05-bound | bowin-extor | extra-maria | marke-retur | revea-werke | where-zinsk
Part, Paragraph
1502 2 (58) | Campo di Fiore, a Roman market-place, restored and adorned at
1503 Prop3 | be eating and drinking, marrying and wooing, building and
1504 Prop2 (49)| The Hussites. After the martyrdom of Hus his followers maintained
1505 1 | then the tailors, cobblers, masons, carpenters, pot-boys, tapsters,
1506 2 (1) | Christians considered en masse, without regard to official
1507 1 (7) | Augustine, the master-theologian of the Ancient Church, bishop
1508 2 | all by the help of that masterly "gloss," which holds that
1509 1 | They wish to be the only Masters of The Holy Scriptures,20
1510 Prop2 | common man receives two material injuries from this practice,
1511 2 (11) | in the way of annates has materially increase (A. WREDE, Deutsche
1512 Prop3 | Greek and Hebrew -- the mathematical disciplines and history.
1513 Prop2 | made between the Emperor Maximilian and King Louis of France,48
1514 | Meanwhile
1515 Prop2 (24)| In Meckleburg, where another relic of "
1516 Prop2 (28)| derived from the sale of medals which were worn as amulets,
1517 Prop1 | right.45 Moreover, he has meddled in these things against
1518 Prop1 | this knighthood, yet he meddles in worldly affairs more
1519 Prop3 | unreformed universities. ~The medical men I leave to reform their
1520 Prop3 | make Doctors of Arts, of Medicine, of Laws, of the Sentences;
1521 2 (11) | Century, the annates (fructus medii temporis) had become a fixed
1522 Prop1 | himself to that prayer, meditation and care for all Christendom,
1523 Prop2 (26)| Pilgrimage to the Grimmenthal in Meiningen began in 1449. An image
1524 Intro | copies came off the press of Melchior Lotther in Wittenberg before
1525 Prop2 | should be neither name nor memory of them left on earth. The
1526 2 (4) | Lausanne, Coutances, Viviers, Mende, Ostia and Velletri, and
1527 Prop1 | this, -- the building of mendicant-houses54 should no more be permitted.
1528 2 | pectoralis reservatio, i.e., his "mental reservation," and proprius
1529 2 (42) | The reservatio mentalis or in pectore is the natural
1530 2 | a million ducats, not to mention the mines of treasure named
1531 1 | actions;25 for this is based merely upon their own laws, which
1532 Prop2 | him and his ban should be met with a counter-ban. ~If,
1533 Prop3 | that Aristotle's Physics, Metaphysics, On the Soul, Ethics, which
1534 Prop2 (45)| interfered with the ordinary methods of ecclesiastical jurisdiction
1535 2 (15) | be filled by the ordinary methods-elections, presentation, appointment
1536 2 (16) | officials of the Church. See MEYER in Realencyk., IV, 658. ~
1537 2 | and give to one Mount St. Michael at Bamberg7 and the bishopric
1538 Intro | but on the 15th of June, midway between the letter to Spalatin,
1539 1 (17) | The passage is found in MIGEN, LXXVI, 203; LXXVII, 34. ~
1540 Prop1 (60)| passages referred to are in Migne, XXII, 656, and XXVI, 562. ~
1541 1 (8) | Ambrose, bishop of Milan from 374-397, had not yet
1542 Prop1 (46)| translation of the Vulgate, Nemo militans Deo. ~
1543 2 (55) | possessor permission to eat milk, eggs, butter and cheese
1544 Intro | grist that came to Luther's mill. But the Spirit of the work
1545 | million
1546 2 | ducats, not to mention the mines of treasure named above
1547 Prop1 (55)| were the Franciscan (the Minorities, or "little brothers"),
1548 1 | strength. ~Even though a miracle were to be done in the pope'
1549 Prop2 | true faith into new, false misbelief. This is what he did in
1550 Prop3 | commerce. ~3. But the greatest misfortune of the German nation is
1551 Prop3 | Daniel, Hananiah, Azariah and Mishael; much more then is it His
1552 Prop1 | different works and forms easily mislead men into living for them
1553 Prop2 | open his eyes, and not be misled by the hypocritical Roman
1554 Prop1 | there are, alas! So many mistaken and dangerous laws that
1555 Prop1 | into a false conceit and a misunderstanding of the divine commandments;
1556 Prop3 (21)| die Deutschen teuschen und mit teuschen teuschenn, i.e.,
1557 Prop3 | emperors, and only to fool and mock us with the name. The King
1558 2 (4) | cardinals. Cf. LEA, in Cambridge Mod. Hist., I, pp. 659 f. ~
1559 Prop2 (49)| in reconciling the more moderate party among the Bohemians (
1560 Cover, 1 | make my excuses to the moderately intelligent, for I know
1561 Prop3 (20)| Turkish Empire" he means the Mohammed power. ~
1562 Cover, 1 | Estates on matters of such moment, and to give advice to people
1563 Cover (4) | The proverb ran, Monachus semper praesens, "a monk
1564 Prop1 | there ever been a worldly monarch who went about in such worldly
1565 Cover (4) | Sprichworterlexicon, under Monch, No. 130. ~
1566 Prop2 | that their only purpose is money-getting, gorging and drunkenness.
1567 Prop2 | free ourselves from that money-snare, the canon law, -- such
1568 2 | to be nothing but so many money-snares, from which a man must extricate
1569 2 (53) | these favors they received monopolistic concessions by which their
1570 Prop3 (25)| the Portuguese a practical monopoly of this trade. A comparative
1571 Intro | ever read or heard of such monstrous robbery? Do we not also
1572 Prop1 | matters of faith and good morals, and leave to the temporal
1573 Prop2 | the bishop of Olmutz in Moravia, or the bishop of Gran in
1574 Prop2 | Sunday, or observed only by a morning mass, after which all the
1575 2 | may, I hope, be his last morsel, and choke him. The pope
1576 Prop2 | or at least some, of the mortal sins which are secret, so
1577 Prop2 | abolish all anniversary mortuary and "soul" masses,3 or at
1578 Prop2 (25)| Trier by the Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the Great. ~
1579 Intro | minds and the variety of motives which led them to espouse
1580 2 | reservation," and proprius motus, i.e., the "arbitrary will
1581 Prop1 | bridle of his mule when he mounts for a ride; still less should
1582 Cover, 2 | especially of Germany, and which move not me alone, but everyone
1583 Prop1 | eating, drinking, the natural movement of the bowels or growing
1584 Prop2 | indeed, they were the prime movers in this miserable business
1585 Prop1 | stirrup or the bridle of his mule when he mounts for a ride;
1586 2 | him three or four thousand mule-riders, eclipsing all emperors
1587 Prop3 (32)| Cf. MULLER, Luther's theol. Quellen,
1588 Intro | subjects that it treats, the multiplicity of the sources from which
1589 Prop2 | the parish churches, to multiply taverns and harlotry, to
1590 Prop3 | followed by other sins, -- murder, adultery, stealing, irreverence
1591 2 (59) | Julius II (1503-1513) into a museum for the housing of his wonderful
1592 Cover (1) | Unserm furnchmen nach. See Introduction, p.57. ~
1593 2 | leave your lands and people naked to these ravening wolves!~
1594 Prop2 (35)| classified according to the names of their patron saints,
1595 Prop1 | title to the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily.44 He has exactly
1596 Prop1 | themselves made the proverb, "The nearer Rome, the worse Christians."50
1597 1 | things, and whenever it is needful or profitable, they should
1598 2 (6) | appointees about 300,000 ducats. Needless to say, the cardinals expected
1599 Prop1 | frankly interpret these words negatively, to mean "I do not promise
1600 Prop1 | God must not be broken and neglected for the sake of the pope'
1601 Prop2 | this practice, i.e., he neglects his work and he spends more
1602 Prop2 (48)| The League of Cambray, negotiated in 1508 for war against
1603 Prop1 | own family or on his poor neighbors. But if he wishes to make
1604 Prop1 (46)| translation of the Vulgate, Nemo militans Deo. ~
1605 Prop1 (2) | is chapter 31, Filiis vel nepotibus. It provides that in case
1606 Prop2 | and destroy the devil's nest at Rome! Here sitteth the
1607 Prop2 (19)| pun is untranslatable, -- Netz, Gesetz solt ich sagen. ~
1608 2 (57) | Equivalent to "carrying coals to Newcastle." ~
1609 Intro | authorities, -- to Charles V, newly elected, but as yet uncrowned;
1610 Cover, 1 | Esteemed and Reverend Master NICHOLAS VON AMSDORF Licentiate Of
1611 2 | any robber could do. ~If ninety-nine parts of the papal court10
1612 Prop3 | not every Christian at his ninth or tenth year to know the
1613 Prop1 | council. ~1. Every prince, nobleman and city should boldly forbid
1614 | nobody
1615 2 | the bishoprics should be nominally abroad, but that their land
1616 2 (29) | endowed benefices the right of nominate the incumbent was vested
1617 2 (4) | Velletri, and the abbacies of Nonantola, and Grottaferrata. This
1618 2 (14) | right to elect the bishop normally belonged. ~
1619 Prop1 (45)| Rome and stretching in a northeasterly direction across the peninsula
1620 2 (9) | complains. It should be noted, however, that these laws
1621 Prop2 | proposal is perhaps too novel an daring, especially for
1622 1 (25) | councils neither bind nor hold (nullum ligant vel astringunt) unless
1623 Prop1 | but, on the contrary, numberless occasions for sin and for
1624 1 | bishops, priests, monks, nuns or anybody else. For if
1625 1 | offense against God not to obey them in all these knavish,
1626 1 | therefore, in no wise to be obeyed, but is to be opposed with
1627 1 | Scriptures, they raise the objection that the interpretation
1628 Prop3 | many hundred years. Such objections do not disturb me as once
1629 Prop2 (41)| members of the sodalities are obligated to the recitation of certain
1630 Prop2 | his tyrannies by oaths and obligations, as he does all other bishops,
1631 2 (40) | Italian, to whom he was obliged to pay a percentage of the
1632 Intro | from hearsay, from personal observation, from such histories as
1633 Intro | grief turns to wrath as he observes that this affliction is
1634 Prop2 | never come into unity. Not obstinacy but the open admission of
1635 Prop3 | heathen has conquered and obstructed and almost suppressed the
1636 1 | without all the show which now obtains. It was Thus that Sts. Augustine,7
1637 Prop2 (60)| presence adopted by William of Occam. For Luther's own view at
1638 2 | vacancy may never again occur in the pope's month. Thus
1639 2 | history and an every-day occurrence at Rome. Avarice has devised
1640 2 (15) | etc. - but that vacancies occurring in the other months shall
1641 2 | devil wills, and out of this ocean like virtue flows into all
1642 1 (4) | Oelgotze - "an image anointed with
1643 Prop3 | in it except its evil and offending appearance, of which St.
1644 Prop1 | example, but only that which offends; and they have themselves
1645 Prop1 (28)| heresies was added a list of offenses which could received absolution
1646 Cover, 1 | high intelligence. I shall offer no apologies, no matter
1647 Prop2 | working toward this unity, offering our hands to one another
1648 1 | is nothing else than an office-holder. While he is in office,
1649 2 | Christ, Whose vicar and officer he boasts himself to be,
1650 Prop1 | appeal for German cases. The officers of this consistory must
1651 Prop1 | should also do away with the officia, and diminish the swarm
1652 Prop1 | extortion practiced by the officiales22 must be forbidden in all
1653 1 (21) | speaking officially (ex officio), and doing what in him
1654 2 | emissaries to gather money. Oft-times they issue an indulgence
1655 Prop1 | a very small good work, oftentimes an evil, delusive work,
1656 Prop2 | confirmed by the bishop of Olmutz in Moravia, or the bishop
1657 Prop3 (7) | decreed, Romanus Pontifex jura omnia in scrinio pectories sui
1658 2 (34) | or permission to avail oneself of the gloss. ~
1659 Prop2 (27)| Grimmenthal. The shrine was opened March 45, 1519, and within
1660 Prop2 (35)| etc. Protest against their operations were raised at the Diets
1661 Prop3 | overtures of peace to my opponents; but as I now see, God has
1662 Prop3 | of all books. It flatly opposes divine grace and all Christian
1663 Intro | permanent. Meanwhile, the opposing party had come to the same
1664 2 | they have done the very opposite.52 There remains one last
1665 Prop3 | by men on earth, but the opposition has always been too great
1666 Cover, 2 | worships. The distress and oppression which weigh down all the
1667 Prop1 | his tyranny. They should. ordain, order, and decree, that
1668 Prop2 | this His commandment, and ordainest in thine heretical, antichristian
1669 1 | anoints, confers tonsures; ordains, consecrates, or prescribes
1670 Prop3 | papacy has instituted and ordered is directed only towards
1671 Intro | and incoherent cry, but an orderly recital of the ills of Germany.
1672 2 (33) | arise. The so-called glossa ordinaria had in Luther's time an
1673 Prop2 (49)| maintained for a time a strong organization in Bohemia, and resisted
1674 Prop2 (49)| teachings of Hus in sectarian organizations. The most important of these,
1675 Prop2 | i.e., to the wailing of organs and of choral singers, and
1676 Intro | was not contained in the original manuscript, but was added
1677 Prop1 (17)| The practice seems to have originated in the X Century with the
1678 2 (11) | are not applied to their ostensible purpose, viz. , the Crusade.
1679 2 (4) | Coutances, Viviers, Mende, Ostia and Velletri, and the abbacies
1680 Prop2 | festival in honor of St. Ottilia or St. Barbara or some other
1681 Prop3 | honorable estate should be outraged. But should not the temporal,
1682 Prop1 | contestants. ~Moreover, the outrageous extortion practiced by the
1683 2 (30) | Duke George of Saxony, an outspoken opponent of Luther, was
1684 Intro | greatest work. Its frank outspokenness true condition of Germany,
1685 Prop1 | treatise.39 ~Such extravagant, over-presumptuous, and more than wicked doings
1686 Prop1 | how many a poor priest is overburdened with wife and child, and
1687 Prop2 | need to study, but he who overcame another by force might burn
1688 Cover, 2 | war and bloodshed do not overcome. We must go at this work
1689 1 | Christendom." Who is ready to overleap this text? It is only the
1690 Prop2 (28)| though the popes never overlooked the profits which the sale
1691 Prop3 | they have made themselves overlords of all the temporal powers
1692 Prop2 | There would have to be an overseer or warden who knew all the
1693 2 | instigation of the priests, overthrew and altogether condemned
1694 Prop3 | The Romans shall come and overthrow the Jews; and afterwards
1695 2 | monasteries and prelacies, and so overthrowing the worship of God. For
1696 Prop3 | times heretofore I have made overtures of peace to my opponents;
1697 Prop2 | does He not still daily overturn what He has appointed and
1698 Cover, 1 | may chide me. Perchance I owe my God and the world another
1699 2 | silence? Almost everything he owns has been gotten by theft
1700 Cover, 1 | it, even if he has to be painted in."4 More than once a fool
1701 2 (59) | A part of the Vatican palace notorious as the banqueting-hall
1702 Prop3 (29)| Zeitalter der Fugger, I, 195), pales into insignificance beside
1703 Prop1 | incorporations,8 unions,9 pallia,10 rules in chancery,11
1704 Prop2 | stationaries"35 and the palmers,36 so that it has been reckoned
1705 Intro | everlasting confusion; a new pantheon of wickedness."7 ~These
1706 1 (16) | Gratian, Dist. XL, c. 6, Si papa. In his Epitome (see Introduction,
1707 1 | these walls of straw and paper, and may set free the Christian
1708 1 | then, I think this first paper-wall is overthrown, since the
1709 2 (6) | and PASTOR, Gesch. der Papste IV, I, 137. Cf. Hutten's
1710 2 (20) | Des Papstes und der Cardinale Gesinde,
1711 Prop1 (48)| The three paragraphs enclosed in brackets were
1712 Prop2 | as God gives you in your parish-church. Nay, the pope leads you
1713 Prop1 | primates16 and make them mere parish-priests, so that the pope alone
1714 2 (11) | were abolished by Act of Parliament (April 10, 1532) ~
1715 Prop2 (41)| each member is believed to participate in the benefits accruing
1716 Intro | Luther did not wait for that particular Romanist to "come again"
1717 2 | could do. ~If ninety-nine parts of the papal court10 were
1718 2 (51) | Rhine levied upon merchants passing through their domains. ~
1719 2 (6) | Ed., VI, 417, note I, and PASTOR, Gesch. der Papste IV, I,
1720 Prop1 | boasts in his decretal Pastoralis,42 that he is rightful heir
1721 2 | all this I consider mere patch-work, and like casting a single
1722 Prop1 | the straight and common path of God's commandments; everyone
1723 Prop2 | been perfect and to have patiently endured this great injustice
1724 Intro | knights,8 who formed the patriotic party Germany and are included
1725 2 (29) | jus patronum, or "right of patronage. The complaint that this
1726 2 (29) | This is the so-called jus patronum, or "right of patronage.
1727 2 | heart of the matter, we will pause a little, and let it be
1728 1 | meat and drink, and from paying them tribute. But if these
1729 Prop3 (7) | Pontifex jura omnia in scrinio pectories sui censetur habere," "the
1730 Prop3 | the pope has his scrinium pectoris,7 and all law and the whole
1731 Prop1 | duties which properly and peculiarly belong to the pope, and
1732 Prop2 (41)| 437). In 1519 Degenhard Peffinnger, of Wittenberg, was a member
1733 Prop2 | thy throat and through thy pen the wicked Satan doth lie
1734 Prop1 (45)| northeasterly direction across the peninsula to a point on the Adriatic
1735 2 (40) | of the income, a yearly pension, or a fixed sum of money
1736 Prop1 | the ruling of lands and peoples, especially when no one
1737 1 | Why, then, should not we perceive what squares with faith
1738 2 (40) | he was obliged to pay a percentage of the income, a yearly
1739 Prop2 | man of sin and the son of perdition! What else is the papal
1740 Prop2 | they ought to have been perfect and to have patiently endured
1741 Prop1 | measure, especially in these perilous times of ours, that all
1742 Prop2 | fidelity, to be inconstant, perjurers, traitors, profligates,
1743 Prop1 | so far as human frailty permits,"69 let everyone frankly
1744 Prop2 (49)| remained outside the Church and perpetuated the teachings of Hus in
1745 Prop1 | when there were so many persecutions and controversies with heretics,
1746 Prop3 | read of the Kingdoms of Persia and Greece, and of almost
1747 1 (21) | an individual (singularis persona) can do wrong and hold a
1748 1 | juggling of words they would persuade us that the pope, whether
1749 Prop1 | not money, nor anything pertaining to the body, but they are
1750 Prop2 | perverted Thou wilt show Thyself perverse." ~19. The grades or degrees
1751 Prop3 | can we expect if we act so perversely and in this way put the
1752 Prop2 | has made, because of such perversion and abuse? As it is written
1753 1 (18) | person of some especially pestilent heretic. Wyclif applied
1754 Prop1 | power and celestial might. 2 Pet. 2:11.72 Thus he should
1755 2 (42) | is exercised either per petitionemalterius, i.e., by confirmation of
1756 Prop1 (45)| the European powers and petty Italian states. It resulted
1757 Prop3 | Germany cannot possibly have a pfennig left and we shall certainly
1758 2 | benefice, a heller or a pfennign left. Antichrist must take
1759 Prop2 | his followers hinder it, (Phil. 2:4), they shall render
1760 2 | as the Crucified"; and in Philippians 2:5, "So think of yourselves
1761 Prop3 (2) | The philosophy of Aristotle dominated the
1762 Cover, 2 | this work despairing of physical force and humbly trusting
1763 Prop3 | would be that Aristotle's Physics, Metaphysics, On the Soul,
1764 Prop2 | laws. ~If I knew that the Picards58 held no other error touching
1765 2 | the church all day selling pictures and images to the pilgrims,
1766 Prop1 | his own. ~48 It is another piece of the same scandalous pride,
1767 2 | himself to be, said before Pilate, John 17:36, My kingdom
1768 Prop3 | them that sing too, and pitch the notes to the top of
1769 Prop3 | I think too that I have pitched my song in a high key, have
1770 Prop1 | only torture themselves pitifully, with labor and sorrow,
1771 Prop2 | shall I say? Every one29 plans only how he may establish
1772 Prop3 | and wooing, building and planting, buying and selling." It
1773 Prop2 | name of God and under the plausible guise of holiness, though
1774 Prop1 (44)| 1260) and the popes, and played an important part in the
1775 Intro | of "Roman tyranny," and pleading with them to intervene in
1776 Prop2 | believes and lives as he pleases, most of all those who use
1777 2 | pope, if he only goes on a pleasure-ride, takes with him three or
1778 1 | in sheer wantonness, to pledge it, bind it, or take away
1779 Prop2 | and fealty which they have pledged to one another; and they
1780 2 | benefice to himself and his own plenary disposal, although he had
1781 2 (24) | consecration, conferring the "plenitude of the pontifical office,"
1782 Prop3 | providence of God and the plotting of evil men, I would not
1783 Prop2 | him put his hand to the plow and seek his riches in the
1784 2 (4) | illustration of the scandalous pluralism practiced by the cardinals.
1785 2 | wife," and yet continue to ply her trade. This kind of
1786 Prop3 | books on Logic, Rhetoric and Poetics retained or used in an abridged
1787 Intro | Doctrine, ethics, history, politics, economics, all have their
1788 2 (24) | conferring the "plenitude of the pontifical office," and the name of
1789 Prop2 (23)| this pilgrimage, and the popularity of the shrine was undiminished
1790 Prop2 | masses and good works are portioned out. Dear friend, in your
1791 Prop3 (25)| cape-route to India had given the Portuguese a practical monopoly of
1792 Prop1 | pope has taken by force and possesses without right.45 Moreover,
1793 2 (16) | jurisdiction and gave their possessors a certain honorary precedence
1794 2 (15) | cathedrals and the chief posts in the monasteries, which
1795 1 | cobblers, masons, carpenters, pot-boys, tapsters, farmers, and
1796 Prop3 | venture to say that any potter has more knowledge of nature
1797 Prop3 | are terrified, my liver is poured out upon the ground, because
1798 Intro | proposed are, many of them, practicable as well as reasonable. ~
1799 Cover (4) | proverb ran, Monachus semper praesens, "a monk is always there."
1800 Prop2 | especially the German nation, praised in all history for its nobility,
1801 Prop3 | end in view, and it was a praiseworthy and Christian purpose, as
1802 Prop2 | wantonness and increase his pranks. I would that the dear saints
1803 1 | characters indelebilis,11 and prate that a deposed priest is
1804 Prop1 | instead to the Bible and the prayer-books, so that he may preach and
1805 Prop2 | though all the prophets preached against it and were persecuted
1806 1 | offices than has the office of preachers or confessors, or of the
1807 Prop2 | so doing. But now no one preaches against it, perhaps for
1808 Prop2 | more than one canonry or prebend. He must be content with
1809 2 | to Antichrist, as did his predecessors several centuries ago. They
1810 Prop1 (73)| freedom of speech. See "Prefatory Letter" above, p. 62. ~
1811 2 (41) | the use of money to secure preferment was held to invalidate the
1812 Prop2 (47)| promise to be observed to the prejudice of the catholic faith."
1813 Prop3 (37)| This "little song" is the Prelude on the Babylonian Captivity
1814 Intro | edition was in course of preparation.13 This "enlarged and revised
1815 Prop2 | except where the Scriptures prescribe its use, i.e., against those
1816 2 (30) | provision of the canon law which prescribed that the same man should
1817 Prop2 (2) | order who has violated the prescriptions of the order and been deprived,
1818 2 (15) | ordinary methods-elections, presentation, appointment by the bishop,
1819 2 | increase the worship of God and preserve the monasteries. The Germans
1820 Prop2 (23)| to have been miraculously preserved from a fire which destroyed
1821 2 (35) | title of the official who presided over this department. ~
1822 1 | Christendom. ~First, when pressed by The temporal power, they
1823 Prop1 | were bishops, and did not presume to be kings over all kings. ~
1824 Prop1 | not more than God, as he presumes to be. ~12. Pilgrimages
1825 Prop1 | Christ is, Whose vicar he pretends to be. ~11. The kissing
1826 Prop3 | be put down by this blind pretension of papal hypocrites, as
1827 2 | indulgence on this same pretext of fighting the Turks,12
1828 Prop1 | brought back from Rome such pretty things that it were better
1829 Prop3 | in which loose living prevails, the Holy Scriptures and
1830 Intro | test and extensive notes. A previous English translation in Wace
1831 Intro | of absorbing interest and priceless historical value. It shows,
1832 1 | are a royal priesthood, a priestly kingdom," and the book of
1833 Intro | Wace and Buchheim, LUTHER'S PRIMARY WORKS (London and Philadelphia,
1834 Prop2 | glory' indeed, they were the prime movers in this miserable
1835 Prop3 | thing to toss empires and principalities to and fro! He is so generous
1836 Intro | press, for it appeared in print on the 26th of the month,3
1837 Intro | added while it was in the printer's hands; perhaps it was
1838 2 | himself alone, 22 parishes, 7 priories and 44 canonries besides, --
1839 2 | tidy sum after all. The priory of Wurzburg yields a thousand
1840 2 (24) | 590-604) mentions it as prisca consuetude (Dist., C.c.
1841 Prop1 | turned them into a lifelong prison, so that these vows are
1842 Prop2 | gives away licenses and privileges, indulgences, graces, advantages,
1843 1 (13) | courts, This is the so-called privilegium fori, "benefit of clergy."
1844 2 | and certain other places probably know something about it.
1845 Cover, 2 | able to do it again, if we proceed by our own might and cunning,
1846 2 (6) | cardinals was a lucrative proceeding for the popes. On July 31,
1847 Intro | at his command, from the proceedings of councils and of diets;
1848 Prop2 (31)| When Luther wrote this the process of canonization had already
1849 Prop1 | carries the sacrament in procession. He must be carried, but
1850 Prop3 | boastful and no one ought to be proclaimed and crowned teacher of Holy
1851 Prop1 (43)| document of the VIII Century, professing to come from the hand of
1852 Prop2 (36)| Wallbruder, the professional pilgrims who spent their
1853 Prop3 (8) | degree occasionally given to professors of Canon Law doctor scrinii
1854 Cover, 2 | we should do our part and profitably use this time of grace. ~
1855 Prop3 | have been burdened with profitless labor and study, at the
1856 Prop2 | inconstant, perjurers, traitors, profligates, faithless? God hath commanded
1857 Prop1 (74)| the Church. The canon law prohibited marriage of blood-relatives
1858 2 (9) | France had enacted laws prohibiting the very practices of which
1859 Prop1 (6) | i.e., Promises to bestow on certain persons
1860 Prop1 (70)| i.e., Celibacy. Non promitto castitatem. ~
1861 Prop2 | saint, according to the promptings of their blind devotion;
1862 1 (6) | constitutions," etc.), promulgated by authority of the popes,
1863 2 | got by purchase such great properties that from his office60 alone
1864 1 (18) | Fathers sometimes thought the prophecies fulfilled in the person
1865 1 | which all the Scriptures prophesy false wonders. Therefore
1866 Intro | and that of modern times, prophetic of the new age, but showing
1867 2 (42) | appointment, etc., of others, or propriomotu, i.e., "on his own motion."
1868 2 | mental reservation," and proprius motus, i.e., the "arbitrary
1869 Prop2 | doctors should examine and proscribe: but now it is they who
1870 Cover, 2 | start the game with great prospect of success, but when we
1871 Prop3 | open and common houses of prostitution, though all of us are baptized
1872 1 (13) | Church History, 169-219 and Prot. Realencyk., Vi, 594. ~~
1873 2 | disobedience to divine law is to be protected! Antichrist himself, I hope,
1874 2 | to use all diligence in protecting Christendom against such
1875 2 | such archknavery, and if he protects and practices it? O noble
1876 Prop1 | emperor and his followers, Tu protege, "Thou shalt guard"; to
1877 Intro | espouse the cause of the Protestant party. Doctrine, ethics,
1878 2 (53) | indulgence against which Luther protested, see Vol. I, p. 21; on their
1879 Prop3 | without our fault, by the providence of God and the plotting
1880 1 | should also be prevented from providing pope, bishops, priests and
1881 2 (30) | which the pope evaded the provision of the canon law which prescribed
1882 Cover, 2 | ruthlessly to earth, as it (Ps. 33:16) is written in the
1883 Prop1 (20)| law as a cannon of Nicaea (Pt. II, qu. 6, c.5). See KOHLER,
1884 Intro | PAPACY AT ROME; the scheda publica grew into the OPEN LETTER.
1885 Prop3 | we Germans too cannot be puffed up because a new Roman Empire
1886 Prop2 (19)| The pun is untranslatable, -- Netz,
1887 2 (41) | a purpose was an offense punishable by deposition and degradation.
1888 1 | that they deceive us with puppet-shows and sham-battles. So terribly
1889 Prop1 | on earth, had to be the puppets of the pope and the Roman
1890 1 | our first attack. ~It is pure invention that pope, bishops,
1891 2 | Germans are to have their purses eased and their itch cured.
1892 Cover (10)| popes for his unscrupulous pursuit of political power, he was
1893 1 | indeed all equal, but guilt puts us in subjection one to
1894 Prop1 (20)| cannon of Nicaea (Pt. II, qu. 6, c.5). See KOHLER, L.
1895 Prop1 (69)| fragilitas humana permittit. A qualification of the vow. ~
1896 Intro | calm. For all its scathing quality, it is a sane arraignment
1897 Prop1 (69)| Quantum fragilitas humana permittit.
1898 Prop1 | nunneries, like that at Quedlinburg59 and others elsewhere.
1899 Prop1 (44)| Ages. It was one of the questions at issue in the conflict
1900 1 | with mere words, we will quote the Scriptures. St. Paul
1901 Prop2 | and bishop help along; it rains indulgences; there is always
1902 Cover (4) | The proverb ran, Monachus semper praesens, "
1903 Prop3 | honorable dress of every rank, so that we do not need
1904 Prop1 (16)| The primate is the ranking archbishop of a country. ~
1905 Prop1 | enough that the pope should rant and play the fool in this
1906 Prop3 | to help on one. O, what a rare bird will a lord and ruler
1907 Prop1 | goes to Rome he seeks a rascal, the second time he finds
1908 Prop1 | God, partakers in their rascality; it is our duty before God
1909 Cover, 2 | of sheer forwardness or rashness that I, a single, poor man,
1910 Prop3 (33)| In the Conitendi Ratio Luther had set the age for
1911 Prop3 | much better, wiser and more rational than the "spiritual law"
1912 Prop1 | Bologna, Imola, Vicenza, Ravenna and all the territories
1913 Prop3 (30)| these earlier edicts be reaffirmed (WREDE, op. cit., II, pp.
1914 Prop2 | irregularity, aggravation, reaggravation, deposition, lightnings,
1915 2 (30) | Gravamina (ibid., 672), and reappears in the Appendix (ibid.,
1916 Prop3 | Word of God, so far to the rear? Moreover the pope commands,
1917 Intro | practicable as well as reasonable. ~The materials of the work
1918 Prop1 | such perverted and deluded reasoning, boasts in his decretal
1919 1 | understand and defend it, and to rebuke errors. ~The third wall
1920 1 | In like manner St. Paul rebukes St. Peter as a man in error.
1921 Prop3 (26)| loan, for it could not be recalled, and the annual payments
1922 Prop2 | spiritual injury, the common man receives two material injuries from
1923 Prop3 (18)| the German kings, after receiving the papal coronation, were
1924 | recently
1925 Prop1 (61)| Dass eine christl. Gemeine Recht und Mach habe, etc. Weimar
1926 2 (30) | incumbency of another, the recipient received its entire income
1927 Intro | incoherent cry, but an orderly recital of the ills of Germany.
1928 Prop2 (41)| sodalities are obligated to the recitation of certain prayers and the
1929 Intro | in their own domains, -- reciting the abuses of "Roman tyranny,"
1930 Prop2 | palmers,36 so that it has been reckoned that every town is laid
1931 Cover (11)| Luther's recollection of the figures was faulty.~
1932 Prop3 (30)| adjourned without acting on the recommendation (ibid., 737) Vol. II-11 ~
1933 Prop3 (30)| the Diet of Worms (1521) recommended that these earlier edicts
1934 Prop2 | which angers rather than reconciles God. It would please me
1935 Prop2 (49)| Basel succeeded (1434) in reconciling the more moderate party
1936 Prop1 | ills which I shall not now recount. ~If any one, now, wishes
1937 Prop3 | not concern Himself about red or brown birettas13 or other
1938 2 | hands shall be released, and redeemed from the Roman robbers;
1939 2 | number of the cardinals be reduced, or that the pope be made
1940 Intro | E. Lemme (Die 3 grossen Reformationsschriften L's vom J. 1520; Gotha,
1941 2 | Ah! if one church were reformed, it would be a dangerous
1942 1 (15) | effective means of bringing refractory rulers to terms. A famous
1943 Prop2 | destroyed, and so I must refrain from saying more about it
1944 Prop2 (49)| extreme party, however, refused to subscribe the Compactata
1945 2 (39) | name of this practice was "regression" (regressus). ~
1946 2 (39) | practice was "regression" (regressus). ~
1947 Prop2 (2) | those who live under the regula, viz., the rule of the order. ~
1948 Prop1 (23)| bureaus through which the pope regulated those matters of administration
1949 2 | certain godly and Christian regulations. But my dear Lord Pope and
1950 2 (10) | Church (WREDE, Deutsche Reichstagaskten unter Kaiser Karl V, II,
1951 1 (15) | See A. WREDE, Deutsche Reichstagsaktenn unter Kaiser Karl V., II,
1952 2 (19) | Vienna. Luther's complaint is reiterated in the Gravamina of 1521. (
1953 Intro | GERMAN NATION is closely related to the tract ON THE PAPACY
1954 2 (56) | including those just mentioned, relating to penance. ~
1955 Prop1 (74)| see above, p. 96). The relation of god-parents to god-children
1956 2 (53) | Vol. I, p. 21; on their relations with the papacy, see SCHULTE,
1957 Prop1 | follow what has followed -- relaxation of discipline and license
1958 2 | into its hands shall be released, and redeemed from the Roman
1959 2 | is better than ten just releases, and an unjust release worse
1960 Prop2 (24)| Meckleburg, where another relic of "the Holy Blood" was
1961 Prop1 | mendicants should also be relieved of preaching and hearing
1962 1 | as that of a madman, and relying on God, hurl back the ban
1963 Prop3 (29)| 1511 a certain Bartholomew Rem invested 900 gulden in the
1964 Intro | the nation's woes, and the remedies that are proposed are, many
1965 Prop3 (9) | the feudal customs and the remnants of Germanic legal ideas,
1966 Prop1 (43)| Rome (the capital had been removed to Constantinople), certain
1967 Prop1 | because the pope gives them no remuneration, but allows them to fatten
1968 2 | to install some apostate, renegade monk,31 who accepts five
1969 Prop2 (46)| fulfillment of its conditions he renewed the war in 1444. At the
1970 2 | the annates were a fixed rent. When they pretend that
1971 Prop3 (26)| The Zinskauf or Rentenkauf was a means for evading
1972 Prop3 | In truth this traffic in rents must be a sign and symbol
1973 1 (21) | claim of infallibility was repeatedly made by the champions of
1974 Prop3 (25)| for a period of years was reported to the Diet of Nurnberg (
1975 2 (53) | were the pope's financial representatives in Germany. On their connection
1976 Prop2 (46)| Cardinal Caesarini, who represented that the treaty had not
1977 Intro | Papacy. In the preface to his reprint of the Epitome, Luther bids
1978 Prop1 | St. Paul, in Romans 1:32, reproves as guilty of death not only "
1979 Prop1 (43)| a forgery. This work was republished in Germany by Ulrich von
1980 Intro | Letter to Amsdorf,4 with the request that be read it and suggest
1981 2 | and robbery, as the law requires. ~In this they should aid
1982 Prop3 | title and insignia, to rescue our liberty, and to show
1983 Intro | more than an accidental resemblance to similar passages in Hutten'
1984 Prop1 | everybody. ~6. The casus reservati,27 the "reserved cases,"
1985 Prop2 (49)| organization in Bohemia, and resisted with arms all attempts to
1986 1 | injury, or to forbid the resisting of injury. There is no authority
1987 1 | and of Antichrist which resists the things that serve for
1988 2 (11) | abolish them entirely, but the resolution of the Council was inoperative,
1989 2 (11) | Council of Basel (1439) resolved to abolish them entirely,
1990 1 | body of Christendom without respect of persons, whether it affect
1991 Prop1 | asked of him a decision respecting his brother, He said, Luke
1992 Prop2 | would soon be better. ~The restoration of the temporal goods which
1993 Prop1 | state. ~10. The pope should restrain himself, take his fingers
1994 Prop3 | it is also necessary to restrict the spice-traffic25 which
1995 Prop1 (45)| petty Italian states. It resulted at last in actual war between
1996 Prop3 (29)| settle at 26,000 and the resulting litigation caused the figures
1997 Prop1 | works and forms; and this results only in the devising of
1998 Prop2 | until they believed His resurrections? If they but had again a
1999 2 | that the seller or disposer retains reversionary rights,39 upon
2000 2 | that the stolen goods be returned, the thieves punished, and
2001 2 | support himself on their returns, but they are not to be
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