| 1-500 | 501-1000 | 1001-1500 | 1501-1844 
      Part, Question1001 Suppl, 2 |            contrite on account of his punishment?~(2) Whether, on account
1002 Suppl, 2 |            contrite on account of the punishment, and not only ~on account
1003 Suppl, 2 |           contrite on account of the ~punishment, and not only on account
1004 Suppl, 2 |           morality of this life is a ~punishment. Therefore the penitent
1005 Suppl, 2 |              privation of virtue is a punishment. Therefore contrition is
1006 Suppl, 2 |              is one who holds to his ~punishment [*"Poenitens," i.e. "poenam
1007 Suppl, 2 |               sorry on account of his punishment, so that contrition which
1008 Suppl, 2 |           sorrow is not on account of punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[2] A[1]
1009 Suppl, 2 |          cannot be applied to evil of punishment, because ~punishment simply
1010 Suppl, 2 |               of punishment, because ~punishment simply denotes a lessening,
1011 Suppl, 2 |          possible to have ~sorrow for punishment but not contrition.~Aquin.:
1012 Suppl, 2 |              away from God, since ~in punishment thereof he was to be deprived
1013 Suppl, 2 |              and sometimes denotes a ~punishment. But contrition ought to
1014 Suppl, 2 |               Vera ~Virgin.] that the punishment of Arius is not yet ended,
1015 Suppl, 2 |             reason of whose ~ruin his punishment would be increased: and
1016 Suppl, 2 |          Nevertheless some accidental punishment ~accrues to it, in the respect
1017 Suppl, 3 |               all manner of temporal ~punishment; else few would be found
1018 Suppl, 3 |               a greater evil than its punishment. ~Therefore contrition which
1019 Suppl, 3 |        separation from God which is a punishment, ~should be more displeasing
1020 Suppl, 3 |               the effect of ~the past punishment, both because sin is more
1021 Suppl, 3 |              perfectly remedied than ~punishment, and because bodily defect
1022 Suppl, 3 |        greater abhorrence of his past punishment than of his past sin, although ~
1023 Suppl, 3 |              ready to suffer the same punishment over again rather than ~
1024 Suppl, 3 |        observe, in comparing sin with punishment, that some ~punishments
1025 Suppl, 3 |             are everlasting, e.g. the punishment of hell. ~Therefore the
1026 Suppl, 3 |               of hell. ~Therefore the punishment to which is connected offense
1027 Suppl, 3 |          consider only the notion of ~punishment, they have the character
1028 Suppl, 3 |               sin deserves a ~greater punishment, the sorrow also of the
1029 Suppl, 3 |             undergone for sin, as the punishment thereof, ought to ~be greater
1030 Suppl, 4 |            nor guilt, nor any debt of punishment. Therefore there is no ~
1031 Suppl, 4 |             assumed by the will as a ~punishment: for since man, by sinning,
1032 Suppl, 4 |         sinning, deserved everlasting punishment, ~and sinned against the
1033 Suppl, 4 |          eternal God, the everlasting punishment being ~commuted into a temporal
1034 Suppl, 4 |               from eternal guilt and ~punishment, He binds him with a chain
1035 Suppl, 4 |                because it regards the punishment. But the ~sorrow of contrition
1036 Suppl, 4 |             immunity from the debt of punishment, yet he never ~returns to
1037 Suppl, 4 |           Satisfaction depends on the punishment appointed, which ~should
1038 Suppl, 4 |             of satisfaction. But that punishment is proportionate ~to sin
1039 Suppl, 4 |          grieve more for sin than for punishment. But ~the souls in purgatory
1040 Suppl, 4 |             grieve for their sensible punishment and for the ~delay of glory.
1041 Suppl, 4 |              blot out both guilt and ~punishment. If therefore the souls
1042 Suppl, 4 |            possible for their debt of punishment to be remitted through the ~
1043 Suppl, 4 |             sense, the payment of the punishment ~due may be called satisfaction.~
1044 Suppl, 5 |             can take away the debt of punishment entirely?~(3) Whether slight
1045 Suppl, 5 |             can take away the debt of punishment entirely?~Aquin.: SMT XP
1046 Suppl, 5 |         cannot take away the debt of ~punishment entirely. For satisfaction
1047 Suppl, 5 |          deliverance from the debt of punishment. Now no man is so perfectly ~
1048 Suppl, 5 |           blot out the entire debt of punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5] A[2]
1049 Suppl, 5 |               Further, in Penance the punishment should in some way compensate ~
1050 Suppl, 5 |               17), it ~seems that the punishment for suchlike sins can never
1051 Suppl, 5 |              finite. Now an infinite ~punishment is due for some, viz. mortal,
1052 Suppl, 5 |           great as to remit the whole punishment. ~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5] A[
1053 Suppl, 5 |             man is absolved from both punishment and guilt by ~means of external
1054 Suppl, 5 |             whether the whole debt of punishment is always taken away by ~
1055 Suppl, 5 |             also the remission of all punishment. Secondly, on the part of
1056 Suppl, 5 |              sorrow is also a kind of punishment, it may be so intense as
1057 Suppl, 5 |           remission of both guilt and punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5] A[2]
1058 Suppl, 5 |            for the ~remission of both punishment and guilt: wherefore he
1059 Suppl, 5 |                intensity, even as the punishment due for mortal sin is finite;
1060 Suppl, 5 |           remission of both guilt and punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5] A[3]
1061 Suppl, 6 |              sentence, in ~order that punishment may be inflicted in proportion
1062 Suppl, 6 |          inflict on himself a greater punishment than even that ~which might
1063 Suppl, 6 |              owes a debt of ~temporal punishment. Moreover, the sacraments
1064 Suppl, 6 |        penitent expiates his temporal punishment by undergoing the ~shame
1065 Suppl, 6 |   satisfaction for sins, because this punishment to which one remains bound ~
1066 Suppl, 6 |            remains open, without such punishment being expiated in this life:
1067 Suppl, 6 |               the expiation of sin's ~punishment, by reason of the severity
1068 Suppl, 6 |         reason of the severity of the punishment which is enjoined ~in satisfaction,
1069 Suppl, 6 |               of conscience; but from punishment in the ~tribunal of the
1070 Suppl, 7 |              release from part of the punishment, and the obligation to pay
1071 Suppl, 7 |          joint cause of delivery from punishment (because shame ~is in itself
1072 Suppl, 7 |         because shame ~is in itself a punishment), since also the keys of
1073 Suppl, 8 |               7) Whether the temporal punishment should be enjoined in proportion
1074 Suppl, 8 |             only the quantity of ~the punishment but also its power, inasmuch
1075 Suppl, 8 |           though the ~quantity of the punishment may be fixed by another
1076 Suppl, 8 |        confesses to, the more ~is the punishment remitted, both by reason
1077 Suppl, 8 |            reckoned as a satisfactory punishment, and by reason of the ~power
1078 Suppl, 8 |             to be delivered ~from all punishment. Nor is repetition derogatory
1079 Suppl, 8 |               to the lessening of his punishment, owing to the ~merit derived
1080 Suppl, 8 |        receive that diminution of his punishment which results from the power
1081 Suppl, 8 |              1/1~Whether the temporal punishment is imposed according to
1082 Suppl, 8 |          would seem that the temporal punishment, the debt of which ~remains
1083 Suppl, 8 |            xxxiii, 2). Therefore the ~punishment is not imposed according
1084 Suppl, 8 |               New Law one is bound to punishment for mortal ~sins, in the
1085 Suppl, 8 |               Now in the Old Law the ~punishment for sin was due to last
1086 Suppl, 8 |              in the ~New Testament, a punishment of seven years is imposed
1087 Suppl, 8 |              that the quantity of the punishment does not answer to the ~
1088 Suppl, 8 |           person of the sinner. Now a punishment of seven years' duration
1089 Suppl, 8 |              Dist. lxxxii. ~Therefore punishment is not imposed according
1090 Suppl, 8 |             sacrament ~of the altar a punishment of forty days or a little
1091 Suppl, 8 |            more is enjoined, ~while a punishment of seven years is prescribed
1092 Suppl, 8 |        Therefore the ~quantity of the punishment does not answer to the degree
1093 Suppl, 8 |            Therefore the quantity ~of punishment adjudicated for sin answers
1094 Suppl, 8 |            equality of justice by the punishment ~inflicted on him. But this
1095 Suppl, 8 |              of the fault ~and of the punishment did not mutually correspond.
1096 Suppl, 8 |             the forgiveness of sin, a punishment is required ~for two reasons,
1097 Suppl, 8 |           afford a remedy. Hence the ~punishment may be imposed in consideration
1098 Suppl, 8 |               way the quantity of the punishment ~corresponds radically to
1099 Suppl, 8 |              are of a nature to remit punishment, the less there ~remains
1100 Suppl, 8 |             contrition ~remits of the punishment, the less there remains
1101 Suppl, 8 |             thus sometimes a greater ~punishment is enjoined for a lesser
1102 Suppl, 8 |             another's (thus a heavier punishment is ~imposed on a young man
1103 Suppl, 8 |               it is necessary by ~the punishment of the one man to deter
1104 Suppl, 8 |              tribunal of Penance, the punishment has to be imposed with due
1105 Suppl, 8 |              things: and so a greater punishment is not always imposed for ~
1106 Suppl, 8 |                on the other hand, the punishment of Purgatory is only for ~
1107 Suppl, 8 |             of ~sinning, so that this punishment is meted only according
1108 Suppl, 8 |            since all these lessen the punishment ~somewhat: wherefore the
1109 Suppl, 8 |           Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 2: This punishment of seven days did not expiate
1110 Suppl, 8 |             days did not expiate the ~punishment due for the sin, so that
1111 Suppl, 8 |               by inflicting a greater punishment, in as much as it is intended
1112 Suppl, 8 |         although sometimes so great a punishment is not strictly due. ~Hence
1113 Suppl, 8 |           Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 4: This punishment refers to the case when
1114 Suppl, 8 |                deserve a much heavier punishment.~
1115 Suppl, 9 |         conduces to the diminution of punishment. Now the greater the ~number
1116 Suppl, 9 |             in Penance in order that ~punishment may be enjoined for sin
1117 Suppl, 9 |              priest. Now a sufficient punishment for different sins can be
1118 Suppl, 9 |            Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 2: The punishment imposed by different priests
1119 Suppl, 9 |                Moreover sometimes the punishment which would be given for
1120 Suppl, 10|          delivers one in any way from punishment?~(3) Whether confession
1121 Suppl, 10|              not designate guilt, but punishment ~that is easily expiated.
1122 Suppl, 10|              confession delivers from punishment in some way?~Aquin.: SMT
1123 Suppl, 10|       confession nowise delivers from punishment. ~For sin deserves no punishment
1124 Suppl, 10|      punishment. ~For sin deserves no punishment but what is either eternal
1125 Suppl, 10|             or temporal. ~Now eternal punishment is remitted by contrition,
1126 Suppl, 10|              contrition, and temporal punishment ~by satisfaction. Therefore
1127 Suppl, 10|              Therefore nothing of the punishment is remitted by ~confession.~
1128 Suppl, 10|      afterwards remits no part of the punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[10] A[
1129 Suppl, 10|              penal works expiate ~the punishment due to sin. Therefore confession
1130 Suppl, 10|            the power to ~deliver from punishment, for two reasons. First,
1131 Suppl, 10|          delivers a man ~from eternal punishment, as also from the guilt.
1132 Suppl, 10|              from the guilt. Now this punishment is ~one of condemnation
1133 Suppl, 10|           remains bound to a temporal punishment, in so far as ~punishment
1134 Suppl, 10|             punishment, in so far as ~punishment is a cleansing and perfecting
1135 Suppl, 10|        perfecting remedy; and so this punishment ~remains to be suffered
1136 Suppl, 10|              been delivered ~from the punishment of hell. Which temporal
1137 Suppl, 10|               of hell. Which temporal punishment is beyond the ~powers of
1138 Suppl, 10|             confession diminishes the punishment in virtue of the very ~nature
1139 Suppl, 10|      confesses, for this act has the ~punishment of shame attached to it,
1140 Suppl, 10|            same sins, the more is the punishment diminished.~Aquin.: SMT
1141 Suppl, 10|            but not of the removal of ~punishment and the like, which come
1142 Suppl, 10|           that, Guilt and the debt of punishment prevent a man from ~entering
1143 Suppl, 10|              obstacle of the debt ~of punishment was not entirely removed
1144 Suppl, 10|             by paying off the debt of punishment: while ~confession does
1145 Suppl, 10|          ordained to the remission of punishment, which it causes in ~virtue
1146 Suppl, 10|              for the remission of the punishment in virtue of the ~keys,
1147 Suppl, 10|      confessing a sin ~diminishes its punishment, the punishment for the
1148 Suppl, 10|        diminishes its punishment, the punishment for the sin for which a
1149 Suppl, 12|            act of ~justice inflicting punishment, is a medicine healing past
1150 Suppl, 13|             due satisfaction when the punishment balances the ~fault, since "
1151 Suppl, 13|             Cf. SS, Q[61], A[4]]. Now punishment may ~equal the pleasure
1152 Suppl, 13|              can fulfill satisfactory punishment for another? ~Aquin.: SMT
1153 Suppl, 13|           cannot fulfill satisfactory punishment ~for another. Because merit
1154 Suppl, 13|              as he takes the ~debt of punishment on himself, this other is
1155 Suppl, 13|             the ~whole of his debt of punishment has been taken up by another;
1156 Suppl, 13|       punished all the same, a double punishment will be paid for the same ~
1157 Suppl, 13|            one can bear the burden of punishment ~laid upon another.~Aquin.:
1158 Suppl, 13|             answer that, Satisfactory punishment has a twofold purpose, viz.
1159 Suppl, 13|             should undergo a greater ~punishment than the principal would
1160 Suppl, 13|               profits more by his own punishment than by ~another's), because
1161 Suppl, 13|               by ~another's), because punishment derives its power of satisfaction
1162 Suppl, 13|        another than for himself, less punishment is ~required of him who
1163 Suppl, 13|              far as the ~satisfactory punishment is medicinal: so that a
1164 Suppl, 13|              other hand, the temporal punishment due to sin after the ~guilt
1165 Suppl, 13|               owes a greater ~debt of punishment. Consequently one man can
1166 Suppl, 13|              as regards ~release from punishment, and one man's act becomes
1167 Suppl, 13|          consider the measure of the ~punishment, whereas in merit we regard
1168 Suppl, 13|            because the measure of the punishment ~does not suffice for the
1169 Suppl, 13|         greater than the release from punishment, viz. ~eternal life.~Aquin.:
1170 Suppl, 13|          himself to undergo a certain punishment, ~he would not be released
1171 Suppl, 13|               himself will suffer the punishment, as long as the other makes ~
1172 Suppl, 13|            respect of fulfilling this punishment, one for the sin committed,
1173 Suppl, 14|         restored by the payment of a ~punishment equal to the offense, but
1174 Suppl, 14|              shown by his subsequent ~punishment. Therefore a man can make
1175 Suppl, 14|             equalization of ~guilt to punishment. But these things can be
1176 Suppl, 14|            may not have expiated his ~punishment by that satisfaction, he
1177 Suppl, 14|               paying off the debt of ~punishment; and that by subsequent
1178 Suppl, 14|            the more it alleviates the punishment, and the ~more good actions
1179 Suppl, 14|               owes a smaller ~debt of punishment. For this reason the priest
1180 Suppl, 14|              a temporal, good. For as punishment is to the evil act, so is ~
1181 Suppl, 14|                deserves an equivalent punishment according to the measure
1182 Suppl, 14|           evil deed deserves condign ~punishment, nevertheless a good deed
1183 Suppl, 14|              hell. For the measure of punishment in hell ~will answer to
1184 Suppl, 14|          charity canceled ~any of the punishment due for sins, those works
1185 Suppl, 14|             evil deed always avoids a punishment, even ~in one who lacks
1186 Suppl, 14|        therefore, do good deeds void ~punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[14] A[
1187 Suppl, 14|               were delivered from the punishment which he ~already deserved,
1188 Suppl, 14|              no one is delivered from punishment ~unless he be absolved from
1189 Suppl, 14|               so that the demerit of ~punishment is hindered; and thus the
1190 Suppl, 14|             postponement of temporal ~punishment, as in the case of Achab (
1191 Suppl, 14|               Some again say that the punishment is mitigated as to the remorse
1192 Suppl, 15|          healed by ~satisfaction. Now punishment is the remedy for sins,
1193 Suppl, 15|               1] Body Para. 2/2~Again punishment preserves from future sin,
1194 Suppl, 15|             has had experience of the punishment. ~Wherefore, according to
1195 Suppl, 15|           this cannot be done without punishment of the sinner. It is of
1196 Suppl, 15|              of sin, "be lacking, the punishment satisfies." Therefore ~the
1197 Suppl, 15|              there would have been no punishment. But ~since guilt preceded
1198 Suppl, 15|             guilt preceded in nature, punishment is inflicted by God on a ~
1199 Suppl, 16|        penance [poenitentia] implies ~punishment [poena]. But the innocent
1200 Suppl, 16|               innocent do not deserve punishment. Therefore ~penance is not
1201 Suppl, 16|              Although they deserve no punishment actually, yet it is ~possible
1202 Suppl, 16|       repentance, and this is a great punishment for them." Now the ~devils
1203 Suppl, 16|      exceeding evil, nor is there any punishment that they lack. ~Therefore
1204 Suppl, 17|           stain and as to the debt of punishment. Wherefore the power of ~
1205 Suppl, 17|           remit the debt of temporal ~punishment, which debt prevents man
1206 Suppl, 17|               of the debt of ~eternal punishment, without being at once admitted
1207 Suppl, 17|              owing a debt of temporal punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[17] A[
1208 Suppl, 18|               can remit sin as to the punishment?~(3) Whether a priest can
1209 Suppl, 18|               not on the part of the ~punishment, but on the part of the
1210 Suppl, 18|              only to the remission of punishment, as some hold, it would
1211 Suppl, 18|       remission of guilt, but against punishment. But this enables us to
1212 Suppl, 18|               can remit sin as to the punishment?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[18] A[
1213 Suppl, 18|           cannot remit sin as to the ~punishment. For sin deserves eternal
1214 Suppl, 18|         deserves eternal and temporal punishment. But after ~the priest's
1215 Suppl, 18|          obliged to undergo temporal ~punishment either in Purgatory or in
1216 Suppl, 18|            priest ~does not remit the punishment in any way.~Aquin.: SMT
1217 Suppl, 18|           Divine justice appoints the punishment which penitents have to
1218 Suppl, 18|               graver ~sin. Now if the punishment for the graver sin be lessened
1219 Suppl, 18|             to ~be so slight that the punishment which it deserves is no
1220 Suppl, 18|              able to remit the entire punishment due for the slight sin: ~
1221 Suppl, 18|             the whole of the temporal punishment due for a sin is of ~one
1222 Suppl, 18|               is taken away ~from the punishment, it will be possible for
1223 Suppl, 18|          virtue of the keys the whole punishment will be taken ~away, since
1224 Suppl, 18|          priest can enjoin a temporal punishment. Therefore he can absolve
1225 Suppl, 18|        Therefore he can absolve from ~punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[18] A[
1226 Suppl, 18|                 or as to ~the eternal punishment, for a like reason. If therefore
1227 Suppl, 18|                sin as to the temporal punishment, he would be unable to remit
1228 Suppl, 18|             absolved from the debt of punishment, since he is then ~made
1229 Suppl, 18|             as to the debt of eternal punishment, (which is ~remitted together
1230 Suppl, 18|           increased and the ~temporal punishment is remitted, the debt of
1231 Suppl, 18|                However, this temporal punishment is not ~entirely remitted,
1232 Suppl, 18|               the blotting out of all punishment, so that nothing remains ~
1233 Suppl, 18|               nothing remains ~of the punishment due to his preceding actual
1234 Suppl, 18|             be ~imputed to a man unto punishment, save what he has done himself,
1235 Suppl, 18|             sacrament of Penance, the punishment is not entirely ~remitted,
1236 Suppl, 18|             is taken off the temporal punishment, the debt of ~which could
1237 Suppl, 18|              remain after the eternal punishment had been remitted. Nor ~
1238 Suppl, 18|            apply only to the temporal punishment which the penitent owes ~
1239 Suppl, 18|             New Law), but also to the punishment due in Purgatory, ~so that
1240 Suppl, 18|             remit the entire temporal punishment, ~but part of it; wherefore
1241 Suppl, 18|              to undergo ~satisfactory punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[18] A[
1242 Suppl, 18|              can be remitted from the punishment which a sinner deserves,
1243 Suppl, 18|              OBJ 3: Some satisfactory punishment must remain for each sin,
1244 Suppl, 18|        absolution some measure of the punishment due to a grave sin is remitted, ~
1245 Suppl, 18|              that the same measure of punishment is remitted for ~each sin,
1246 Suppl, 18|             would remain without any ~punishment at all: but, by virtue of
1247 Suppl, 18|          absolution ~something of the punishment is remitted by virtue of
1248 Suppl, 18|            previous sin, and the less punishment is required to remove that
1249 Suppl, 18|            man is first absolved, his punishment is more or ~less remitted
1250 Suppl, 18|              his contrition the whole punishment is remitted, as we ~have
1251 Suppl, 18|             confession even the whole punishment be remitted, that a sin ~
1252 Suppl, 18|            made satisfaction for its ~punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[18] A[
1253 Suppl, 18|          extends both to guilt and to punishment; to the guilt indeed, so
1254 Suppl, 18|             His operation extends to ~punishment directly, in both respects,
1255 Suppl, 18|            loosing with regard to the punishment. For he looses from ~the
1256 Suppl, 18|               For he looses from ~the punishment which he remits, while he
1257 Suppl, 18|              while he binds as to the punishment which ~remains. This he
1258 Suppl, 18|          regards the quantity of the ~punishment considered in general, and
1259 Suppl, 18|               this or that particular punishment, and thus he binds to punishment
1260 Suppl, 18|      punishment, and thus he binds to punishment by ~imposing it.~Aquin.:
1261 Suppl, 18|               1: The remainder of the punishment to which the priest binds ~
1262 Suppl, 18|                Not only sin, but also punishment is an obstacle to heaven: ~
1263 Suppl, 18|               Christ binds us to some punishment ~whereby we are conformed
1264 Suppl, 18|      Therefore it seems that the more punishment the priest remits, the ~
1265 Suppl, 18|           some ~sinners He imposed no punishment, but only amendment of life,
1266 Suppl, 18|              own judgment, ~remit the punishment, either wholly or in part.~
1267 Suppl, 18|             from enjoining the entire punishment ~due to one sin, lest by
1268 Suppl, 18|           lest by the severity of the punishment, the sick man come ~to despair
1269 Suppl, 18|              the remission of the due punishment, there is need for ~discretion. ~
1270 Suppl, 18|         authority, He could remit the punishment wholly or in ~part, just
1271 Suppl, 19|        because the right of imposing ~punishment for sin was conferred on
1272 Suppl, 19|       hindered by guilt more than by ~punishment. Now excommunication, suspension
1273 Suppl, 19|               punishments do: so that punishment is a hindrance not because
1274 Suppl, 20|              not ~from all defects of punishment, since even after doing
1275 Suppl, 20|              for the remission of the punishment he must refer the penitent
1276 Suppl, 21| excommunication is not a fault, but a punishment. ~Therefore excommunication
1277 Suppl, 21|              a temporal harm. For the punishment should not exceed the fault.
1278 Suppl, 21|            exceed the fault. But the ~punishment of excommunication is the
1279 Suppl, 21|    excommunication is the most severe punishment, ~and since punishments
1280 Suppl, 21|                 Wherefore, though the punishment of excommunication exceeds
1281 Suppl, 22|        decision of superiors. Now the punishment of excommunication is fraught ~
1282 Suppl, 22|          Suspension is not so great a punishment as excommunication, ~since
1283 Suppl, 22|        contrary, Excommunication is a punishment and a healing medicine. ~
1284 Suppl, 23|           stated in Dt. 25:3. Now the punishment appointed by common ~custom
1285 Suppl, 24|             Evil of fault and evil of punishment differ in this, that ~the
1286 Suppl, 24|                whereas the ~origin of punishment is sometimes without, since
1287 Suppl, 24|              sometimes without, since punishment does not need ~to be voluntary,
1288 Suppl, 24|      voluntary, in fact the nature of punishment is rather to be against ~
1289 Suppl, 24|        contrary, Excommunication is a punishment. Now a man can be ~loosed
1290 Suppl, 24|               can be ~loosed from one punishment, while another remains.
1291 Suppl, 25|     indulgence remits any part of the punishment due for the ~satisfaction
1292 Suppl, 25|             can remit any part of the punishment due for the ~satisfaction
1293 Suppl, 25|         cannot remit any part of the ~punishment due for the satisfaction
1294 Suppl, 25|        remitted from the satisfactory punishment which is appointed according
1295 Suppl, 25|              He binds us to temporal ~punishment, as Hugh of St. Victor declares (
1296 Suppl, 25|            man can absolve from that ~punishment, by remitting any part of
1297 Suppl, 25|              to the remission of the ~punishment due, it seems that no mere
1298 Suppl, 25|            man can remit the debt of ~punishment without satisfaction.~Aquin.:
1299 Suppl, 25|            But Christ could remit the punishment of a sin without any ~satisfaction,
1300 Suppl, 25|           free a man from the debt of punishment which he ~has deserved in
1301 Suppl, 25|               him by the priest ~as a punishment for his sins, or from the
1302 Suppl, 25|              since, by ~remitting the punishment she had enjoined on a man,
1303 Suppl, 25|             for the remission of the ~punishment which remains after contrition,
1304 Suppl, 25|             confession, ~whether this punishment be enjoined or not. The
1305 Suppl, 25|            exceeds the entire debt of punishment due ~to those who are living
1306 Suppl, 25|            needs the remission of his punishment (else he would have ~received
1307 Suppl, 25|          obtain the remission ~of his punishment if another were to satisfy
1308 Suppl, 25|        destroy the proportion between punishment and sin, since someone has ~
1309 Suppl, 25|  spontaneously taken upon himself the punishment due for another's guilt, ~
1310 Suppl, 25|             absolved from the debt of punishment, but is given the means
1311 Suppl, 25|          indulgences pays the debt of punishment which a man owes, out of ~
1312 Suppl, 25|            may be quit of the debt of punishment; and ~all the more, seeing
1313 Suppl, 25|               some ~fixed part of the punishment due for sin, after taking
1314 Suppl, 25|               2: Further, the debt of punishment keeps man back from the ~
1315 Suppl, 25|            from all debt of temporal ~punishment. Therefore it would seem
1316 Suppl, 25|         remitted a ~third part of the punishment due for his sins is granted
1317 Suppl, 25|          plenary absolution ~from all punishment due for his sins, which
1318 Suppl, 25|             Further, to remit a man's punishment beyond a just estimate seems ~
1319 Suppl, 25|           without cause remit a man's punishment either wholly ~or partly,
1320 Suppl, 25|          anyone: "I remit to all ~the punishment you owe for your sins."
1321 Suppl, 25|            cause of the ~remission of punishment effected by indulgences
1322 Suppl, 25|             for the ~remission of all punishment. The effective cause of
1323 Suppl, 25|           from Divine justice, for no punishment is remitted, but the ~punishment
1324 Suppl, 25|      punishment is remitted, but the ~punishment of one is imputed to another.~
1325 Suppl, 25|            the key of orders from the punishment ~due; it is God Who appoints
1326 Suppl, 25|              the decision of how much punishment is to ~be remitted by an
1327 Suppl, 25|                If, however, he remits punishment without sufficient ~reason,
1328 Suppl, 25|            much for the remission of ~punishment, yet works of satisfaction
1329 Suppl, 25|            the remission of ~temporal punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[25] A[
1330 Suppl, 25|          measure of the ~remission of punishment, but in order that the intention
1331 Suppl, 26|           loose man from the debt of ~punishment in the sight of God, yet
1332 Suppl, 26|              from the entire debt of ~punishment unless satisfaction is offered
1333 Suppl, 26|        Further, a fuller remission of punishment is granted by ~indulgences
1334 Suppl, 26|               person; since he remits punishment, not by virtue of ~his own
1335 Suppl, 27|               the remission of ~their punishment, since none can be freed
1336 Suppl, 27|          since none can be freed from punishment who is not yet ~freed from
1337 Suppl, 27|         receive the remission of his ~punishment from the minister of the
1338 Suppl, 27|             but ~for the remission of punishment. Hence they do not avail
1339 Suppl, 27|              times they are liable to punishment ~on account of some sin,
1340 Suppl, 27|                as to the remission of punishment, which is a lesser good,
1341 Suppl, 27|              do indulgences remit the punishment enjoined in ~chapter, because
1342 Suppl, 27|             chapter. Absolution ~from punishment enjoined or due for sin
1343 Suppl, 27|          directed to the remission of punishment, just as ~satisfaction is.
1344 Suppl, 27|              such as the remission of punishment and the like.~Aquin.: SMT
1345 Suppl, 27|             gain the remission of the punishment of all his sins for some
1346 Suppl, 27|    jurisdiction, is the remission ~of punishment by means of indulgences.~
1347 Suppl, 30|               the stain, ~the debt of punishment, and the remnants of sin.
1348 Suppl, 30|        Unction; nor does it remit the punishment, for if the recipient recover, ~
1349 Suppl, 30|      diminishes the debt ~of temporal punishment; and this indirectly, in
1350 Suppl, 30|             strong man bears the same punishment more easily than a ~weak
1351 Suppl, 39|             Para. 1/1~OBJ 3: Further, punishment is not due save for a fault.
1352 Suppl, 39|             he ought not to incur the punishment of ~irregularity.~Aquin.:
1353 Suppl, 39|             The Old Law inflicted the punishment of blood, whereas the ~New
1354 Suppl, 39|              1: Irregularity is not a punishment due for sin. Hence it is ~
1355 Suppl, 41|     shamefulness not of guilt, but of punishment ~inflicted for the first
1356 Suppl, 41|          Although marriage brings ~no punishment to those who use it, it
1357 Suppl, 42|              but that such and such a punishment be appointed ~for such and
1358 Suppl, 49|                evil not of sin but of punishment alone, consisting in the
1359 Suppl, 49|             shame is the turpitude of punishment, not of sin, for man ~is
1360 Suppl, 52|          slavery ~was brought in as a punishment of sin. Nor is it unreasonable
1361 Suppl, 52|              The natural law requires punishment to be inflicted for ~guilt,
1362 Suppl, 52|            but the ~appointing of the punishment according to the circumstances
1363 Suppl, 52|          slavery which is a definite ~punishment is of positive law, and
1364 Suppl, 52|             be punished; for it ~is a punishment to the wife to have a slave
1365 Suppl, 55|           binds himself to suffer the punishment of retaliation, if ~he fail
1366 Suppl, 55|            Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 1: The punishment of retaliation takes place
1367 Suppl, 55|          action is taken not for the ~punishment of the doer, but in order
1368 Suppl, 55|            does not bind himself to a punishment. ~Moreover, the accusation
1369 Suppl, 58|             with the sin, because the punishment sometimes ~continues after
1370 Suppl, 58|             if this is inflicted as a punishment of the sin, it ~would seem,
1371 Suppl, 59|               effect. Hence it is in ~punishment of the unbelieving wife
1372 Suppl, 59|             but she must take it as a punishment of her ~tardy conversion
1373 Suppl, 60|            given by inflicting a just punishment. Since then the just punishment ~
1374 Suppl, 60|       punishment. Since then the just punishment ~of adultery is death, because
1375 Suppl, 60|              that she receive capital punishment as ~appointed by the law;
1376 Suppl, 60|             not inflicting on him the punishment for ~murder, on account
1377 Suppl, 60|               of the debt of ~eternal punishment, nor of such punishment
1378 Suppl, 60|               punishment, nor of such punishment as may be awarded him by
1379 Suppl, 60|         reason that he is quit of any punishment ~to be inflicted by a secular
1380 Suppl, 60|      committed the infliction of this punishment not ~to private individuals,
1381 Suppl, 60|             from a particular kind of punishment, since ~excommunication
1382 Suppl, 60|     excommunication is also a kind of punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[60] A[
1383 Suppl, 60|              inflict only corrective ~punishment, which does not extend beyond
1384 Suppl, 60|             these are exceeded by the punishment of death. Wherefore the
1385 Suppl, 60|        remitted ~therefore the entire punishment is remitted, as evidenced
1386 Suppl, 62|           account ~of fornication, in punishment of the unfaithful party
1387 Suppl, 62|           corrected by means of that ~punishment. Now a corrective punishment
1388 Suppl, 62|          punishment. Now a corrective punishment is not required when amendment ~
1389 Suppl, 62|         fornication not ~only by this punishment but also by words and blows;
1390 Suppl, 62|             recourse to the aforesaid punishment in order to correct her.~
1391 Suppl, 62|            cannot entirely ~remit the punishment, unless amendment has followed.~
1392 Suppl, 62|           guilty party, but ~also his punishment, for the safeguarding of
1393 Suppl, 62|            rather to be spared in the punishment of divorce.~Aquin.: SMT
1394 Suppl, 62|             in both. For divorce is a punishment of adultery, in ~so far
1395 Suppl, 62|             sufficient reason for the punishment in question, ~just as there
1396 Suppl, 62|              persons condemned to the punishment of death, ~although one
1397 Suppl, 62|              something of the debt of punishment, and though this has been
1398 Suppl, 62|             still remains the debt of punishment to be ~inflicted by the
1399 Suppl, 66|               not the infliction of a punishment, but the ~defect of a sacrament.
1400 Suppl, 66|                Baptism takes away all punishment resulting from an act. ~
1401 Suppl, 67|           they were excused from the ~punishment which they should have suffered
1402 Suppl, 67|              fourth is by omission of punishment, and in this way the bill
1403 Suppl, 67|             did not incur the debt of punishment, either temporal or eternal,
1404 Suppl, 67|        incurred the debt of temporal ~punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[67] A[
1405 Suppl, 67|                A[3]) this was done in punishment of the ~woman who married
1406 Suppl, 67|               but not as regards the ~punishment appointed by God.~Aquin.:
1407 Suppl, 67|               was assigned to her ~in punishment that she should not return
1408 Suppl, 67|         husband was absolved from the punishment of the law by ~the written
1409 Suppl, 68|              this second way is not a punishment. ~Hence we do not say that
1410 Suppl, 68|              In like manner it is no ~punishment to an illegitimate child
1411 Suppl, 69|           delivered from the death of punishment. The ~treatise on the resurrection
1412 Suppl, 69|              separated souls, and the punishment inflicted on them by fire; (
1413 Suppl, 69|         except what conduces to their punishment or to their reward. But
1414 Suppl, 69|               cannot conduce to their punishment or reward, since they ~receive
1415 Suppl, 69|              place ~conduces to their punishment or reward.~Aquin.: SMT XP
1416 Suppl, 69|             Para. 1/1~OBJ 4: Further, punishment and reward, being pronounced
1417 Suppl, 69|           they reach their reward or ~punishment, which are the ends of their
1418 Suppl, 69|       receives at once its ~reward or punishment, unless there be an obstacle.
1419 Suppl, 69|         keeping with their reward or ~punishment, as soon as the soul is
1420 Suppl, 69|            after death as a reward or punishment. Now after death neither
1421 Suppl, 69|              s place conduces to ~its punishment or reward in so far as the
1422 Suppl, 69|             through being exempt from punishment, but ~their desire was not
1423 Suppl, 69|             in hell there is sensible punishment, which was ~not in the limbo
1424 Suppl, 69|             in hell there is eternal ~punishment, whereas the saints were
1425 Suppl, 69|          those who were ~condemned to punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[69] A[
1426 Suppl, 69|            reference to the places of punishment, but in comparison with
1427 Suppl, 69|            limbo ~of the Fathers. For punishment should correspond to sin.
1428 Suppl, 69|                Therefore the place of punishment should be the same for both.~
1429 Suppl, 69|            says (Enchir. xciii): "The punishment of ~children who die in
1430 Suppl, 69|             is most lenient." But no ~punishment is more lenient than that
1431 Suppl, 69|               Therefore the ~place of punishment is the same for both.~Aquin.:
1432 Suppl, 69|            contrary, Even as temporal punishment in purgatory and eternal ~
1433 Suppl, 69|             in purgatory and eternal ~punishment in hell are due to actual
1434 Suppl, 69|               actual sin, so temporal punishment in the ~limbo of the Fathers
1435 Suppl, 69|               the Fathers and eternal punishment in the limbo of the children ~
1436 Suppl, 69|           differ as to the quality of punishment or reward. For ~children
1437 Suppl, 69|              But lighter still is the punishment ~due to those who are debarred
1438 Suppl, 69|            glory ~is called a kind of punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[69] A[
1439 Suppl, 69|                Further, the places of punishment should correspond to the
1440 Suppl, 69|           since ~there is no sensible punishment there, which is due to such
1441 Suppl, 69|           there is none ~but temporal punishment, whereas everlasting punishment
1442 Suppl, 69|       punishment, whereas everlasting punishment is due to him: ~nor would
1443 Suppl, 69|           sins for which they deserve punishment, so some die in mortal sin ~
1444 Suppl, 69|         reward and several ~places of punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[69] A[
1445 Suppl, 69|             is their proper place ~of punishment: but this is done for our
1446 Suppl, 69|       instruction, that seeing their ~punishment we may be deterred from
1447 Suppl, 69|              the question, ~because a punishment of this kind does not place
1448 Suppl, 69|               the mitigation of their punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[69] A[
1449 Suppl, 70|          LEAVING THE BODY, AND OF THE PUNISHMENT INFLICTED ON IT BY MATERIAL
1450 Suppl, 70|            leaving the ~body, and the punishment inflicted on it by material
1451 Suppl, 70|               will not conduce to its punishment, but rather to its perfection.~
1452 Suppl, 70|           they are not then free from punishment, for just as the glory of
1453 Suppl, 70|        interrupted, so neither is the punishment of the damned. ~And yet
1454 Suppl, 70|                OTC Para. 2/3~Further, punishment should correspond to sin.
1455 Suppl, 70|             that the soul will suffer punishment from a corporeal fire, ~
1456 Suppl, 70|             it cannot conduce to his ~punishment, as seen. Sometimes, however,
1457 Suppl, 70|             subjected to them also in punishment. Now an instrument acts ~
1458 Suppl, 70|             of Divine ~justice in the punishment of sin: and for this reason
1459 Suppl, 70|             to the fire, as receiving punishment therefrom, and from this ~
1460 Suppl, 70|         thereof as prepared for their punishment. Wherefore, since this ~
1461 Suppl, 70|                to their glory, so the punishment of the damned is nowise
1462 Suppl, 71|     accidental reward, or a rebate of punishment. ~And for both these purposes
1463 Suppl, 71|          avail for the ~diminution of punishment or something of the kind
1464 Suppl, 71|             ways. First, as expiating punishment by way of ~compensation
1465 Suppl, 71|        absolving him from the debt of punishment, does not ~absolve the performer
1466 Suppl, 71|        performer from his own debt of punishment, because in this ~compensation
1467 Suppl, 71|              are sentenced to eternal punishment, and for this reason ~the
1468 Suppl, 71|          already condemned to eternal punishment, ~they shrink from pleading
1469 Suppl, 71|           follow from this (since the punishment of hell is finite in intensity ~
1470 Suppl, 71|       suffrages would ~take away that punishment altogether, which is the
1471 Suppl, 71|               are entirely freed from punishment, not absolutely as Origen
1472 Suppl, 71|             restored to order save by punishment: wherefore it is ~impossible
1473 Suppl, 71|       wherefore it is ~impossible for punishment to cease, unless first of
1474 Suppl, 71|            ever in the damned, their ~punishment will nowise be interrupted.~
1475 Suppl, 71|            certain ~proportion of the punishment is taken away, and by the
1476 Suppl, 71|            worth, should diminish the punishment less than the ~first: thirdly,
1477 Suppl, 71|               first: thirdly, because punishment cannot be diminished unless
1478 Suppl, 71|              suffrages the ~remaining punishment would be so little as not
1479 Suppl, 71|            thus would ~no longer be a punishment.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[71] A[
1480 Suppl, 71|    diminishing or interrupting their ~punishment, but by fortifying the person
1481 Suppl, 71|               be that he suffers less punishment. Moreover, the aforesaid ~
1482 Suppl, 71|             heaven. For the remaining punishment or glory of the body does ~
1483 Suppl, 71|              damned, ~wherefore their punishment cannot be diminished as
1484 Suppl, 71|    diminishing nor interrupting their punishment, nor ~again by diminishing
1485 Suppl, 71|            diminishing their sense of punishment, but by withdrawing from ~
1486 Suppl, 71|          broad sense for any ~kind of punishment, so as to include also the
1487 Suppl, 71|             so as to include also the punishment of purgatory ~which is sometimes
1488 Suppl, 71|              a diminishment of their ~punishment, but in this alone (as stated
1489 Suppl, 71|               nowise diminishes their punishment, as neither is the joy ~
1490 Suppl, 71|            consequence was freed from punishment. The same applies ~to all
1491 Suppl, 71|             from the ~debt of eternal punishment, but that his punishment
1492 Suppl, 71|              punishment, but that his punishment was suspended for a ~time,
1493 Suppl, 71|               1/1~OBJ 2: Further, the punishment of purgatory is finite.
1494 Suppl, 71|             Therefore if some ~of the punishment is abated by suffrages,
1495 Suppl, 71|         number of suffrages, that the punishment would be entirely ~remitted,
1496 Suppl, 71|            living do not diminish the punishment of purgatory.~Aquin.: SMT
1497 Suppl, 71|              remission of his entire ~punishment. Now supposing these suffrages
1498 Suppl, 71|            until he is ~released from punishment, they will profit him nothing.
1499 Suppl, 71|                1/1~I answer that, The punishment of purgatory is intended
1500 Suppl, 71|            finally consigned ~to that punishment. We may also reply with
 
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