Part, Question
1 1, 3 | as they are able; and the imitation is here defective, precisely ~
2 1, 9 | by way of some kind ~of imitation, as from the first effective
3 1, 15 | essence as capable of such imitation by any creature, He knows
4 1, 35 | Further, Image is derived from imitation, which implies "before" ~
5 1, 35 | Para. 1/1 ~Reply OBJ 3: Imitation in God does not signify
6 1, 44 | analogy ~of some kind of imitation.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[44] A[
7 1, 45 | analogy ~of some kind of imitation.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[44] A[
8 1, 92 | because it is produced as an imitation of something else; ~wherefore,
9 1, 92 | observe in man a certain imitation of God, consisting in the ~
10 1, 92 | to the ~image of God by imitation of the Divine Nature does
11 2, 19 | agent: and this by way of imitation, not by way of equality.~
12 2, 81 | understood as ~denoting imitation or suggestion, since it
13 2, 81 | in ~their origin, or by imitation, because every soul is God'
14 2, 87 | understood in reference ~to the imitation of sin, wherefore in Exodus
15 2, 102 | that this declaration, and imitation of Abraham's faith, ~might
16 2, 18 | by reason of a variable imitation of ~the Inimitable" - that
17 2, 32 | be a sin. But it is ~in imitation of God that we hate certain
18 2, 106 | transmitted to another, either by "imitation," as children copy the sins ~
19 2, 122 | and ~again because in imitation of Christ he is dead to
20 2, 145 | both ~because it is kept in imitation of Christ, and because it
21 2, 150 | cleave to God more closely by imitation of ~the mind. The "new hymn"
22 2, 161 | The other is a likeness of imitation, such as is possible for
23 2, 179 | word ~and example to its imitation it begets a numerous offspring
24 2, 182 | ascend to Divine ~things in imitation of them. Hence, other things
25 2, 184 | consists chiefly in the imitation ~of Christ, according to
26 2, 185 | becomes religious to live in imitation of Christ. ~Now Christ was
27 3, 1 | that the Master by Whose imitation the human race ~was to be
28 Suppl, 57| sonship of adoption is an imitation of natural sonship. ~Wherefore
29 Suppl, 88| that movement, namely ~the imitation of the Divine goodness in
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