls who think only
765 Prop1 | work, oftentimes an evil, delusive work, for God has not commanded
766 Intro | which Luther had sought to demolish in his tract on the Papacy.
767 Intro | Kohler, L'S SCHRIFT AN DEN ADEL. . .IM SPIEGEL DER
768 1 | Spirit? That would be to deny the whole faith and the
769 Prop2 | fool's-works, by which we depart from true faith into new,
770 Prop2 (30)| for the canonization of a departed bishop or other local dignitary.
771 2 | it would be a dangerous departure; Rome's turn too might come!
772 Prop2 (33)| cord from which the seals depend; "wax," the seal holding
773 Prop3 | he is at all times to be dependent upon the caprice of the
774 Prop1 | this power then we should depose all bishops, archbishops
775 Prop1 | my faithful counsel nor deprive them of the comfort which
776 1 | sword deal with Christendom, depriving it of its liberty by their
777 Prop2 (28)| source of large revenue, derived from the sale of medals
778 Prop3 | holy Gospel from which he derives his name16 and his life?
779 2 (20) | Des Papstes und der Cardinale
780 2 (25) | C.c. 1). The canon law describes this oath as one "of allegiance,
781 2 (31) | A monk who deserted his monastery was known
782 Cover, 2 | Christendom, without regard to the deserts of evil men. Otherwise we
783 Prop1 | reason it should properly and deservedly cease, because it can well
784 Prop3 | themselves in their proud designs against the Roman Emperor
785 2 | which we will not speak, and desires of the pope the same benefice,
786 Prop3 | find the proverb true, "Despair makes most of the monks
787 Cover, 2 | We must go at this work despairing of physical force and humbly
788 Intro | vermin?" The situation is desperate; appeals and protests have
789 Prop3 | name; but now, under the despotism of the Sentences, we find
790 2 | If this were to be called destroying monasteries and abolishing
791 Prop2 (48)| terms with the pope and detached him from the alliance, and
792 Cover (4) | always there." See WANDER, Deutsches Sprichworterlexicon, under
793 2 | No Turk could have so devastated Italy and suppressed the
794 Prop2 | damnings and the rest of these devices, -- should be buried ten
795 Prop1 | this results only in the devising of hypocrisy and the destruction
796 Prop1 | that they might the better devote themselves to study and
797 Prop2 (41)| They are associations for devotional purposes. The members of
798 Prop3 | shall certainly have to devour one another. The devil invented
799 2 | monasteries in ruins, bishoprics devoured, the prelacies and the revenues
800 2 (58) | The Campo di Fiore, a Roman market-place,
801 1 (21) | attack upon the XCV Theses (Dialogus de potestate Papae, Dec.,
802 2 (20) | or "household" (called Dienstverwandte in the Gravamina of 1521)
803 Prop2 | dissension that the clergy differ from the laity in manner
804 Prop1 | the manifold divisions and differences within one and the same
805 Prop1 (74)| dispensation, which was not all too difficult to secure, especially by
806 Prop3 | ruled without them! These diffuse and far-fetched laws are
807 2 | will be found at Rome to dig up contests out of the earth
808 Prop2 (30)| departed bishop or other local dignitary. Cf. Hutten's Vadiscus (
809 2 | it is our duty to use all diligence in protecting Christendom
810 Prop3 | contains more than enough directions for all our living, and
811 2 | or by one with an alleged disability. To such an incumbent, without
812 Prop1 (11)| the "courtesans" and the disadvantage of the Germans. (WREDE,
813 Cover, 2 | we use, the greater our disaster if we do not act humbly
814 Prop3 | books, should be altogether discarded, together with all the rest
815 2 (24) | otherwise he is forbidden to discharge any of the duties of his
816 Prop3 | Hebrew -- the mathematical disciplines and history. But all this
817 Prop2 | at the cost of another's discomfort, according to the present
818 Prop2 | who fear that through the discontinuance of these masses their trade
819 Prop2 | should be careful that no discord arise because of such a
820 Prop3 | studying them? We could never discover the whole arbitrary will
821 Prop3 (25)| in the XVI Century. The discovery of the cape-route to India
822 1 (25) | In the Epitome Prierias discusses this appeal, asserting,
823 Prop2 (35)| alleged insurance against disease, accident, etc. They were
824 Prop1 | that at Rome they deal so disgracefully with the faith. If they
825 Prop1 | because it can well be dispensed with.56 It looks suspiciously
826 2 | the seller is willing to dispose of them, or to whom he bequeaths
827 2 | advantage that the seller or disposer retains reversionary rights,39
828 Prop1 (57)| taken part in a vigorous dispute between two parties in the
829 Prop1 (43)| its genuineness was not disputed. In 1440, however, Laurentius
830 Prop1 | they had great wars and disputes with the emperors,36 until
831 Prop3 | has become nothing but a disputing and a weariness to the flesh. ~
832 Prop2 | should either abolish them or disregard them, or at least make them
833 Prop2 | as it ought not to cause dissension that the clergy differ from
834 Prop2 | advantages lead only to dissensions, divisions and pride, in
835 Prop2 | they legalize unjust gains, dissolve oaths, vows and agreements,
836 2 | legalized. Here vows are dissolved; here monks at granted liberty
837 Prop1 | command either to keep his distance, or else to jump into the
838 2 (44) | merchants together from widely distant points, and were the times
839 Prop1 (57)| Century there were eight distinct sects within the Franciscan
840 Prop1 | exist without any of these distinctions, is lost by both sides,
841 Prop2 (58)| Bohemian Brethren, who are here distinguished from the Hussites, Cf. Realencyk.,
842 1 (11) | certain spiritual mark which distinguishes them from the rest." (MIRBT,
843 Prop3 | Such objections do not disturb me as once they did; for
844 2 | Again, the year has been so divided between the pope and the
845 2 (48) | question touching marriage and divorce, including, therefore, the
846 Prop3 | attached forever to the doctorate, and that with such a solemn
847 Prop1 (43)| A forged document of the VIII Century, professing
848 Intro (8) | SMITH, Nos. 269,279, and documents in St. Louis Ed., XV, 1630
849 1 (18) | Antichrist" (see LOOFS, Dogmengeschichte, 4th ed., p. 649). ~
850 Prop3 | more than full with these domestic robbers, the silk and velvet
851 Prop2 (59)| whose influence is still dominant in Roman theology. ~
852 Prop3 (2) | philosophy of Aristotle dominated the mediaeval universities.
853 Prop1 | much ado in the Bull Coena Domini,28 and which are not worth
854 Prop2 (34)| Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians, Carmelites
855 Prop3 | to be excepted from his dominion and themselves direct the
856 Prop2 | thy pen the wicked Satan doth lie as he hath never lied
857 2 (33) | of a word or passage of doubtful meaning. The glosses are
858 Prop2 | and cathedrals, which were doubtless established in order that
859 Prop3 | that he seeks a living, and doubts that he will ever be able
860 Intro | may be the habitation of dragons, specters and witches, and
861 1 (21) | which even Holy Scripture draws its vigor and authority,
862 Prop1 | effect a reform in this dreadful state of things, nevertheless
863 1 | a mere layman. They even dream that a priest can never
864 Prop1 | and wrest them to human dreams, as I have showed in a Latin
865 Prop2 | as they deserve, to the dregs, i.e., to the wailing of
866 1 (13) | distinction which the Roman Church drew between clergy and laity
867 Prop1 | His disciples' feet and dried them, and the disciples
868 2 | bishoprics and benefices, and the driving of bargains in spiritual
869 Prop2 (23)| times this wafer exuded drops of blood, reverenced as
870 Prop2 | else of the sort, are to be drowned and destroyed. There is
871 2 | Now that Italy is sucked dry, they come into Germany,5
872 2 (30) | the Diet of Worms (1521), Duke George of Saxony, an outspoken
873 Prop3 (4) | Duns Scotus, died 1308. In the
874 Prop3 | Gospel lies idle in the dust under the bench,11 to the
875 Prop3 | Who ruleth over all things dwelleth in heaven, and it is He
876 Prop1 | preaching, suffering and dying. Now they turn it around,
877 2 (33) | meaning. The glosses are the earliest form of commentary on the
878 Prop3 | and about them!37 If their ears itch for it I will sing
879 2 | are to have their purses eased and their itch cured. Another
880 Prop2 (23)| A little town in East Prussia, where was displayed
881 Cover, 1 | passed and the time to (Eccl 3:7) speak is come, as saith
882 Cover, 1 | speak is come, as saith Ecclesiastes. I have followed out intention1
883 Prop3 (29)| s view of capitalism see ECK, Introduction to the Sermon
884 2 | four thousand mule-riders, eclipsing all emperors and kings?
885 Intro | ethics, history, politics, economics, all have their place in
886 Intro | annotated by E. Schneider. The editions of K. Benrath (Halle, 1883)
887 Prop3 | Christendom lies, are to be educated and trained. Therefore I
888 Intro | hands on his wrath in the effort to be calm. For all its
889 Cover, 1 | help His Church through the efforts of the laity, since the
890 2 (55) | permission to eat milk, eggs, butter and cheese on fast
891 Prop1 | Israel, who stole from the Egyptians the hire they had earned,
892 Prop3 (29)| annually of the Welser (EHRENBERG, Zeitalter der Fugger, I,
893 Prop1 (57)| the XV Century there were eight distinct sects within the
894 Prop3 (33)| had set the age for men at eighteen to twenty, for the women
895 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, ""
896 Prop1 (61)| 345, note 4. See also Dass eine christl. Gemeine Recht und
897 1 | Council, but the Apostles and elders. If, then, that right had
898 Prop2 (56)| the Hussites used both elements. See below, pp. 178 f. ~
899 Prop3 | account (1 Kings 1:38 f.); Elisha too had one of his servants
900 1 (5) | recognized by the Council of Elvira, in the year 306, and the
901 2 (24) | shoulder-cape which is the emblem of the archbishop's office,
902 1 (6) | body of Church law, and embodied in legal forms the medieval
903 2 | the Turks, they send out emissaries to gather money. Oft-times
904 2 (30) | opponent of Luther, was as emphatic in his protest against this
905 Prop3 | is a small thing to toss empires and principalities to and
906 2 (10) | of various sorts who were employed in the transaction of papal
907 Prop2 (25)| cathedral church of Trier by the Empress Helena, mother of Constantine
908 2 | as ye see in Christ, Who emptied Himself and took upon Him
909 2 (1) | i.e. Christians considered en masse, without regard to
910 2 (53) | control of large capital enabled them to advance large sums
911 2 (9) | both England and France had enacted laws prohibiting the very
912 Prop1 (48)| The three paragraphs enclosed in brackets were added by
913 2 | Thus priests are to be encouraged against their own bishop,
914 2 (33) | juris itself. Cf. Cath. Encyc., Vi, pp. 588f. ~
915 1 (6) | died 1484). See Catholic Encyclo., IV, pp. 391 ff. ~
916 2 (11) | the servitia, see Catholic Encyclopedia, I, pp. 537 f. Luther here
917 Prop2 | all the souls which are endangered cry out against him, for
918 Prop1 | this pilgriming carry on endless knaveries and learn the
919 Prop2 | Here my responsibility ends.~
920 Prop2 | perfect and to have patiently endured this great injustice and
921 Prop2 | deceived into giving to their enemies, the Gibeonites, and King
922 2 (9) | however, that these laws were enforced only occasionally, and never
923 Prop3 | account, and did not let them engage much in commerce. ~3. But
924 1 | though they are not all engaged in the same work, just as
925 Intro | extensive notes. A previous English translation in Wace and
926 Prop2 (2) | consequence, of the benefits enjoyed by those who live under
927 Intro | of preparation.13 This "enlarged and revised edition"14 contained
928 2 | all kings and princes at enmity rather than have them unite
929 2 | evil are here knighted and ennobled here is permitted the marriage
930 Intro | out of our poverty we must enrich the ass-drivers and stable-boys,
931 Prop2 (35)| who, for an alms, would enroll the contributor in the list
932 1 | go unpunished, and have ensconced themselves within the safe
933 Prop1 (45)| II (1503-1513) in war and entangled them in political alliances
934 Prop1 | 2 Timothy 2:3, "No one entangleth himself with worldly affairs,
935 2 | holds a benefice afterwards enters the "household" of the pope
936 Prop2 (41)| the sodalities membership entitled the member to the enjoyment
937 1 (9) | besought him to yield to their entreaties. ~
938 Prop1 | learned and pious citizen, entrust to him the office of the
939 2 | not that he to whom it is entrusted is to care for it, or build
940 2 | commend,30 by which the pope entrusts the keeping of a rich, fat
941 Prop2 | Christ, God and all things? (Eph. 4:4 f.) Are we to be blind
942 Prop3 | Macc. 4:9, 12: Gymnasia Epheborum et Graecae gloriae,1 in
943 Prop1 (13)| The sign of the episcopal office; as regards archbishops,
944 1 (8) | time of his election to the episcopate, which was forced upon him
945 1 | distinction between those who are equally Christians? Only from human
946 Prop2 (23)| Universities of Leipzig and Erfurt, Pope Eugenius IV in 1446
947 Intro | UND DIE KIRCHENGESCHICHTE, Erlangen, 1900. Extensive comment
948 1 | follow him? Has not the pope erred many times? Who would help
949 1 | Christendom when the pope errs, if we were not to believe
950 2 (52) | das blat umb szo findistu es -- The translators have
951 Prop1 | everyone should have his own especial task. ~2. Since the pope
952 1 (12) | among whom there can be no essential difference.
953 Prop2 | that bread and wine are not essentially and naturally in the sacrament,
954 1 | commands that every man shall esteem himself the lowliest and
955 2 | the emperors. Indeed, some estimate that every year more than
956 2 (30) | practices by which the pope evaded the provision of the canon
957 2 | Holy Roman See of Avarice evades the canon law by making "
958 Prop3 (26)| Rentenkauf was a means for evading the prohibition of usury.
959 Cover, 1 | the Augustinians, ~on the Eve of St. John the Baptist (
960 Prop3 (18)| even claimed that in the event of a vacancy the pope was
961 Intro | to her name of Babel, an everlasting confusion; a new pantheon
962 2 | is ancient history and an every-day occurrence at Rome. Avarice
963 Prop2 | And if there were no other evidence that it is not of God, this
964 1 | ordained of God to punish evil-doers and to protect them that
965 1 | ruling member, and by his evil-doing is the cause of much harm
966 Prop3 | the will of God through evil-minded men; and we have more regard
967 1 | God for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them
968 Prop1 (6) | vacant. Complaint of the evils arising out of the practice
969 Prop3 | Germans with his intolerable exactions, we should still have our
970 Prop1 | Naples and Sicily.44 He has exactly as much right to that kingdom
971 Prop3 | own wanton will as a law exalting them above all the world,
972 Prop2 | suppresses God's commandment, he exalts his own commandment over
973 Prop2 | bishops and doctors should examine and proscribe: but now it
974 Prop3 | as though they were to be excepted from his dominion and themselves
975 Prop3 | against the extravagance and excess in dress, by which so many
976 Prop2 (40)| 291 f.) Luther definitely excludes penance from the number
977 2 (10) | is made to 949 offices, exclusive of those which had to do
978 2 | Holy Father must make some excuse, that he may not be reproved
979 1 (13) | that the clergy should be exempt from the jurisdiction of
980 Prop1 (17)| Exemption" was the practice by which
981 2 (42) | Tit. XXVII) this right is exercised either per petitionemalterius,
982 Prop2 | villages also should be exhorted to contribute, since in
983 Prop1 | permit sentences of ban or exile when faith or right life
984 Prop3 | of every sort. It has not existed much over a hundred years,
985 2 | but now she has become exorbitant, and no one dare be a knave
986 Prop1 | reservations,5 gratiae expectativae,6 papal months,7 incorporations,8
987 2 (59) | housing of his wonderful and expensive collection of ancient works
988 Prop3 | turn out only men who are experts in the Holy Scriptures,
989 Prop2 (27)| 447, note 1). For another explanation see Benrath, p. 105. ~
990 2 (33) | A gloss is a note explanatory of a word or passage of
991 2 | bear to have such knavery exposed if it were his own? Finally,
992 1 (20) | degree was authorized to expound the subject named in the
993 Prop1 | called to this work by the express desire of bishops, parishes,
994 Cover (7) | twenty years of age. Hutten expresses his "hopes of good" from
995 Prop3 (2) | religious truth came to expression, but it was the basis of
996 1 (5) | baptism in such cases was expressly recognized by the Council
997 1 | Therefore its work should extend freely and without hindrance
998 Prop2 (49)| so-called Bohemian Brethren, had extended into Poland and Prussia
999 1 (15) | Interdicts of more limited local extent were quite frequent. The
1000 2 | lands and still steal and extort, by means of indulgences,
1001 Prop1 | only are they the means of extorting much money from the people,
|