Luther
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:29:05
Cowards: Cowards:
:29:08
Cowards:
:29:12
How dare you?
:29:13
You call yourselves Christians?
:29:16
Christians? :
:29:18
You, why are you standing there?
Put out this fire:

:29:21
Run: Buckets: Shovels: Run:
:29:22
When a limb is rotten,
you must cut it off.

:29:25
- You know that as well as I.
- Get out:

:29:27
Martin, this is for you:
Let it burn:

:29:29
Get out of Wittenberg
before I beat you out:

:29:32
Beat me out?
:29:33
I defended you.
I supported you.

:29:36
I'm carrying on
just as you would have.

:29:39
You think this is my work?
:29:41
This is never my work:
:29:44
No, it's the people's work:
:29:46
The people's work:
:29:51
It's the people's work.
:29:56
The people's work:
:30:06
Spalatin.
:30:12
Are you there?
:30:16
Now, how is he?
:30:19
Luther's depressed, my lord.
:30:21
Confused.
:30:24
He feels the peasants
have twisted his language.

:30:27
But he will join them?
:30:30
Luther abhors violence.
:30:32
But he's in sympathy
with their grievances?

:30:37
It's hard to argue against
freeing people from crippling taxes

:30:40
or the purgatory of being
born slaves all their lives.

:30:44
You know, if Luther
were to lift one finger,

:30:48
every peasant in Germany
would rise up behind him.

:30:52
Maybe.
:30:55
Luther's a theologian, my lord.
:30:58
He fights,
but with his tongue or his pen.


prev.
next.