|    Part, Question1   1, 39  |      which the Council of Nicaea adopted against the Arians, ~means
 2   1, 68  |        then, this explanation is adopted none of these opinions will
 3   1, 39  |      which the Council of Nicaea adopted against the Arians, ~means
 4   1, 69  |        then, this explanation is adopted none of these opinions will
 5   1, 83  |        consistent with faith, he adopted it: and those ~thing which
 6   2, 114 |        of the Divine ~Nature, is adopted as a son of God, to whom
 7   2, 89  |        this result is becomingly adopted in ~the divine praises.
 8   2, 186 |        day?" ~Nevertheless it is adopted in religious life as being
 9   3, 20  |        Him, e.g. that the Father adopted Him and that He predestined
10   3, 23  |        it is proper to man to be adopted to the sonship of God?~(
11   3, 23  |         Christ can be called the adopted Son?~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
12   3, 23  |         in regard to which he is adopted.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23] A[
13   3, 23  |       Christ's ~Father alone has adopted sons.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
14   3, 23  |       this difference between an adopted son of God ~and the natural
15   3, 23  |          God." Yet sometimes the adopted son is said to be ~begotten,
16   3, 23  |        the rational nature to be adopted?~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23] A[
17   3, 23  |       the rational nature to be ~adopted. For God is not said to
18   3, 23  |         rational ~creature to be adopted.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23] A[
19   3, 23  |          rational creature to be adopted.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23] A[
20   3, 23  |    belongs to all men. But to be adopted ~does not belong to every
21   3, 23  |       Para. 1/1~On the contrary, Adopted sons are the "heirs of God,"
22   3, 23  |        the rational nature to be adopted.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23] A[
23   3, 23  |       therefore clear that to be adopted belongs to the rational
24   3, 23  |     Whether Christ as man is the adopted Son of God?~Aquin.: SMT
25   3, 23  |        that Christ as man is the adopted Son of God. For ~Hilary
26   3, 23  |      lowliness of the flesh'] is adopted." ~Therefore Christ as man
27   3, 23  |   Therefore Christ as man is the adopted Son of God.~Aquin.: SMT
28   3, 23  |          He would seem ~to be an adopted son.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
29   3, 23  |        greater ~dignity to be an adopted son than to be a servant.
30   3, 23  |      more is ~Christ, as man, an adopted Son.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
31   3, 23  |       viii): "We do not call an ~adopted son a natural son: the natural
32   3, 23  |       Christ, as Man, is not ~an adopted Son.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
33   3, 23  |          can nowise be called an adopted Son.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[23]
34   3, 23  |          Christ being called the adopted ~Son of God.~Aquin.: SMT
35   3, 23  |        that "carnal ~humanity is adopted," the expression is metaphorical:
36   3, 23  |          by habitual grace is an adopted son. Yet habitual grace
37   3, 23  |       who was not a son to be an adopted son, but is a ~certain effect
38   3, 24  |     befitting to Christ to be an adopted Son, as ~stated above (Q[
39   3, 24  |          are predestinated to be adopted sons. And just as Christ
40   3, 28  |          closely than if he were adopted from another family. ~Consequently
41   3, 28  |        be ~the father even of an adopted son not born of his wife."~
42   3, 31  |         him, ~but because he was adopted by him, since he says that
43   3, 32  |          Ghost; so as to be ~the adopted sons of God, so was Christ
44   3, 39  |          men are born again into adopted sons of God; since God's
45   3, 39  |   declares us to have become the adopted sons of God." ~
46   3, 40  |           Whether He should have adopted a lowly state of life, or
47   3, 41  |         after His baptism Christ adopted an austere ~form of life,
48   3, 57  |        not abandon those whom He adopted," as Pope Leo says (De ~
49   3, 65  |        given above, is ~commonly adopted by all.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
50   3, 74  |       sacraments ~such matter is adopted as is commonly made use
51   3, 74  |    stated ~above (A[3]), that is adopted as the matter of the sacraments
52   3, 80  |      seems that the course to be adopted is either ~that the sinner
53 Suppl, 57|        Now, sometimes the person adopted does not come under the ~
54 Suppl, 57|      necessarily lay up for ~his adopted child, since sometimes the
55 Suppl, 57|       child, since sometimes the adopted does not inherit the ~goods
56 Suppl, 57|          whether an older person adopted a younger, or a ~younger
57 Suppl, 57|     difference of degree between adopted and ~adopter. Therefore
58 Suppl, 57|    adopter. Therefore whoever is adopted, is adopted as a child;
59 Suppl, 57| Therefore whoever is adopted, is adopted as a child; and ~consequently
60 Suppl, 57|     right to say that one may be adopted as a ~grandchild.~Aquin.:
61 Suppl, 57|   wherefore God is said to ~have adopted us as children through charity.
62 Suppl, 57|  arrogatio," whereby the person ~adopted is placed under the power
63 Suppl, 57|    adopter; and one who is thus ~adopted inherits from his adopted
64 Suppl, 57|        adopted inherits from his adopted father if the latter die
65 Suppl, 57|       adoption," and by this the adopted does not come under the
66 Suppl, 57|  magistrate: and one who is thus adopted does not inherit ~the estate
67 Suppl, 57|        certain subjection of the adopted to the adopter: and it is
68 Suppl, 57|        but ~according to law the adopted person must be so much younger
69 Suppl, 57|           just as someone may be adopted in place of a ~child, so
70 Suppl, 57|         child, so may someone be adopted in place of a grandchild
71 Suppl, 57|          inherit the estate, ~be adopted, he is adopted not as a
72 Suppl, 57|       estate, ~be adopted, he is adopted not as a relative, but as
73 Suppl, 57|       adoption ~which places the adopted under the care of the adopter.~
74 Suppl, 57|          directed. And since the adopted child dwells in the house
75 Suppl, 57|      dwells in the house of ~his adopted father like one that is
76 Suppl, 57|         adopting father ~and the adopted child?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[
77 Suppl, 57|          adopting father and the adopted child. For it would seem
78 Suppl, 57|       the ~natural mother of the adopted, as happens in spiritual
79 Suppl, 57|          besides the adopter and adopted.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[57] A[
80 Suppl, 57| perpetual impediment between the adopted ~son and the naturally begotten
81 Suppl, 57|         begotten daughter of the adopted; because when the ~adoption
82 Suppl, 57|         the adopter, or when the adopted ~comes of age, the latter
83 Suppl, 57|         adoptive ~father and the adopted child, the latter's child
84 Suppl, 57|        the second is between the adopted child and the naturally
85 Suppl, 57|      father ~and the wife of the adopted son, or contrariwise between
86 Suppl, 57|         contrariwise between the adopted son ~and the wife of the
87 Suppl, 57|          but only so long as the adopted person remains under the
88 Suppl, 57|       the same time, whereas the adopted son does not. Hence ~no
89 Suppl, 57|    certain authority over their ~adopted son and his wife, wherefore
90 Suppl, 57|         Wherefore if a father be adopted the children and ~grandchildren
91 Suppl, 57|          the power of the person adopted are adopted also.~
92 Suppl, 57|        of the person adopted are adopted also.~
93 Suppl, 68|   legitimate and not natural, as adopted children; ~some are neither
 
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