Part, Question
1 1, 91 | relationship makes a person unfit for that office; ~hence
2 2, 71 | he is ~rendered thereby unfit for fulfilling his duties:
3 2, 103 | corporal, which rendered a man ~unfit for divine worship; thus
4 2, 38 | do that which renders him unfit for that duty. Wherefore
5 2, 68 | Further, no man is rendered unfit for things necessary for ~
6 2, 68 | if they be ~considered unfit according to law.~Aquin.:
7 2, 187 | work for a time, would be unfit for the kingdom of God,
8 3, 5 | worthless and seemingly unfit for any use. ~Now two of
9 3, 80 | fornication makes one more unfit for ~receiving this sacrament,
10 3, 80 | makes him to be ~utterly unfit for receiving this sacrament;
11 3, 80 | much disturbed, one becomes unfit for receiving this ~sacrament.~
12 Suppl, 39| Wherefore the like are unfit to receive ~all those sacraments
13 Suppl, 39| account of a person being unfit to administer the sacrament
14 Suppl, 43| during that period he is ~unfit for any contract, and therefore
15 Suppl, 49| because he renders himself unfit for ~spiritual things, since
16 Suppl, 58| of marital intercourse is unfit ~to marry, so also those
17 Suppl, 58| impotent are deemed most unfit for the ~marriage contract."
18 Suppl, 58| satisfy an obligation is unfit to make a contract which ~
19 Suppl, 58| marriage intercourse is unfit to ~marry." But in the majority
20 Suppl, 59| worship makes a person simply unfit for lawful ~marriage, whereas
21 Suppl, 60| law declares him simply unfit to marry her, so that if
22 Suppl, 60| hereby ~rendered simply unfit by law in relation to other
23 Suppl, 64| a sin to render oneself unfit to fulfill an ~obligation
24 Suppl, 64| sinful to render oneself unfit ~for paying the debt, by
25 Suppl, 64| precept to render ~oneself unfit for the exercise of a sacred
26 Suppl, 64| of the precept, becomes unfit for the ~exercise of divine
27 Suppl, 64| pleasure, it ~renders man unfit for spiritual things. Therefore,
28 Suppl, 72| been committed are reckoned unfit for the performance of ~
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