Protestation.
I, Martin Luther, Doctor, of the Order of Monks at Wittemberg, desire
to testify publicly that certain propositions against pontifical indulgences,
as they call them, have been put forth by me. Now although, up to the
present time, neither this most celebrated and renowned school of ours,
nor any civil or ecclesiastical power has condemned me, yet there are,
as I hear, some men of headlong and audacious spirit, who dare to pronounce
me a heretic, as though the matter had been thoroughly looked into and
studied. But on my part, as I have often done before, so now too I implore
all men, by the faith of Christ, either to point out to me a better
way, if such a way has been
14divinely revealed to any, or at least to
submit their opinion to the judgment of God and of the Church. For I
am neither so rash as to wish that my sole opinion should be preferred
to that of all other men, nor so senseless as to be willing that the
word of God should be made to give place to fables, devised by human
reason.
15
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