Part, Question
1 2, 113 | offender is at peace with the offended. Hence sin is remitted to
2 2, 114 | from another ~whom he has offended, unless he makes satisfaction
3 2, 41 | anything whereby thy brother is offended or ~scandalized, or weakened."
4 2, 147 | whereby thy brother is ~offended or scandalized, or made
5 2, 152 | and secondly, she ~hath offended against her husband," by
6 2, 157 | or with one who has not offended him, is not ~said to be
7 3, 48 | offers something ~which the offended one loves equally, or even
8 3, 48 | devil. Through guilt he had offended God, and put himself under
9 3, 49 | God's part, whom man had offended by sinning, and who with ~
10 3, 49 | slaying Him; and ~thereby they offended God grievously. Therefore
11 3, 85 | the ~part of the person offended against. Each of these belongs
12 3, 85 | human acts, ~whereby God is offended or appeased; whereas God
13 3, 86 | sin, not because he had offended God ~thereby, but on account
14 3, 86 | since one man is said to be offended with another, because he ~
15 3, 86 | offense, for which he is offended with someone, without any ~
16 3, 86 | one respect, while being offended with ~him in another, even
17 3, 90 | offender or of the person offended; ~whereas, in Penance, the
18 3, 90 | to the will of the person offended. ~Accordingly the first
19 Suppl, 2 | everything wherein he has offended God. But when this ~inability
20 Suppl, 3 | who is sorry for having offended God, implicitly grieves ~
21 Suppl, 3 | according as by them he ~offended God more or less.~Aquin.:
22 Suppl, 12| reconciled to the person ~offended. But reconciliation, being
23 Suppl, 96| the dignity in the ~person offended: for if the latter were
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