The mystic mind of Denk runs a good deal in the channels of the author of the "German Theology, Deutsche Theologie," and of his pantheistic contemporary, Sebastian Franck.
According toDenk a man may be saved without the preaching of the Word, without the Scriptures, and without any knowledge of the historical Christ and His work.
Expelled from the city, Denk died during his flight, 1527, at Basel.
Denk was the leader of the council held by the Anabaptists in 1527 in Augsburg.
It was of Denk that Capito wrote, 1526: "At Nuernberg the schoolteacher at St. Sebald denied that the Holy Ghost and the Son are equal to the Father, and for this reason he was expelled.
Denk held that the source of religious and moral knowledge is not the Scriptures, but the voice of God in the heart of man, or Christ Himself, who speaks and writes the divine Law into the hearts of those who are His.
Denn sett ik mi so truri hin, Un denk so vel an di, Ik et alleen min Abendbrot— Un du büst nich derbi.
Wenn ut de Böm de Blaeder fallt, So denk ik glik an di: So full so menni brawe Jung, Un du weerst mit derbi.
Ja, oft denk ich an sein Licht, Wenn der fruehe Tag anbricht: Ach was ist fuer Herrlichkeit In dem Licht der Ewigkeit!
Ach, denk ich, bist du hier so schoen, Und laesst dus uns so lieblich gehn Auf dieser armen Erden, Was will doch wohl nach dieser Welt Dort in dem reichen Himmelszelt Und goldnen Schlosse werden!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "denk" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.