<u> D. Men are only human and fallible themselves and cannot claim their opinions to be divine and infallible.</u>
The excerpt asserts rulers' nature (both civilian and ecclesiastical): they are fallible, imperfect, and uninspired men. Still, over the centuries, they have established and imposed their opinions on others as reliable, as the only truth. But this is wrong, the divine, and the truth can not depend on men's opinions or beliefs about what they think it's right. In conclusion, men with their fallible and imperfect nature, cannot claim their opinions to be divine and infallible.
Well the exposition is when Jeremy decides who his enemy is, and describes the details of his current life. Rising action includes his struggle to make an enemy list and talk to his enemy. The climax is when he decides that his enemy list is obsolete. Falling action is when he trashes his list and invites everyone for pie. Resolution: They eat pie. Even if I got the story wrong, all stories follow a suspense pattern that is similar.
Answer:
ok
Explanation:
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Answer:
I know right it's so nice