King objected to being called an outsider because he believed that all individuals are interconnected and part of the same human family. He felt that labeling someone as an outsider creates division and perpetuates discrimination, which goes against his belief in unity and equality for all.
Martin Luther objected to relics because he believed they promoted the idea of salvation through physical objects rather than through faith in God. He argued that the veneration of relics encouraged superstition and distracted people from the core teachings of Christianity, which emphasized a personal relationship with God and the importance of Scripture. Luther's critique was part of his broader challenge to the practices of the Catholic Church during the Reformation, advocating for a return to biblical principles.
Indulgences were what the church was selling, it was forgiveness.. people had to pay the church to be forgiven. Martin Luther objected to them because he belived that the church was wrong and that the bible had the last word, because it was the word of god. He belived that if someone was really sorry they would be forgiven.
Actually, it never bothered Catholics because it never happened. Indulgences were available for any of the corporal works of mercy, the three primary ones being prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. It bothered the heretics, beginning with Martin Luther, because they did not understand indulgences, nor did they understand almsgiving.
That is called the object's weight.
His cause of posting the 95 theses was because of the selling of indulgences. Indulgences was a thing that would take you directly to heaven even though you did a bad thing. Did this help:D
The amount of matter in an object is called mass.
If someone had been selling indulgences for money then Martin Luther might have had a good case as indulgences can not be purchased, although they have always been issued for any of the three works of penance which include prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. On the latter, indulgences had always been granted for almsgiving, but from the latest information we have about the time period, although there were some abuses, it would appear that most of the problem was of Martin Luther's own making. I personally suspect that he was just looking for any reason to throw over the Church, his 95 Theses which included his objections to indulgences really make no sense given even a cursory (unbiased) knowledge of Catholic history and belief. Click on link attached below.Catholic Encyclopedia on Martin Luther
any object, natural or artificial, that orbits another object is called a "satellite"
A very small object is called a "microscopic" object or "minuscule" object, depending on the size. It can also be referred to as a "tiny" or "miniscule" object.
The quantity of matter in an object is called mass.
A 3-d object is often called a model.