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Martin Luther
Open Letter to Christ. Nobility of the German Nation

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1002 1 (6) | Gratian (1142), the Liber Extra (1234), the Liber Sextus ( 1003 Prop2 (45)| Faculties" were extraordinary powers, usually for the 1004 Prop1 | Latin treatise.39 ~Such extravagant, over-presumptuous, and 1005 2 | money-snares, from which a man must extricate himself,49 if he would be 1006 Prop2 (23)| certain times this wafer exuded drops of blood, reverenced 1007 1 (11) | authoritative statement in the bull Exultate Deo (1439). Eugenius IV, 1008 1 | shall lend no aid when the eye is suffering. Is it not 1009 1 | be frightened off by the fabrications of the popes, but we ought 1010 Prop2 (49)| they soon ceased to be a factor in the political situation, 1011 Prop1 | often do violence to the facts and base their decisions 1012 2 | business. And now I would fain hear of a mind so lofty 1013 Prop3 | them Aristotle had not the faintest inkling! And yet this dead 1014 Intro | Amen."~This passage may fairly be regarded as the germ 1015 Prop2 | Christian safe-conduct, and faithlessly to act contrary to it. So 1016 1 | errors. ~The third wall falls of itself when the first 1017 Prop1 | their robbery, and with falsely devised threats would drive 1018 Prop2 | example, may serve to bring in fame and money. ~Although the 1019 Prop3 | them! These diffuse and far-fetched laws are only a burden to 1020 Prop3 | henceforth a waste of time and a farce. At present the canon law 1021 Prop3 | the vows. Nay, I will go farther and say, If you trust God 1022 2 | that we may not share the fate of all the poor souls who 1023 Prop2 | should be buried ten fathoms deep in the earth, so that 1024 Prop1 | remuneration, but allows them to fatten themselves on presents. 1025 Cover (11)| recollection of the figures was faulty.~ 1026 2 (53) | need. In return for these favors they received monopolistic 1027 Prop2 | men to break the faith and fealty which they have pledged 1028 Prop2 | brings such things to pass, fearing that otherwise it must die 1029 Prop2 (13)| church. These days had become feast days for the parish, and 1030 Prop2 | pope has instituted the feasts, and whether we must have 1031 2 (15) | vacant in the months of February, April, June, August, October 1032 2 | ordinance. This is called "feeding the sheep of Christ!" Thus 1033 Intro | There are times when we feel in reading it that the writer 1034 Prop2 (22)| Die wilden Kapellen und Feldkirchen, i.e., churches which are 1035 Prop1 | suffer want. Yet the foolish fellow thinks to gloss over such 1036 1 | since now they also are fellow-Christians, fellow-priests, "fellow-spirituals,"30 1037 1 | fellow-spirituals,"30 fellow-lords over all things, and whenever 1038 1 | also are fellow-Christians, fellow-priests, "fellow-spirituals,"30 1039 1 | fellow-Christians, fellow-priests, "fellow-spirituals,"30 fellow-lords over all 1040 Prop2 | good work if they make a festival in honor of St. Ottilia 1041 Prop2 | nobility, its constancy and fidelity, to be inconstant, perjurers, 1042 Prop1 (32)| The Fifth Lateran Council (1512-17). ~ 1043 Prop1 | bishops mere ciphers and figure-heads, and acts against his own 1044 Cover, 2 | princes of hell, who can fill the world with war and bloodshed, 1045 Prop1 | and which should be the final court of appeal for German 1046 2 (52) | Ja wend das blat umb szo findistu es -- The translators have 1047 Prop1 (22)| their verdicts (usually fines) by means of ecclesiastical 1048 Prop1 | restrain himself, take his fingers out of the pie, and claim 1049 2 (58) | The Campo di Fiore, a Roman market-place, restored 1050 Prop2 | hunger or of cold. It is not fitting that one man should live 1051 Cover, 2 | with earnest prayer, and fix our minds on nothing else 1052 Prop1 (75)| law was also given to the flames. ~ 1053 Prop3 | the worst of all books. It flatly opposes divine grace and 1054 Prop1 | the wrath of God, if we flatter this kind of pride and do 1055 Prop3 | will of the pope and his flatterers. Your cause may be thoroughly 1056 Prop1 | and by our silence or our flattery make ourselves partakers 1057 Prop3 | lands, enough wool, hair, flax and everything else which 1058 Prop2 | which the pope sells at his flaying-place in Rome. We should either 1059 Prop1 | those who are to despise and flee worldly glory, i.e., of 1060 1 | second wall19 is still more flimsy and worthless. They wish 1061 Prop2 (41)| institution in the Roman Church, flourished especially in the XVI Century. 1062 2 | of this ocean like virtue flows into all the world. Is it 1063 Prop2 | liberty, and all sorts of food made free, as the Gospel 1064 Prop1 | regarded as the height of foolishness; but I am not concerned 1065 Prop2 | haste; it will take time and forbearance. Had not even Christ to 1066 Prop1 (34)| 6, cap. 4. The decretal forbids the bestowing of the pallium ( 1067 Prop3 | and toil. ~Above all, the foremost and most general subject 1068 1 (25) | decision of the pope, which he foresaw would be adverse, to the 1069 2 | few, and so he brings his foresight to bear upon the benefices 1070 Prop2 | comes out of it. ~20. The forest chapels and rustic churches22 1071 Prop1 (43)| A forged document of the VIII Century, 1072 Prop1 (43)| that the Donation was a forgery. This work was republished 1073 1 (13) | the so-called privilegium fori, "benefit of clergy." It 1074 2 (41) | office or position which is formally conferred by a ritual act 1075 | formerly 1076 Intro | Roman curia. ~Yet it is no formless and incoherent cry, but 1077 Prop3 (9) | of the time when it was formulated, and the continual conflict 1078 2 | fighting, if only the money is forthcoming. It is with the annates 1079 Prop1 (72)| Angelica fortitudo et coelestis virtus. ~ 1080 | forty 1081 Cover, 2 | It is not out of sheer forwardness or rashness that I, a single, 1082 Prop2 | sponsorships and the third and fourth degrees and if the pope 1083 Prop2 (34)| Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians, 1084 Intro | Luther's greatest work. Its frank outspokenness true condition 1085 Prop1 | permits,"69 let everyone frankly interpret these words negatively, 1086 Prop3 (18)| Charles the Great, King of the Franks, was crowned Roman Emperor 1087 Prop2 (28)| at the shrines, and the free-will offerings of the pilgrims. 1088 Prop3 | living based on an honest freehold or revenue, than a hundred 1089 Prop3 | grievous than twenty based on freeholds. In truth this traffic in 1090 Prop2 | it is only a question of freeing a heretic! We should vanquish 1091 2 (11) | appraisement and collection was frequently raised. The Council of Constance 1092 2 | 1. It is a horrible and frightful thing that the ruler of 1093 Prop1 | many other childish and frivolous things, they decreed that 1094 Prop1 | pope should be the head and front of this knighthood, yet 1095 2 (11) | XIV, Century, the annates (fructus medii temporis) had become 1096 Prop1 | of baptism. What sort of fruit this has borne, we see, 1097 2 | Rome, quite uselessly and fruitlessly; we get nothing for it but 1098 Prop2 (46)| absolved the king from the fulfillment of its conditions he renewed 1099 Cover (1) | Unserm furnchmen nach. See Introduction, 1100 Prop1 | pilgrim on his way to Rome, furnishing weapons to the Turks, or 1101 Prop1 | mere fable and idle talk. ~Furthermore, I advise that henceforth 1102 Prop2 | have in such a miserable gabbing or wretched vigils and masses, 1103 Prop2 | misused and applied to the gaining of temporal goods, that 1104 Prop1 | as St. Paul teaches in Galatians 5:1 and 1 Corinthians 9: 1105 Prop2 (14)| for drunkenness, gain and gambling. ~ 1106 2 | beneath the cross treated the garments of Christ. Yet all that 1107 2 | they send out emissaries to gather money. Oft-times they issue 1108 1 (26) | i.e., A mere gathering of people. ~ 1109 Cover (5) | of the German Nation; See GEBHARDT, Die Grav. Der Deutschen 1110 Prop2 (7) | Das geistliche Unrecht. ~ 1111 Prop3 | and to all men in Adam, Gen. 3:17 ff.: "Accursed be 1112 Prop1 | to the command of God in Genesis 3:19, "In the sweat of thy 1113 Prop1 | 25, "The princes of the Gentiles are lords, but ye shall 1114 2 | canons are cheated. This is a genuine robbery, which intends to 1115 Prop1 (43)| to worldly power, and its genuineness was not disputed. In 1440, 1116 2 (30) | Diet of Worms (1521), Duke George of Saxony, an outspoken 1117 Intro | fairly be regarded as the germ of the Open Letter. The 1118 Prop3 (9) | customs and the remnants of Germanic legal ideas, naturally gave 1119 2 (6) | 417, note I, and PASTOR, Gesch. der Papste IV, I, 137. 1120 Prop2 (19)| untranslatable, -- Netz, Gesetz solt ich sagen. ~ 1121 2 (20) | Papstes und der Cardinale Gesinde, i.e., all those who were 1122 2 | reformation. So far we have been getting an idea of how they deal 1123 1 (3) | frightened the world with ghost-stories." ~ 1124 1 (3) | Spuknisse, literally "ghosts." The gist of the sentence 1125 Prop2 | giving to their enemies, the Gibeonites, and King Zedekiah was miserably 1126 Prop3 | God that every town had a girl's school also, in which 1127 Prop3 | school also, in which the girls were taught the Gospel for 1128 1 (3) | literally "ghosts." The gist of the sentence is, "the 1129 Prop2 | The others -- let them glitter as they will -- are but 1130 Prop3 | Gymnasia Epheborum et Graecae gloriae,1 in which loose living 1131 2 (33) | may arise. The so-called glossa ordinaria had in Luther' 1132 Prop2 | have become excuses for gluttony and drunkenness. ~Above 1133 Prop2 | Hungary, or the bishop of Gnesen in Poland, or the bishop 1134 Prop3 | its liberty. So the pope gobbles the kernel, and we play 1135 Prop1 (74)| relation of god-parents to god-children was also held to establish 1136 Prop1 (74)| p. 96). The relation of god-parents to god-children was also 1137 Prop3 | Constantinople, from whom the pope godlessly and lawlessly took this 1138 Prop2 | he gives you lead33 for gold, hide for meat, the string 1139 Prop2 (55)| haben, literally, ""Bid him good-day." ~ 1140 Prop2 | and now Regensburg27 and a goodly number of others. Oh, what 1141 Prop2 | purpose is money-getting, gorging and drunkenness. What kind 1142 Intro | Reformationsschriften L's vom J. 1520; Gotha, 1884) contain a modernized 1143 Prop3 | was brought to pass by the Goths,19 but especially when the 1144 2 (48) | legitimacy of children, were governed by the laws of the Church, 1145 Prop1 (74)| The laws governing marriage were entirely the 1146 Prop2 | privileges, indulgences, graces, advantages, faculties32 1147 2 (15) | absolutely to the pope, who graciously yielded the right to others 1148 2 (42) | Church offices of every grade belongs to the pope (see 1149 Prop2 | Thyself perverse." ~19. The grades or degrees within which 1150 Prop2 | had been restored and had gradually brought all the people together 1151 Prop3 | 12: Gymnasia Epheborum et Graecae gloriae,1 in which loose 1152 Prop2 | Moravia, or the bishop of Gran in Hungary, or the bishop 1153 Cover (9) | Frederick II (1212-1250), grandson of Barbarossa and last of 1154 Cover (5) | Nation; See GEBHARDT, Die Grav. Der Deutschen Nation, Breslau, 1155 Prop1 | sins, still less cases so grave that the pope may not remit 1156 1 | may make hypocrites and graven images,4 but it never makes 1157 Prop2 | with which they would not grease their shoes, and afterwards 1158 Prop3 | the Kingdoms of Persia and Greece, and of almost all kingdoms; 1159 Prop3 | to his arrogant will the Greeks and the emperor at Constantinople, 1160 Prop3 | written in these books. It grieves me to the heart that this 1161 Intro | in Hutten's VADISCUS. All grist that came to Luther's mill. 1162 Intro | 1883) and E. Lemme (Die 3 grossen Reformationsschriften L' 1163 2 (4) | abbacies of Nonantola, and Grottaferrata. This is but one illustration 1164 Prop3 | liver is poured out upon the ground, because of the destruction 1165 1 | still clearer. If a little group of pious Christian laymen 1166 2 | such a hellish rule could grow worse, a thing I can neither 1167 Prop3 | out of German lands. There grows among us, by God's grace, 1168 Prop1 | his calling is praying, guarding and working in all that 1169 Prop3 | the whole world must be guided by that. Now it is oft times 1170 Cover, 2 | cleverly hindered by the guile of certain men and things 1171 Prop2 | as counters compared with guldens. But if there were a fraternity 1172 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, "" 1173 Intro | ALS KIRCHEN HISTORIKER, Gutersloh, 1897; Kohler, L'S SCHRIFT 1174 Prop3 | Maccabees says, 2 Macc. 4:9, 12: Gymnasia Epheborum et Graecae gloriae,1 1175 Prop1 (61)| Gemeine Recht und Mach habe, etc. Weimar Ed. XI, pp. 1176 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, ""Bid him good-day." ~ 1177 Prop3 (7) | scrinio pectories sui censetur habere," "the Roman pontiff has 1178 Intro | her, that she may be the habitation of dragons, specters and 1179 Prop2 (31)| canonized, May 31, 1523, by Pope Hadrian VI. When Luther wrote this 1180 2 | German nation, i.e., the half of the first year's revenues 1181 Prop2 (41)| fraternities, Cologne of 80, Hamburg of more than 100 (Realencyk., 1182 Prop3 | the holy princes, Daniel, Hananiah, Azariah and Mishael; much 1183 Prop2 | heretics with fire, then the hangmen would be the most learned 1184 Prop1 | the pope would never be happy while he knew that God's 1185 Prop1 | cite pious priests to Rome, harass them and drive them into 1186 Prop1 | be decided by people so hardened and blinded by great avarice, 1187 Prop2 | nor by defiance, nor by haste; it will take time and forbearance. 1188 2 | come into its power, but hastens, with insatiable appetite, 1189 2 (1) | Der Haufe, i.e. Christians considered 1190 Prop3 | before the door, but already haunts the house, and that emperor, 1191 Prop3 (13)| The head-dress of the doctors. ~ 1192 Cover (2) | cowl and tonsure with the headgear of the jester. ~ 1193 Intro | for Babylon, she is not healed; let us, then, leave her, 1194 Prop1 | he is strong and in good health, he has himself borne by 1195 Prop2 | were enough to prove it. Hearest thou this, O pope, not most 1196 Prop1 | relieved of preaching and hearing confession, except when 1197 Intro | from many sources, -- from hearsay, from personal observation, 1198 Prop2 | together, and on one day, with hearty sincerity, devotion and 1199 Prop1 | Christian, after the wretched, heathenish and unchristian rule of 1200 2 | the war might not rest too heavily upon the nobility, but that 1201 Prop1 | who now sit in shame and heaviness of conscience because their 1202 Prop2 | Oh, what a terrible and heavy account will the bishops 1203 Prop3 | languages -- Latin, Greek and Hebrew -- the mathematical disciplines 1204 Prop1 | Afterward, however, they hedged them about with vows and 1205 Cover, 2 | bloodthirsty Julius II10 to such heights? Nothing else, I fear, except 1206 Prop1 | Pastoralis,42 that he is rightful heir to the Empire, in case of 1207 Prop2 (25)| of Trier by the Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the 1208 2 | have not yet stirred up the hell-broth of personal vices, nor do 1209 Cover, 2 | this suffering nation a helping hand. Oft times the councils6 1210 Prop1 (36)| the time of the Emperors Henry IV and V (1056-1125). ~ 1211 Prop2 | lost their reason, like herds of cattle; for this cannot 1212 | hereafter 1213 Prop3 | faithless men and sometimes by heredity, as we read of the Kingdoms 1214 Prop1 (55)| 1221), and the Augustinians Hermits, to which Luther himself 1215 Intro (5) | letter of June 7th to John Hess, ENDERS, II, 411; SMITH, 1216 Prop3 | have the land and cities. hey have always abused our simplicity 1217 Prop1 | councils, what is the use of hiding councils; or who has given 1218 Prop3 (31)| ausbuben, so sich's vielmehr hineinbubt. ~ 1219 2 (59) | works of art. Luther is hinting that the indulgence money 1220 1 (7) | Ancient Church, bishop of Hippo in Africa from 395-430. ~ 1221 Intro | s own. ~For the general historian, who is concerned more with 1222 Intro | absorbing interest and priceless historical value. It shows, as does 1223 1 (27) | any papal confirmation, is historically correct. On Luther's statements 1224 Intro | personal observation, from such histories as Luther had at his command, 1225 Intro | Schafer, LUTHER ALS KIRCHEN HISTORIKER, Gutersloh, 1897; Kohler, 1226 2 | and the "months" it has hit upon a device by which benefices 1227 Prop3 (29)| invested 900 gulden in the Hochstetter company of Augsburg; by 1228 Prop2 (33)| depend; "wax," the seal holding the cord to the parchment. ~ 1229 Prop2 (10)| s-days and minor religious holidays. See also the "Discourse 1230 Prop1 | injury and ruin, and the holier and better he appears to 1231 Prop1 | still less should he do homage and swear faithful allegiance 1232 Prop2 | string for the purse, wax for honey, words for goods, the letter 1233 2 (16) | their possessors a certain honorary precedence over other officials 1234 Prop2 | all his possessions and honors, if he could by that means 1235 Intro | Rome: "Farewell, unhappy, hopeless, blasphemous Rome! The wrath 1236 2 | nor believe. ~1. It is a horrible and frightful thing that 1237 Cover, 2 | saved by the multitude of an host: a mighty man is not delivered 1238 1 (18) | incarnation of all that is hostile to Christ and His Kingdom. 1239 2 (59) | 1513) into a museum for the housing of his wonderful and expensive 1240 Prop3 | and we play with the empty hulls. ~Now may God, Who by the 1241 Prop1 (43)| Laurentius Valla, an Italian humanist, published a work in which 1242 Prop2 | such greed, knavery and humbug? He is a shepherd, -- yes, 1243 Prop2 (46)| Varna, Nov. 10th, 1444, the Hungarians were decisively defeated, 1244 Prop2 (35)| saints, St. Anthony, St. Hurbert, St. Valentine, etc. Protest 1245 Cover, 2 | may not henceforth be so hurtful and so great a hindrance. 1246 Prop2 | free and universal begging hurts the common people. I have 1247 Prop2 | and not be misled by the hypocritical Roman bulls and seals, stay 1248 Prop2 (19)| untranslatable, -- Netz, Gesetz solt ich sagen. ~ 1249 2 (30) | who received an office in icommendam was not required to fulfill 1250 Prop1 | faith, immediately became idolatrous and set up their own human 1251 2 | earned it by some other ignoble service to Rome. In this 1252 Prop3 (2) | not know Aristotle was an ignoramus. ~ 1253 Prop2 | for those people are utter ignoramuses as regards things Christian; 1254 Prop1 | away, the children, from ignorance of God's works and of faith, 1255 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, "" 1256 Prop3 (30)| recommendation (ibid., 737) Vol. II-11 ~ 1257 Prop1 | because they are at this time ill-advised. For men see at Rome no 1258 2 | which holds that this is not illegal. What cardinals and other 1259 2 (4) | Grottaferrata. This is but one illustration of the scandalous pluralism 1260 Intro | SCHRIFT AN DEN ADEL. . .IM SPIEGEL DER KULTURGESCHICTE, 1261 2 | become his by virtue of immemorial use and enjoyment. Tell 1262 1 (5) | Lay-baptism in view of imminent death is a practice as old 1263 Cover, 1 | the grace and favor of the immoderately intelligent, though I have 1264 Prop1 | hold as regards Bologna, Imola, Vicenza, Ravenna and all 1265 Prop2 | then, although it is the impatience of the Bohemians which is 1266 2 | enough, and Avarice grew impatient at the long time it took 1267 Prop1 | interest, have devised "impediments"74 and have prevented, destroyed 1268 Prop2 | the government in taxes, imposts and assessments, what is 1269 1 (11) | confirmation, a character is impressed which cannot be destroyed 1270 Prop3 | impossible and give the impression that I want to suppress 1271 Prop3 | whole canon law captive and imprisoned it in the "chamber of his 1272 Cover, 1 | on it and, if necessary, improve it. ~I know full well that 1273 Prop1 | emperors,36 until at last, with impudent authority, they took the 1274 Prop1 | curiosity or because of a pious impulse, unless it is first recognized 1275 1 | to sin such license and impunity. For if we are bound to 1276 Prop3 | dearly for our empire, with incalculable bloodshed, with the suppression 1277 1 (18) | Antichrist, the incarnation of all that is hostile to 1278 Prop1 | have the ability and the inclination to help the German nation 1279 2 (11) | of the term "annates" to include other payments to the curia, 1280 1 (6) | this treatise. The Corpus includes the following collections 1281 Intro | Yet it is no formless and incoherent cry, but an orderly recital 1282 2 | They are then no longer "incompatible," and the holy canon law 1283 Prop2 | constancy and fidelity, to be inconstant, perjurers, traitors, profligates, 1284 2 | incorporatio, i.e., by "incorporating" many incompatibilia, so 1285 2 | glosses,"33 called unio and incorporatio, i.e., by "incorporating" 1286 Prop1 | expectativae,6 papal months,7 incorporations,8 unions,9 pallia,10 rules 1287 1 | judge what is correct or incorrect in matters of faith? What 1288 Prop1 | cases are tried at Rome. It increases the costs, and moreover 1289 2 (30) | granted in this way during the incumbency of another, the recipient 1290 1 (11) | character indelebilis, or "indelible mark," received authoritative 1291 1 (11) | confirmation, and orders -- which indelibly impress upon the soul a 1292 Prop3 (25)| discovery of the cape-route to India had given the Portuguese 1293 Intro | in the first.15 They are indicated in the notes to the present 1294 Prop3 | although there is no sign or indication whatever that He is in them. ~ 1295 Cover, 1 | belongs, have grown quite indifferent. I am sending the whole 1296 Prop1 | pride and do not show our indignation. It is enough that the pope 1297 1 (21) | Even though the pope as an individual (singularis persona) can 1298 2 (29) | incumbent was vested in individuals, usually of the nobility, 1299 1 (16) | as follows: "A Pontifex indubitatus (i.e., a pope who is not 1300 Prop1 (35)| The induction of Church officials into 1301 Prop2 (41)| LEA, Hist. Of Conf. And Indulg, III, pp. 470 ff. ~ 1302 2 | of the annates or of the indulgence-money or of all the rest, is used 1303 Prop2 (32)| Indulta, i.e., grants of special 1304 Prop1 | opinions, and thus injustice is inevitably done the contestants. ~Moreover, 1305 1 (21) | the supreme pontiff as an infallible rule of faith, from which 1306 2 | fighting against the Turks and infidels in defense of Christendom, 1307 Prop2 (59)| Century (1225-74), whose influence is still dominant in Roman 1308 Prop2 | sent into Bohemia should inform themselves about the faith 1309 Prop2 | who knew all the poor and informed the city council or the 1310 1 (15) | punishment for trifling infractions of church law was a subject 1311 Prop3 | by confirming it,27 has injured the whole world. ~Therefore 1312 Prop2 | man receives two material injuries from this practice, i.e., 1313 Prop1 | authority of the bishops and injuring poor souls, therefore the 1314 Prop3 | Aristotle had not the faintest inkling! And yet this dead heathen 1315 2 (11) | resolution of the Council was inoperative, and in the Concordat of 1316 2 | applied. Another time I shall inquire about that, for Campoflore,58 1317 Prop2 (47)| violation see LEA, Hist. of the Inquisition in the MA, II, pp. 453 ff. ~ 1318 Prop2 | cardinal or papal legate or inquisitor, for those people are utter 1319 2 | power, but hastens, with insatiable appetite, to get possession 1320 Prop3 (29)| Fugger, I, 195), pales into insignificance beside the 1634 percent 1321 1 | sole authority, and with insolent juggling of words they would 1322 Cover, 2 | to cry aloud that God may inspire some one with His Spirit 1323 2 | goods and revenues, and to install some apostate, renegade 1324 2 (43) | For a similar instances quoted at Worms (1521), 1325 2 (42) | the canonists (LANCELOTTI, Institutiones juris canonici, Lib. I, 1326 Prop3 | princes, cities, endowed institutions, nobles and their heirs 1327 Prop3 | which we are abundantly instructed about all things, and of 1328 Prop1 | two lines which could be instructive to a pious Christian, and 1329 Prop3 | unspeakable deception and insult. We have the name of the 1330 Intro | all the more open to the insults and wrongs and deceptions 1331 Prop2 (35)| patron saint, an alleged insurance against disease, accident, 1332 Cover, 1 | advice to people of such high intelligence. I shall offer no apologies, 1333 2 (2) | beginning of the XIV. It was intended to signify that very superiority 1334 2 | a genuine robbery, which intends to let nothing escape. Therefore 1335 1 (15) | by Innocent III in 1208. Interdicts of more limited local extent 1336 Prop2 | has no such right and is interfering in the judgment of God. ~ 1337 2 (53) | the XVI Century. They were international bankers, "the Rothschilds 1338 Prop1 (52)| year a jubilee. In 1343 the interval between jubilees was fixed 1339 Intro | and pleading with them to intervene in behalf of the souls that 1340 Intro | may have been due to the intervention of another Romanist, none 1341 1 | free council! And they have intimidated kings and princes by making 1342 2 (41) | secure preferment was held to invalidate the title of the guilty 1343 Prop3 (29)| certain Bartholomew Rem invested 900 gulden in the Hochstetter 1344 Prop3 | offered my writings for investigation and judgment, but it has 1345 Cover (2) | An ironical comparison of the monks' 1346 Prop2 | consciences that they become "irregular"2 and all sorts of other 1347 Prop3 | murder, adultery, stealing, irreverence and all the vices. The temporal 1348 Prop1 (44)| kingdom, which comprised the island of Sicily and certain territories 1349 Prop1 (43)| lands in Italy and "the islands of the sea." It was used 1350 Cover, 2 | of Benjamin slew 42,000 Israelites11 because the latter relied 1351 1 (10) | Was ausz der Tauff krochen ist. ~ 1352 1 (15) | interdict is laid (Realencyk., IX, 208 f.). Its use was not 1353 Intro | Reformationsschriften L's vom J. 1520; Gotha, 1884) contain 1354 2 (52) | Ja wend das blat umb szo findistu 1355 Intro | KOSTLIN-KAWERAU I, 315 ff. ~CHARLES M. JACOBS. ~Lutheran Theological Seminary ~ 1356 2 (44) | Century. The annual fairs (Jahrmarkt), held at stated times in 1357 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, literally, ""Bid 1358 Prop3 | one of his servants anoint Jehu King of Israel, and yet 1359 Prop3 | before them. They fare as Jeremiah says in Lamentations 2:11 1360 1 | with which the walls of Jericho were overthrown, that we 1361 Prop2 | away from the temple at Jerusalem to countless other places, 1362 Prop2 | great princes, making a jest of these things, and taking 1363 Prop3 | shall come and overthrow the Jews; and afterwards they also 1364 Prop1 | that they make the three journeys at once, and they have verily 1365 Prop1 (52)| 1343 the interval between jubilees was fixed at fifty, in 1389 1366 1 | 15: "He that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself 1367 Prop2 | exalt them to heaven, to the judgment-seat of God. ~16. It were also 1368 Prop2 | unjustly condemned; for the judgments of God are secret and terrible, 1369 Prop3 | false and lying words and juggler's tricks? Is he not satisfied 1370 1 | authority, and with insolent juggling of words they would persuade 1371 Prop1 | his distance, or else to jump into the Rhine or the nearest 1372 Prop3 (7) | decreed, Romanus Pontifex jura omnia in scrinio pectories 1373 1 (6) | in the so-called Corpus juriscanonici. It comprised the whole 1374 2 (29) | family. This is the so-called jus patronum, or "right of patronage. 1375 Prop3 | be suffered, if the work justified the name; but now, under 1376 Prop2 | confess the truth, stop justifying ourselves, and grant the 1377 Intro | Schneider. The editions of K. Benrath (Halle, 1883) and 1378 Prop2 (22)| Die wilden Kapellen und Feldkirchen, i.e., churches 1379 Prop3 (24)| Cf. Luther's Sermon von Kaufbandlung und Wuche of 1524. (Weim. 1380 Prop3 (29)| Introduction to the Sermon von Kaufshandlung und Wucher, in Berl. Ed., 1381 2 | teach that a bawdy-house keeper should have the name of " 1382 Prop3 | So the pope gobbles the kernel, and we play with the empty 1383 Prop3 | pitched my song in a high key, have made many propositions 1384 Prop2 | once, and far greater than killing a priest or keeping back 1385 Intro | 391; Schafer, LUTHER ALS KIRCHEN HISTORIKER, Gutersloh, 1897; 1386 Prop2 (51)| See KOHLER, L. Und die Kirchengesch., 139, 151. ~ 1387 Intro | 1895, and LUTHER UND DIE KIRCHENGESCHICHTE, Erlangen, 1900. Extensive 1388 Prop2 (13)| Kirchweihen, i.e., the anniversary celebration 1389 Prop1 | sinful man to let his feet be kissed by one who is a hundred 1390 1 | to obey them in all these knavish, crafty deceptions.3 ~Josh. 1391 Prop1 | bowing cardinal on bended knee? As though the holy sacrament 1392 2 | stigma of evil are here knighted and ennobled here is permitted 1393 Intro | promised support of the German knights,8 who formed the patriotic 1394 Prop2 (41)| see Benrath, pp. 106 f.; KOLDE in Realencyk., III, pp. 1395 Prop3 | temporal law, but only their Koran; and we must confess that 1396 1 (10) | Was ausz der Tauff krochen ist. ~ 1397 Intro | ADEL. . .IM SPIEGEL DER KULTURGESCHICTE, Halle, 1895, and LUTHER 1398 Prop1 | to the common man, Tu labora, "Thou shalt work." Not, 1399 Prop2 | Apostles, Luke 10:7: "Every laborer is worthy of his hire." ~ 1400 Prop3 | Accursed be the earth when thou laborest therein, it shall bear thee 1401 Prop2 | retain the festivals of Our Lady and of the greater saints, 1402 2 | the poor souls who are so lamentably lost through the shameful 1403 Prop3 | fare as Jeremiah says in Lamentations 2:11 ff.: "Mine eyes are 1404 2 (42) | theory of the canonists (LANCELOTTI, Institutiones juris canonici, 1405 Intro (10)| See Luther's letters to Lang and Staupitz, who wished 1406 2 (24) | XII Century on, though the language of the canon law makes it 1407 Prop3 | Besides this there are the languages -- Latin, Greek and Hebrew -- 1408 Prop3 | the midst of Christendom languish and perish miserably for 1409 Prop3 | tossed this empire into our lap, and charged us with the 1410 Prop3 (10)| Theological instruction was largely by war of comment on the 1411 Prop2 (55)| Lass man ihn ein gut jar haben, 1412 Prop2 | at Rome they themselves laugh at the fasts, making us 1413 Prop1 (43)| disputed. In 1440, however, Laurentius Valla, an Italian humanist, 1414 2 (4) | the bishoprics of Bologna, Lausanne, Coutances, Viviers, Mende, 1415 1 (16) | heresy or schism) cannot lawfully be deposed or judged either 1416 Prop3 | whom the pope godlessly and lawlessly took this empire, a thing 1417 Prop2 | but the holy "spiritual lawlessness."7 Of this I have previously 1418 Prop1 | them and drive them into lawsuits. If, in consequence of this 1419 1 (5) | Lay-baptism in view of imminent death 1420 Intro | reading it that the writer is laying violent hands on his wrath 1421 Prop2 (33)| Lead," the leaden seal attached to the bull; " 1422 Prop2 | the pope remain a blind leader of the blind. (Matt. 15: 1423 Prop3 | become bishops and priests, leaders in the fight against heretics, 1424 2 | so they turned over a new leaf, and all authority was taken 1425 Prop2 (48)| The League of Cambray, negotiated in 1426 Prop3 | the likes of you. I have lectured on him3 and heard lectures 1427 Prop3 | lectured on him3 and heard lectures on him, and I understand 1428 Prop2 | in return for money they legalize unjust gains, dissolve oaths, 1429 2 (48) | therefore, the question of the legitimacy of children, were governed 1430 2 | here bastards can become legitimate; here all dishonor and shame 1431 Intro | Benrath (Halle, 1883) and E. Lemme (Die 3 grossen Reformationsschriften 1432 2 | Augsburg,53 so that the lending and trading and buying of 1433 Intro | beginning. May God help us at length to open our eyes. Amen."~ 1434 Prop3 (3) | have read him." Luther's lesen allows of either interpretation. ~ 1435 2 (51) | robber-barons" of the Rhine levied upon merchants passing through 1436 Prop3 (10)| Sentences" (Sententiae, libri sententiarum) was the title 1437 Cover, 1 | Master NICHOLAS VON AMSDORF Licentiate Of holy Scripture and Canon 1438 Prop2 | doth lie as he hath never lied before. O Christ, my Lord, 1439 Prop1 | vows and turned them into a lifelong prison, so that these vows 1440 1 (25) | neither bind nor hold (nullum ligant vel astringunt) unless they 1441 Prop2 | reaggravation, deposition, lightnings, thunderings, cursings, 1442 | likely 1443 2 | then it is a new kind of likeness. When a word is said against 1444 Prop1 | which would not be to the liking of his Holiness. ~At the 1445 2 | believe we have reached the limit. As for what they have stolen 1446 2 (15) | appointments were regarded as limitations upon the authority of the 1447 Prop3 (18)| himself successor to the line of emperors who had ruled 1448 Intro | war-trumpet," but a connecting link between the thought of the 1449 1 | olden days Abraham had to listen to Sarah, although she was 1450 1 | though he be sitting and listening to another in God's Word, 1451 Prop3 (29)| 26,000 and the resulting litigation caused the figures to become 1452 Prop3 | bowels are terrified, my liver is poured out upon the ground, 1453 Prop3 (26)| price was not regarded as a loan, for it could not be recalled, 1454 2 | from St. Peter; no one ever loaned it or gave it to him; it 1455 2 (47) | the taking of interest on loans of money. ~ 1456 Prop2 (35)| III, 651, and Benrath, loc. cit. ~ 1457 2 | would fain hear of a mind so lofty that it could imagine what 1458 Prop2 | even here; for such is the log of all the devil's martyrs. 1459 Prop3 (10)| Sentences, that of Peter Lombard. ~ 1460 Intro | LUTHER'S PRIMARY WORKS (London and Philadelphia, 1884). 1461 1 (18) | vicar of Antichrist" (see LOOFS, Dogmengeschichte, 4th ed., 1462 2 | all of them together are looked upon as though they were 1463 1 | only for the binding and loosing of they arrogate to themselves 1464 2 | many a good priest has to lose his living, or settle the 1465 Prop1 | once a month on pain of losing his benefice. How shall 1466 Prop2 | all the trouble, error and loss of souls that have followed 1467 Intro | off the press of Melchior Lotther in Wittenberg before the 1468 2 | occupied day and night if they loved Christ and His Church. But 1469 1 | shall esteem himself the lowliest and the least. ~Where sin 1470 Prop1 | agree as Christ agrees with Lucifer, heaven with hell, night 1471 2 (6) | creation of new cardinals was a lucrative proceeding for the popes. 1472 Prop1 | foot, as though it were a lure of the devil, and show him 1473 Prop2 | set up the dear saints as lures for money? ~Therefore I 1474 Prop3 | say, to "wear out their lust," but rather wear it in,31 1475 Intro | ff. ~CHARLES M. JACOBS. ~Lutheran Theological Seminary ~Mount 1476 Prop1 (39)| the treatise, Resolutio Lutheriana super propositione XIII, 1477 1 (17) | passage is found in MIGEN, LXXVI, 203; LXXVII, 34. ~ 1478 1 (17) | found in MIGEN, LXXVI, 203; LXXVII, 34. ~ 1479 Prop1 | would not let the people of Lystra pay them divine honor, but 1480 Intro | KOSTLIN-KAWERAU I, 315 ff. ~CHARLES M. JACOBS. ~Lutheran Theological 1481 Prop2 (47)| of the Inquisition in the MA, II, pp. 453 ff. ~ 1482 Prop3 | book of Maccabees says, 2 Macc. 4:9, 12: Gymnasia Epheborum 1483 Prop3 | unchanged, than as the book of Maccabees says, 2 Macc. 4:9, 12: Gymnasia 1484 Prop1 (61)| christl. Gemeine Recht und Mach habe, etc. Weimar Ed. XI, 1485 1 | his conduct as that of a madman, and relying on God, hurl 1486 Intro | but to continue in their madness and to increase the abounding 1487 Prop2 | Poland, or the bishop of Magdeburg in Germany.53 It will be 1488 2 (41) | Simony -- the sin of Simon Magus (Acts 8:18-20) -- the sin 1489 Prop3 | common, neither boy nor maid should take the vow of chastity, 1490 Prop3 | than that married women, or maidens, or those of more honorable 1491 2 (59) | objects rather than on the maintenance of the Church. Cf. CLEMEN, 1492 1 | applied to the pope, since the majority of the popes have been without 1493 Prop3 | tosseth them to and fro, and maketh them." Since, therefore, 1494 1 | office were deposed for malfeasance, he would then be just what 1495 Prop3 | and since they could not manage that, they at least succeeded 1496 Prop1 | likes as these, which are so manifest and clumsy that I should 1497 Prop1 | Holiness. ~At the same time the manifold divisions and differences 1498 Prop1 | the judges do not know the manners, laws and customs of the 1499 Prop2 (27)| Grimmenthal. The shrine was opened March 45, 1519, and within a month 1500 Prop2 | and scholars will sometime mare and oppose papal tyranny. ~ 1501 Prop2 (27)| Fair Virgin (die schone Maria) of Regensburg" was an image


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