|    Part, Question1   2, 73  |         of God, to Whom man ~is ungrateful when he sins: and in this
 2   2, 106 |   greater punishment, as being ~ungrateful for greater benefits, and
 3   2, 13  |      the truth is revealed, or ~ungrateful to God, by Whose inspiration
 4   2, 33  |       humility, shows him to be ungrateful: and from such like contempt
 5   2, 104 |         of us in his mind, I am ungrateful and not merely ~unjust,
 6   2, 104 |       poor man is certainly not ungrateful if he does what he ~can.
 7   2, 104 |      and an unwilling debtor is ungrateful."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106]
 8   2, 105 |    should be withdrawn from the ungrateful?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[107] A[
 9   2, 105 |       does not repay a favor is ungrateful." But ~sometimes it is impossible
10   2, 105 |          an unwilling debtor is ungrateful," as Seneca declares ~(De
11   2, 105 |         Disobedient to parents, ungrateful, wicked." etc.~Aquin.: SMT
12   2, 105 |         of ~sin. But one can be ungrateful by committing different
13   2, 105 |          De Benef. iii): "It is ungrateful to take ~no notice of a
14   2, 105 |     notice of a kindness, it is ungrateful not to repay one, but it
15   2, 105 |       above all. But one is not ungrateful to God by ~committing a
16   2, 105 |         should the latter prove ungrateful; ~and there would be no
17   2, 105 |     above (A[2]), a man may ~be ungrateful in two ways: first, by mere
18   2, 105 |        3~Secondly, a man may be ungrateful, because he not only omits
19   2, 105 |         a venial sin one is not ungrateful to God to ~the extent of
20   2, 105 |        conferred on him is not ~ungrateful, if he fails to repay it,
21   2, 105 |     should be withheld from the ungrateful?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[107] A[
22   2, 105 |        should withheld from the ungrateful. For it ~is written (Wis.
23   2, 105 |    should be withheld from the ~ungrateful.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[107] A[
24   2, 105 |        committing ~sin. But the ungrateful in receiving a favor is
25   2, 105 |   should not be bestowed on the ungrateful.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[107] A[
26   2, 105 |          11:17). Now he that is ungrateful when he receives a ~favor
27   2, 105 |        withhold favors from the ungrateful.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[107] A[
28   2, 105 |   considered with regard to an ~ungrateful person. The first is what
29   2, 105 |         easily ~judge him to be ungrateful, since, as Seneca remarks (
30   2, 105 |    repeats his favors, the more ungrateful and evil the ~other becomes,
31   2, 105 |       quoted speaks of what the ungrateful man ~deserves to suffer.~
32   2, 105 |      that bestows a favor on an ungrateful person affords him ~an occasion
33   2, 120 | continued to him, and he who is ungrateful for a favor ~deserves to
34   2, 120 |  deprived of life because he is ungrateful ~for the favor. However,
35   2, 160 |        pride as to show oneself ungrateful": and Augustine says ~(De
36   2, 160 |      Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 3: The ungrateful man ascribes to himself
37   2, 184 |      would ~seem to be the more ungrateful for the divine favors which
38   3, 28  |       she would seem to be most ungrateful, were she not content with ~
39   3, 88  |        and, in this way, man is ungrateful to God in every ~mortal
40   3, 88  |          so that he is the more ungrateful if he scorns it. In this
41   3, 88  |     same favor, one man is very ungrateful, either on account of the ~
42   3, 88  |        another ~man is slightly ungrateful, either because his scorn
43   3, 88  |         whatever, a man becomes ungrateful to God, as ~evidenced from
44 Suppl, 96|        the sinner who has been ~ungrateful to God should lose his being.
 
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