|    Part, Question1   1, 37  |            the will. Hence, we are obliged to employ circumlocution
 2   1, 37  |            the will. Hence, we are obliged to employ circumlocution
 3   1, 90  |            fore-feet, he ~would be obliged to take hold of his food
 4   1, 96  | consumption of the humor, man ~was obliged to take food.~Aquin.: SMT
 5   2, 102 |            for ~sin, which man was obliged to offer at times. Moreover
 6   2, 2   |          because the ~scientist is obliged to assent by force of the
 7   2, 33  |         good, to which the mind is obliged to adhere. ~Wherefore if
 8   2, 60  |  restitution, but only when he is ~obliged, in virtue of his office,
 9   2, 67  |           authority, whereby he is obliged to judge justly. Hence it
10   2, 68  |        such a duty a man cannot be obliged ~to act on the plea that
11   2, 76  |           against justice if he be obliged to pay back more. In ~another
12   2, 83  |           to offer, ~since all are obliged to offer to God a devout
13   2, 86  |            from God. ~Hence man is obliged before all to fulfill the
14   2, 98  |            as a simoniac, by being obliged to resign, but is bound
15   2, 183 |            perfection, so as to be obliged to enter the religious state.
16   2, 183 |            their ~successors, were obliged to preach the Gospel without
17   2, 187 |            seem that a ~man is not obliged to fulfil the vow by which
18   2, 187 |          himself absolutely, he is obliged to enter as soon as he can,
19   3, 46  |             Just as Christ was not obliged to die, but willingly ~submitted
20   3, 60  |          use of reason must not be obliged to swear: and whoever has ~
21 Suppl, 9 |      although a man is not able or obliged ~to receive Baptism, except
22 Suppl, 18|   absolution the penitent is still obliged to undergo temporal ~punishment
23 Suppl, 18|         the penitent still remains obliged to undergo ~satisfactory
 
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