|    Part, Question1   2, 84  |         OBJ 3: Further, capital crimes are those which receive
 2   2, 87  |      like manner as those whose crimes they ~imitate. It seems,
 3   2, 87  |         up amid their parents' ~crimes, both by becoming accustomed
 4   2, 105 |         punishments to ~certain crimes, as we shall state farther
 5   2, 105 |  penalty for the more ~grievous crimes, viz. for those which are
 6   2, 105 |        may refrain from similar crimes.~Aquin.: SMT FS Q[105] A[
 7   2, 105 |        account of their ~former crimes, to punish which God sent
 8   2, 12  |       After prohibiting greater crimes he forbids lesser sins":
 9   2, 65  |        to clear himself of the ~crimes" of which he is accused.~
10   2, 66  |         are accused of grievous crimes and are not yet proved to
11   2, 69  |      been convicted of grievous crimes ~should be advocates. Nevertheless
12   2, 71  | instance, when one reveals the ~crimes which a man has in truth
13   2, 72  |    charges others publicly with crimes, either by ~accusing or
14   2, 93  |        is allowable that public crimes should be judged by our
15   2, 93  |         but hidden and unknown ~crimes must be left to Him Who
16   2, 134 |    deliberate ~delight in their crimes are said to be borne patiently."~
17   2, 156 |   useless, judgments unstable, ~crimes unchecked." Therefore to
18   3, 31  |         that, on account of the crimes of the kings of Juda, Christ ~
19   3, 49  |        them with respect to the crimes they commit against ~Him,
20   3, 79  |   sacrament be a cleansing from crimes." But ~mortal sins are called
21   3, 79  |          mortal sins are called crimes. Therefore mortal sins are
22   3, 79  |       may be the "cleansing of ~crimes," or of those sins of which
23   3, 80  |  government ~to judge of public crimes committed, and that by means
24   3, 80  |         but private and unknown crimes ~are to be left to Him Who
25   3, 80  |       are hindered by ~grievous crimes." Consequently, if those
26   3, 89  |   fornication, and of such like crimes, ~according to the prescription
27   3, 89  |   Ordinand.): "If the aforesaid crimes are not proved by a judicial ~
28   3, 89  |      did penance for his deadly crimes, and yet he retained his ~
29 Suppl, 20|    diocese for the more heinous crimes to be reserved to the ~bishop,
30 Suppl, 65|    mortal sins alone are called crimes. Now all fornication is
31 Suppl, 67|       the law is guilty of four crimes: for in ~God's sight he
32 Suppl, 72|         find that places where ~crimes have been committed are
33 Suppl, 84|   courageously ~confesses great crimes. Sins are said to be blotted
34 Suppl, 96|     they may have been of other crimes. But ~this is clearly contrary
35 Suppl, 96|    prove to be free from other ~crimes.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[99] A[
36 Suppl, 96|         they be guilty of other crimes. But ~this cannot stand,
37 Appen1, 2|    condemning both for the same crimes to the same punishment.~
 
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