Part, Question
1 2, 13 | to the other; thus if a hungry man, as Plato says (Cf.
2 2, 69 | ardent desire, even as a hungry and thirsty man eats and
3 2, 22 | the naked, or feed the ~hungry and so forth. Therefore
4 2, 24 | 25:21: "If thy enemy be hungry, give him to ~eat; if he
5 2, 30 | almsdeeds, namely, to ~feed the hungry, to give drink to the thirsty,
6 2, 30 | which we ~have "to feed the hungry"; while the other is relieved
7 2, 30 | reward of patience? It is the hungry man's bread ~that you withhold,
8 2, 41 | matters (as by feeding the ~hungry), or in spiritual matters (
9 2, 64 | he stealeth to fill his hungry ~soul." Secondly, theft
10 2, 64 | can. Sicut ii): "It is the hungry man's bread ~that you withhold,
11 2, 79 | Deal thy bread to the hungry." ~But God needs nothing
12 2, 116| Luc. xii, 18): "It is the hungry man's bread that thou keepest ~
13 2, 137| Fortitude ~becomes the hungry and thirsty: since those
14 2, 169| Deal thy bread to the hungry," etc.; and besides this
15 2, 179| is to give bread to the hungry," and after ~mentioning
16 2, 179| is ~to give bread to the hungry, to teach the ignorant the
17 3, 5 | was angered, sad, and ~hungry. Now these show that He
18 3, 40 | disciples also, when, being hungry, they plucked the ~ears
19 3, 41 | saying that, after "He ~was hungry, the tempter" came "to Him,"
20 3, 41 | nights, afterwards He was hungry": and then "the tempter ~
21 3, 41 | Now, when "our Lord ~was hungry," says Hilary (Super Matth.
22 3, 41 | nights, afterwards He was hungry," thus affording the devil
23 3, 41 | in order to succor the hungry ~crowd. Therefore it seems
24 3, 44 | they saw that Christ was hungry after fasting they deemed
25 3, 77 | 11:21): "One, indeed, is hungry, and another is drunk":
26 3, 80 | another; if any man be ~hungry, let him eat at home": and
27 3, 80 | 11:21): "One, ~indeed, is hungry, and another is drunk."~
28 3, 80 | the gloss: "If any ~man be hungry and loath to await the rest,
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