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41 EGW GC 143.3 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… the papists who opposed Luther. There is the same disposition to accept the theories and traditions of men instead of the word of God as in former ages. Those …
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42 EGW GC 145.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… . The papists would be satisfied with nothing short of an imperial edict sentencing Luther to death. The elector had declared firmly that “neither his imperial …
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43 EGW GC 167.3 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… the papists prevailed upon the emperor to issue an edict against him. In this decree Luther was denounced as “Satan himself under the form of a man and dressed …
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44 EGW GC 190.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… , and papists, but without violence or tumult. I put forward God's word; I preached and wrote—this was all I did. And yet while I was asleep, ... the word that I had preached …
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45 EGW GC 192.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… . The papist princes declared—and many were ready to credit the statement—that the rebellion was the legitimate fruit of Luther's doctrines. Although this …
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46 EGW GC 195.2 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… . The papists who had left the study of the Scriptures to the priests and monks now called upon them to come forward and refute the new teachings. But, ignorant …
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47 EGW GC 216.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… the papists.— Ibid., b. 13, ch. 9. More dreaded he was indeed by the Romanists of France. They thrust him into prison as a heretic, but he was set at liberty by the king …
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48 EGW GC 226.2 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… the papists themselves. It was not the establishment, but the suppression, of Protestantism, that, three hundred years later, was to bring upon France these …
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49 EGW GC 227.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… . The papists looked about them in amazement at thought of the unsuspected heretics that had been tolerated among them. Their rage spent itself upon the multitudes …
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50 EGW GC 242.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… the papists to overthrow the work resulted in extending it, and erelong Denmark declared its acceptance of the reformed faith.