The correct answer is the third option: a priest telling his congregation that bread and wine turned to the body and blood of Jesus during communion. John Wycliffe was an English theologian who, in the Late Middle Ages, reacted against the practices and dogmas of the Catholic Church. Wycliffe questioned the corruption, wealth and power of the Church; he stated that priests should come back to a life of poverty, and he even maintained that the Bible should be translated into English so everybody could have a direct access to the word of God without intermediaries. In his book <em>On the Eucharist</em>, published in 1379, he went even further by questioning the doctrine of transubstantiation, that is, the Catholic dogma according to which, during the ceremony of the mass, bread and wine become the flesh and blood of Christ.
John Wycliffe would not have agreed with "<span>a priest telling his congregation that bread and wine turned to the body and blood of Jesus during communion," since Wycliffe did not believe in "transubstantiation" </span>
<span>Many Europeans wanted to explore lives outside of Europe because of contact with non-European civilizations, books such as the travels of John Mandeville, and many people wanted to trade with outside civilizations. Religious zeal was also a motive for exploration</span>
In Act one, Rev. Hale wants Tituba to confess to witchcraft and then requires her to confess that she has seen other women of the village working with the devil. He does this right after Abigail tells him that it was Tituba who forced her and the other girls to attempt to conjure spirits in the forest the night before.
you have to have a drivers license because that is one of the best proofs of identification unless the drivers license is not yours it is then illegal to have a drivers licence that is not yours when you are obtaining it with the intention of using it is identity fraud
Ivan I was a friend to the Mongols because he helped them suppress Russian revolts, and he was an a enemy to them because he strengthened Moscow, eventually setting the stage for Ivan III and his overthrown of Mongol power.