Part, Question
1 2, 5 | troubled with the fear of losing it, or with the sorrow of
2 2, 5 | assured opinion of never losing the good that he possesses.
3 2, 89 | venial in itself, before losing the integrity of ~the original
4 2, 105 | nations, through fear of their losing their faith; and those of
5 2, 18 | from God ~through fear of losing his worldly goods, or through
6 2, 23 | But man falls away by losing charity. Therefore charity
7 2, 76 | indeed the other party by losing some of his own goods be
8 2, 106 | committing sin, through fear of losing those ~things which they
9 2, 121 | consequence, moderates the fear of losing it, and the same is the
10 2, 121 | sorrow, in the thought of losing his life, ~and for bodily
11 2, 127 | it, nor very grieved at losing it. Wherefore, since ~the
12 2, 131 | sinning venially and without losing the habit, or mortally and
13 3, 54 | of countenance, without losing the substance of the ~countenance."
14 3, 57 | said to be ~emptied, not by losing His fulness, but because
15 Suppl, 52| own prejudice, through his losing the ~inestimable good of
16 Suppl, 62| does so in ~order to avoid losing his good name, lest he seem
17 Appen1, 1| suffering himself, ~but only by losing that which his nature was
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