|    Part, Question1   2, 100 |           no man can ~sufficiently repay, viz. God and man's father,
 2   2, 30  |         Who seeth in ~secret, will repay thee." Now the eternal reward
 3   2, 55  |          justice tends to make man repay God as much as he can, ~
 4   2, 60  |           When it is impossible to repay the equivalent, it suffices ~
 5   2, 60  |        equivalent, it suffices ~to repay what one can, as in the
 6   2, 70  |            belongeth to Me, I will repay" [*Heb. 10:30]. Now by ~
 7   2, 76  |           by a ~point of honor, to repay anyone who has done us a
 8   2, 76  |        bound by a natural ~debt to repay something. Now it does not
 9   2, 76  |         wherefore the borrower may repay the lender with what he
10   2, 76  |        consumption is not bound to repay more than he received in
11   2, 104 |            the honor with which we repay our parents ~belongs to
12   2, 104 |             to which it belongs to repay favors received, is not
13   2, 104 |        would not seem equitable to repay ~him. Also the recipient
14   2, 104 |            and is quite unable ~to repay. Therefore seemingly a man
15   2, 104 |           vii): ~"It is my duty to repay, and not to keep back and
16   2, 104 |          Whether a man is bound to repay a favor at once?~Aquin.:
17   2, 104 |       seems that a man is bound to repay a favor at once. For we
18   2, 104 |        Therefore a man is bound to repay a ~favor at once.~Aquin.:
19   2, 104 |   apparently ~more praiseworthy to repay a favor at once.~Aquin.:
20   2, 104 |           iv): "He that hastens to repay, ~is animated with a sense,
21   2, 104 |        Benef. ii): "Do you wish to repay a favor? Receive it ~graciously."
22   2, 104 |     convenient time, one wished to repay at once, favor for favor,
23   2, 104 |            iv), "he that wishes to repay too soon, is an ~unwilling
24   2, 104 |           thanksgiving, whereby we repay favors, is a part of ~justice.
25   2, 104 |      Therefore it is impossible to repay a ~favor according to the
26   2, 104 |          virtue, it seems that ~to repay more than the favor received
27   2, 104 |           Ethic. v, 5): "We should repay ~those who are gracious
28   2, 105 |         iii) that "he who does not repay a favor is ungrateful."
29   2, 105 |      sometimes it is impossible to repay a favor without sinning,
30   2, 105 |  ingratitude through inability to ~repay, for the very reason that
31   2, 105 |            it is ungrateful not to repay one, but it is the ~height
32   2, 105 |          thanks, and ~the third to repay the favor at a suitable
33   2, 105 | ingratitude is when a man fails to repay a favor, the second when
34   2, 105 |         ungrateful, if he fails to repay it, provided he be prepared
35   2, 106 |          Revenge to Me, and I will repay." Therefore all vengeance
36   2, 127 |       favors from others unless he repay them with yet ~greater favor;
37   3, 87  |         for mortal sin, "till thou repay the last farthing," by which
38 Suppl, 13|           14), it is impossible to repay them measure for measure,
39 Suppl, 13|          but it ~suffices that man repay as much as he can, for friendship
40 Suppl, 13|            whatever man is able to repay becomes acceptable. ~Others,
41 Suppl, 71|       belongs to Divine justice to repay good for good in ~the same
 
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