134. Let there be brought forward such details as to who were present from the papist party in the Council of Nice, and that unless the words "that He is perfect Man" had been accepted, the pope could not have been acknowledged as His vicar. But yet this was not solely for the pope. He would in other respects be acknowledged as God of heaven and God of earth, if he had taken upon himself the Divine, when nevertheless it is actually Divine to save men, to create them anew, to impart heaven to them, to lead them from infancy to the close of life and afterwards to eternity. But the Protestants also saw the contradictions in the findings of the Council, therefore they admitted the things that follow, to which however, few Protestants of the present day pay any attention. Wherefore, they believe along with the Papists that it is not the Human that is Divine, thus placing the Divine above the Human alongside the Father.