vagina
One practice that was not a source of contention between the Catholic Church and Martin Luther was the belief in the Holy Trinity. Both the Catholic Church and Lutherans agreed on the doctrine of the Trinity, which states that there is one God in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This was not a matter of dispute during the Protestant Reformation.
Martin Luther believed that Christians are saved by faith alone in Christ alone.
5'6 1/2" (1.69 M) Source: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0455052/bio
No woman has publically come forward and admitted an affair with Dr. King and no substantiated proof (with names and dates) has been submitted to any accreditted news source.
"Free at last. Free at last. Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last." are the closing words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I have a Dream" speech.
Just by believing in god/ faith
He Beleived it was the only source of information about god
The sacrament of communion
The sacrament of communion
—Salvation is gained by faith alone —Jesus is the head of the church —The Bible is the sole source of religious truth —Only God can forgive sins —The Bible should be in English (not Latin)
As you are not listing any of the possible "practices" in your question, I'm just going to take a stab in the dark; for instance, infant baptism was never a source of contention. Initially indulgences were not a source of contention (Luther was only objecting to the people's misunderstanding of indulgences), but later he rejected the entire system. One user said that the sacrament of communion was often an answer that they were looking for when this question is asked on a test, but Martin Luther most definitely did not believe in transubstantiation, he believed in consubstantiation. 1_ the sacrament of communion
As you are not listing any of the possible "practices" in your question, I'm just going to take a stab in the dark; for instance, infant baptism was never a source of contention. Initially indulgences were not a source of contention (Luther was only objecting to the people's misunderstanding of indulgences), but later he rejected the entire system. One user said that the sacrament of communion was often an answer that they were looking for when this question is asked on a test, but Martin Luther most definitely did not believe in transubstantiation, he believed in consubstantiation. 1_ the sacrament of communion
As you are not listing any of the possible "practices" in your question, I'm just going to take a stab in the dark; for instance, infant baptism was never a source of contention. Initially indulgences were not a source of contention (Luther was only objecting to the people's misunderstanding of indulgences), but later he rejected the entire system. One user said that the sacrament of communion was often an answer that they were looking for when this question is asked on a test, but Martin Luther most definitely did not believe in transubstantiation, he believed in consubstantiation. 1_ the sacrament of communion
As you are not listing any of the possible "practices" in your question, I'm just going to take a stab in the dark; for instance, infant baptism was never a source of contention. Initially indulgences were not a source of contention (Luther was only objecting to the people's misunderstanding of indulgences), but later he rejected the entire system. One user said that the sacrament of communion was often an answer that they were looking for when this question is asked on a test, but Martin Luther most definitely did not believe in transubstantiation, he believed in consubstantiation. 1_ the sacrament of communion
One practice that was not a source of contention between the Catholic Church and Martin Luther was the belief in the Holy Trinity. Both the Catholic Church and Lutherans agreed on the doctrine of the Trinity, which states that there is one God in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This was not a matter of dispute during the Protestant Reformation.
Martin Luther believed that Christians are saved by faith alone in Christ alone.
This photo, taken of a fairly liable source, depicts the wrong, misleading form of antisemitism brought onto a small scale from what was a large discussion during his era. Martin Luther King allegedly endorsed Zionism.