|    Part, Question1   1, 1   |     revealed by God, they must be accepted by faith. Hence the sacred
 2   1, 23  |     whatsoever way destination is accepted.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[23] A[
 3   1, 78  |           1: If this authority is accepted, intelligence there means
 4   2, 1   |    difficulty, ~so that if one be accepted, it is not difficult to
 5   2, 1   |      whole truth of faith, it was accepted by the authority of the
 6   2, 10  |      resisted before it has been ~accepted, and such is the unbelief
 7   2, 10  |        resisted after it has been accepted, and this either ~in the
 8   2, 10  |         resists it without having accepted it, even as ~he who fails
 9   2, 10  |          the Jews, who have never accepted ~the Gospel faith. Since,
10   2, 10  |       faith. Since, however, they accepted the figure of that faith ~
11   2, 10  |      because the ~latter have not accepted the Gospel faith in any
12   2, 10  | unbelievers who at some time have accepted ~the faith, and professed
13   2, 51  |        what before it had rightly accepted. And since it can resist ~
14   2, 66  |   accusation in writing should be accepted."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[68] A[
15   2, 66  |       says, "Let no accusation be accepted in writing" ~it refers to
16   2, 75  |          of a certain jester was ~accepted by all, "You wish to buy
17   2, 85  |       done penance, tithes may be accepted from them on these ~things.~
18   2, 87  |          as His witness should be accepted as true. Now sometimes God
19   2, 92  |        from the philosophers, who accepted the same things for ~sacred,
20   2, 98  |          out of the office he has accepted), but a sale of the very
21   2, 183 |     authority in laying aside the accepted charge for ~the reasons
22   2, 184 |           will ~be forward, it is accepted according to that which
23   2, 187 |      Bishop of Grenoble, who had ~accepted the episcopate after vowing
24   3, 46  |         proposed; and this can be accepted in three ways. First of
25   3, 46  |          the pain and sorrow were accepted voluntarily, to ~the end
26   3, 46  |          sins of all ~men, Christ accepted sadness, the greatest in
27   3, 47  |   employed by Job (21:14) can be ~accepted on their behalf: "(Who)
28   3, 48  |         so favorably offered and ~accepted as the flesh of our sacrifice,
29   3, 55  |           but after they had once accepted it, ~they had no further
30   3, 57  |        Hence His own power can be accepted according to both. ~Likewise
31   3, 57  |   Likewise a twofold power can be accepted regarding His human nature:
32   3, 83  |        that this sacrifice may be accepted by God through the devotion
33   3, 83  |        the former sacrifices were accepted by Him.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
34   3, 83  |         angel, so that it may be ~accepted by God.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
35 Suppl, 11| confidence ought not easily to be accepted in this way: ~but if it
36 Suppl, 17|           of knowledge, cannot be accepted ~without sin by one who
37 Suppl, 71|    satisfaction offered by one is accepted in lieu of ~another's.~Aquin.:
 
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