|    Part, Question1   1, 10  |          taken as if the ~negation belonged to their essence, but because
 2   1, 18  |         form only, and not matter, belonged to natural things, ~then
 3   1, 39  |     persons as if they exclusively belonged to them; but in order to
 4   1, 50  |         away, in view of ~which it belonged to it. Roundness can never
 5   1, 61  |           in the opinion of some, ~belonged to the inferior orders.
 6   1, 63  |          hold that the chief devil belonged ~to the lower order of the
 7   1, 39  |     persons as if they exclusively belonged to them; but in order to
 8   1, 51  |         away, in view of ~which it belonged to it. Roundness can never
 9   1, 62  |           in the opinion of some, ~belonged to the inferior orders.
10   1, 64  |          hold that the chief devil belonged ~to the lower order of the
11   1, 91  |            Therefore a rib of Adam belonged to the integrity of ~his
12   1, 91  |           1/2~Reply OBJ 2: The rib belonged to the integral perfection
13   1, 95  |      consider the mastership which belonged to man in the state of ~
14   1, 96  |     communicated to the body ~what belonged to itself as a soul; and
15   1, 118 |            be ~left in him of what belonged to him at the beginning.
16   1, 118 |         which was there previously belonged to true human nature, so
17   2, 50  |          first species of ~quality belonged to the soul alone. And he
18   2, 50  |   Predicaments not as though they ~belonged to the first species of
19   2, 98  |          Old Law; not because they belonged to the Old Law, but because
20   2, 98  |         Old Law, but because they ~belonged to the natural law. But
21   2, 100 |           decalogue, if ~it nowise belonged to the decalogue. Secondly,
22   2, 100 |     whereas the judicial precepts ~belonged to "special justice," which
23   2, 102 |            of others similar which belonged to that ~time, does not
24   2, 102 |             Now the worship of God belonged in a general way to the
25   2, 102 |          but ~in a special way, it belonged to the priests and Levites,
26   2, 102 |          in general; while ~others belonged to the ministers.~Aquin.:
27   2, 102 |            they declared that they belonged to that people ~which God
28   2, 106 |         grace ~instilled into them belonged to the New Testament.~Aquin.:
29   2, 107 |           and in this respect they belonged to the ~New Law. In like
30   2, 107 |         God, in this respect they ~belonged to the New Testament: for
31   2, 4   |      specifically, as ~though they belonged to different species. But
32   2, 59  |      possessed of something ~which belonged to the community. Therefore
33   2, 59  |           richer out of that which belonged to the other. The result
34   2, 91  |          and yet these observances belonged to the ~worship of God.
35   3, 2   |          Christ, and it, moreover, belonged to Christ from the beginning
36   3, 13  |       nature still retaining ~what belonged to it. Now the active principle
37   3, 14  |     allowed to ~suffer and do what belonged to it."~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
38   3, 14  |      allowed to do and suffer what belonged to ~it." And this necessity
39   3, 14  |         our sin, and not that they belonged to Him of Himself. Hence
40   3, 15  |     allowed to suffer ~and do what belonged to it." But it is proper
41   3, 15  |            spirit. ~And hence this belonged to Christ, whose spirit
42   3, 16  |          so understand it as if it belonged to human ~nature to be in
43   3, 18  |       flesh to do ~and suffer what belonged to it." And in like manner
44   3, 18  |      powers of His soul to do what belonged to them. Now it is clear
45   3, 19  |          should do and suffer what belonged to it," as stated above (
46   3, 28  |          other motions. But Christ belonged to the same species as other
47   3, 31  |           of flesh and bone, which belonged to him, not as an ~integral
48   3, 31  |        such a way that ~Adam's sin belonged to Christ: forasmuch as
49   3, 36  |         which appeared to the Magi belonged to the heavenly ~system?~
50   3, 36  |         which appeared to the Magi belonged ~to the heavenly system.
51   3, 36  |         which appeared to the Magi belonged to ~the heavenly system.~
52   3, 38  |         Consequently, in a way, it belonged to the law of Christ, but
53   3, 42  |            darkness (Lk. 1:79), it belonged to remove occasions of error,
54   3, 46  |            like ~fashion, since it belonged to Christ's soul, inasmuch
55   3, 48  |       cause, to whom Christ's life belonged as to its first ~author,
56   3, 57  |            inquiry:~(1) Whether it belonged for Christ to ascend into
57   3, 57  | fittingness. Now this in a measure belonged to His glory; and He had
58   3, 57  |            s Ascension into heaven belonged to Him according to His ~
59   3, 57  |            s Ascension into heaven belonged to Him ~according to His
60   3, 68  |         conceived ~within a mother belonged to her body, so as to be
61   3, 74  |          The shedding of the blood belonged directly to Christ's ~Passion:
62 Suppl, 54|             of natural law. Now it belonged to human nature from when
63 Suppl, 66|          the time of the synagogue belonged to the unity of the Church
64 Suppl, 70|         though ~the act of feeling belonged to the soul by itself, but
65 Suppl, 71|          head replied that it ~had belonged to a pagan priest who was
66 Suppl, 71|        very bad, ~those namely who belonged to the Church as actual
67 Suppl, 71|        dead together with what has belonged to them, how much ~more
68 Suppl, 71|            together with what ~has belonged to him, not that they also
69 Suppl, 77|       Whether whatever in the body belonged to the truth of human nature
70 Suppl, 77|        food. Therefore if whatever belonged to the truth of ~human nature
71 Suppl, 77|         OBJ 2: Further, Adam's rib belonged to the truth of human nature
72 Suppl, 77|            rib. Therefore whatever belonged in man to the truth of human
73 Suppl, 77|         rise again in man whatever belonged in him to ~the truth of
74 Suppl, 77|        human nature in ~that child belonged also to the truth of human
75 Suppl, 77|      changed into seed, that which belonged to the truth of ~human nature
76 Suppl, 77|           impossible for ~whatever belonged to the truth of human nature
77 Suppl, 77|          On the contrary, Whatever belonged to the truth of human nature
78 Suppl, 77|  resurrection. ~Therefore whatever belonged to the truth of human nature
79 Suppl, 77|         perish. Therefore whatever belonged to the truth of human ~nature
80 Suppl, 77|           human nature, all ~of it belonged to the truth of human nature
81 Suppl, 77|        alone will rise again which belonged to the truth of the human ~
82 Suppl, 77|            order, ~that what first belonged to the substance of a man'
83 Suppl, 77|          flesh that is eaten never belonged to the truth of ~human nature
84 Suppl, 77|         the second: otherwise what belonged to ~the resurrection in
85 Suppl, 77|         something that would ~have belonged to the seminal substance
86 Suppl, 78|         OBJ 3: Further, that which belonged most to the truth of human
87 Suppl, 78|         more would it seem to have belonged to the truth of human ~nature,
88 Suppl, 78|   completion. Wherefore that which belonged principally to the ~truth
 
 |