I kind of want to see someone answer this, because I have the same question!
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
from guessing this should be A
Explanation:
the other choices make no sense
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:hi everyone add me on snap it’s yellowunico please and thank you 
Explanation:you should add me on snap cause I’m bored and funny and cute 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Martin Luther was raised in the church with a solid education in the church's teachings and in the art of scholarly debate.  He spent time living as a monk, knowing the Catholic Church's spiritual path from that perspective.  As a monk, he had traveled to Rome and seen the corruption that was evident there, which shocked him.  He had studied deeply to become a Doctor of Theology and taught theology at the University of Wittenberg.  He had the training and stature to contend with the powerful leaders within the Catholic Church, because his own scholarship and skill were second to none.  And he personally had experienced the overwhelming sense of guilt that the scholastic theology of the church had imposed on him, in contrast to the message of grace in Christ that he found when studying the Bible itself.
        
             
        
        
        
The Treaties of Utrecht, signed in Utrecht in the Dutch Republic, were negotiated after the War of the Spanish Succession.  In the agreements signed with Great Britain, France agreed to the following:
1.  France acknowledged Queen Anne<span> as the rightful British monarch.
</span>2.  France would stop its support of James Edward<span>, the son of the former king </span>James II of England, who had been removed from the throne during the Glorious Revolution of 1688.
<span>3.  France conceded the Great Britain the Hudson Bay territory, Newfoundland, </span>Nova Scotia<span>, </span><span>and the island of St. Kitts.
4.  France would demolish its fortifications at Dunkirk.  (They had attacked British shipping from there.)</span>