Luther Examined and Reexamined - A Review of Catholic Criticism and a Plea for Revaluation by W. H. T. (William Herman Theodore) Dau
page 84 of 272 (30%)
page 84 of 272 (30%)
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somewhat shaken when he discovered that he could not read mass in any
church in the territory at Milan, because there the Ambrosian form of service was prescribed while he had been trained to the Gregorian. Luther shook his head at the freedom of certain public manners of the Italians which reminded him of dogs and of what he had read about Kerkyra. Luther heard of a Lenten collation, probably at the abbey of San Benedetto de Larione, where the word "fast" had to be spelled with an _e_ as the second letter. The loquaciousness, spicy talk, blasphemy, dishonesty, treachery, quarrelsomeness, and deadly animosities of the Italians, Luther regards as strange, considering that they live so near to the Holy City. He wondered why the Italians do not permit their women to go out of their houses except deeply veiled. He finds that the Italians show no respect for their beautiful churches and the divine service conducted in them. Even on great festivals the magnificent cathedrals are almost empty, the worshipers are chatting with one another while the service is in progress. Even quarrels are settled at these holy places, sometimes with the knife. When there is a burial, they hurry the corpse to the grave, not even the relatives being in attendance. He is grieved at the irreligious manner in which the priests at Rome read mass. They hurry through the performance with incredible rapidity. They crowd each other away from the altar in their haste to get their |
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