Part, Question 
 1   1, 25  |          as ~to give sight to the blind, or to raise the dead. Therefore,
 2   1, 33  |    instance when a mole is called blind. In a ~third sense privation
 3   1, 83  |       instance, a man who is born blind can have no knowledge ~of
 4   1, 83  |      wanting. And thus a man born blind could have knowledge of
 5   1, 90  |           or giving sight to ~the blind: and by this power He formed
 6   1, 90  |         be raised to life, or the blind to see: ~like to which also
 7   1, 93  |       Christ gave to the man born blind were not different from ~
 8   1, 104 |           and giving sight to the blind, and the like; for nature
 9   1, 110 |          or partly; as a man born blind cannot imagine color. ~Sometimes,
10   1, 110 |         he cannot make a man born blind imagine color), but by local ~
11   1, 111 |          grace. That the man born blind was enlightened, that ~Lazarus
12   2, 5   |           restoring sight to ~the blind, and such like. Now it has
13   2, 18  |           said to be evil: thus a blind man is possessed of ~goodness
14   2, 18  |           a deficient act. Thus a blind man has in act the power
15   2, 58  |        Thus if a running horse be blind, the faster it runs ~the
16   2, 63  |           He gave to the man born blind, as one ~produced by the
17   2, 63  |          3: God gave the man born blind an eye for the same act
18   2, 79  |           is written (Is. 6:10): "Blind the heart of this ~people,
19   2, 79  |        too, the devil is said to ~blind, in so far as he induces
20   2, 79  |           Therefore God does not ~blind some for the sake of their
21   2, 81  |         one reproaches a man born blind; one rather takes pity on
22   2, 85  |          virtue any more than the blind ~can to sight. Therefore
23   2, 85  |          justice. Thus ~even in a blind man the aptitude to see
24   2, 87  |           3,2) about the man born blind: "Neither hath ~this man
25   2, 87  |            that he should be born blind." In ~like manner we see
26   2, 102 |        animal, e.g. a lame, ~or a blind, or otherwise defective
27   2, 102 |         to his God . . . if he be blind, if he ~be lame," etc. It
28   2, 102 |      forbidden that he should ~be blind, i.e. he ought not to be
29   2, 105 |           take bribes, which even blind the wise, and ~pervert the
30   2, 110 |         been thus deserted become blind." Therefore grace ~implies
31   2, 113 |         when He gave sight to the blind or raised the dead. Now
32   2, 3   |          Let them alone, they are blind, and leaders ~of the blind."~
33   2, 3   |        blind, and leaders ~of the blind."~
34   2, 14  |          Jn. 9:41): "If you were ~blind, you should not have sin."
35   2, 14  |           appears from Is. 6:10, "Blind the heart of this people," ~
36   2, 30  |  mentioned above, for instance, a blind man needs a leader, a ~lame
37   2, 30  |     sickness, so that to lead the blind, and to support ~the lame,
38   2, 45  |      shalt thou take bribes which blind even the ~prudent [Douay: '
39   2, 69  |           of body (for instance a blind man whose ~attendance in
40   2, 70  | spitefully to another that he is ~blind, he taunts but does not
41   2, 81  |         words ~were spoken by the blind man before being anointed,
42   2, 84  |          OBJ 3: The oblation of a blind or lame animal was declared ~
43   2, 84  |          1:8): "If you offer the ~blind in sacrifice, is it not
44   2, 102 |        Lord after healing the two blind men ~commanded them, saying: "
45   2, 102 |           Our Lord in telling the blind men to conceal the miracle ~
46   2, 171 |           the imagination of one ~blind from birth), or divinely
47   2, 176 |         xliv in Joan.) ~that "the blind man spoke these words before
48   2, 183 |      Christ's teaching, "they are blind, and ~leaders of the blind."~
49   2, 183 |        blind, and ~leaders of the blind."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[185]
50   2, 185 |          take bribes which . . ~. blind the wise, and pervert the
51   3, 17  |      happened to him who was born blind, no new being would be ~
52   3, 33  |      miraculously; thus, too, the blind man to whom sight has been ~
53   3, 42  |         Let them alone: ~they are blind and leaders of the blind;
54   3, 42  |          blind and leaders of the blind; and if the blind lead the
55   3, 42  |          of the blind; and if the blind lead the blind, ~both fall
56   3, 42  |         and if the blind lead the blind, ~both fall into the pit."~
57   3, 43  |       power. For this reason the ~blind man, after his sight had
58   3, 43  |       opened the eyes of one born blind. Unless this man were of
59   3, 44  |          22-25) that, "taking the blind man ~by the hand, He led
60   3, 44  |            that he should be born blind." It was ~unseemly, therefore,
61   3, 44  |           laid His hands upon the blind man, wishing to show ~that
62   3, 44  |         clay upon the eyes of the blind man," Augustine ~says: "
63   3, 44  |         the ~case of the man born blind, and this was his want of
64   3, 77  |         restoring of sight to the blind: even thus in human affairs,
65   3, 77  |           in a subject; just as a blind man, to ~whom sight is given
66   3, 84  |         restored the sight to any blind ~man twice, or that He cleansed
67   3, 84  |           Lord gave sight to many blind men ~at various times, and
68   3, 84  |           in body, so many ~lame, blind, and withered, that the
69   3, 86  |          We read (Mk. 8) that the blind man whom our Lord ~enlightened,
70   3, 86  |         the ~enlightenment of the blind man signifies the delivery
71   3, 86  |             A[3], ad 2) about the blind man who was restored to ~
72 Suppl, 3 |    confesses that "he deserves to blind his eyes with ~tears." Therefore
73 Suppl, 32|        OBJ 2: Further, a man born blind does not sin by his sight.
74 Suppl, 32|         to be applied to one born blind, and in like manner ~as
75 Suppl, 64|        because thus is a deformed blind lame leprous offspring ~
76 Suppl, 72|           as in giving sight to a blind man, for sight is natural,
77 Suppl, 73|        instanced in ~the man born blind who, after being restored
78 Suppl, 93|          a man is said to be more blind, if he be removed ~further
 
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