| 1-500 | 501-810 
     Part, Question501   2, 146 |         instance when a ~man has too great a desire for the pleasures
502   2, 149 |             pleasures stands in very great need ~of being chastised:
503   2, 150 |          magnificence which is about great ~expenditure is for this
504   2, 151 |             every venereal act is a ~great hindrance to virtue. For
505   2, 151 |             the human species a very great good. And just as the use
506   2, 151 |                You are bought with a great price: glorify and bear
507   2, 151 |              pleasure, which is very great. Wherefore this pleasure
508   2, 152 |              and would become a very great incentive to lust: and ~
509   2, 155 |        apparition on account of his ~great meekness." Therefore meekness
510   2, 155 |           its ~impetuousness, a very great obstacle to man's free judgment
511   2, 158 |            about some matter of very great moment, there ~must needs
512   2, 158 |         while ~magnificence is about great expenditure, there is need
513   2, 158 |        virtues. Yet there is not so ~great a difference between the
514   2, 158 |             passions that present no great ~difficulty on the part
515   2, 159 |           magnanimity, which aims at great ~things, whereas humility
516   2, 159 |             it on to the pursuit of ~great things according to right
517   2, 159 |              appetite from aiming at great things ~against right reason:
518   2, 159 |        magnanimity urges the mind to great things in ~accord with right
519   2, 159 |              occur in the pursuit of great things. Therefore if humility
520   2, 159 |          were to curb ~the desire of great things, it would follow
521   2, 159 |             but with the estimate of great ~things.~Aquin.: SMT SS
522   2, 159 |       movement of a spirit aiming at great things. Wherefore, like ~
523   2, 159 |              thinking of raising the great fabric of spirituality?
524   2, 159 |       hindered by striving to become great in earthly things. Hence
525   2, 159 |              tending inordinately to great things: yet its rule is
526   2, 159 |         deeming oneself incapable of great things, ~and this pertains
527   2, 159 |              36), "there is ~nothing great in being humble towards
528   2, 160 |     magnanimity to urge the mind to ~great things against despair,
529   2, 160 |             the inordinate desire of great things against presumption.
530   2, 160 |             a deficiency in pursuing great things, ~is properly opposed
531   2, 160 |             inasmuch as ~it tends to great things inordinately. Since,
532   2, 160 |              soul in tending towards great ~things, is more directly
533   2, 160 |         snare for me." Hence no very great gravity attaches to the
534   2, 161 |               De Civ. Dei xiv, 15): "Great was the ~wickedness in sinning,
535   2, 162 |            whence there followed ~so great a rebellion of the carnal
536   2, 164 |            be curious: and this is a great gift that temperance bestows."
537   2, 165 |            they are doing ~something great, if with surpassing curiosity
538   2, 165 |          which we call the world. So great a pride is ~thus begotten,
539   2, 166 |            Hear, for I will speak of great ~things." Wherefore Ambrose
540   2, 166 |           property to comedians is a great sin, not a virtue"; unless
541   2, 169 |              12:22, ~"He discovereth great things out of darkness."~
542   2, 172 |               Is. 8:1): "Take thee a great book and write in it with
543   2, 172 |            word and ~writing to that great event to come," the promises,
544   2, 173 |            not ~believe that when so great an apostle, the teacher
545   2, 176 |             prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders." Therefore
546   2, 176 |           God, by invoking Whom such great ~miracles are wrought."~
547   2, 178 |          these rise at one time to a great height, at another swoop
548   2, 180 |       Gregory says (Moral. vi, 37): "Great are the merits of ~the active
549   2, 180 |               nor cast down with too great a sorrow ~when those goods
550   2, 181 |             2 Tim. 2:20) that ~"in a great house there are not only
551   2, 183 |       perfection is compatible with ~great wealth, since Abraham, to
552   2, 183 |          hand, if the excess be very great he ~cannot be ignorant of
553   2, 184 |            sad, save because he ~had great wealth? For it is one thing
554   2, 184 |            it ~follows that it is of great avail in acquiring the happiness
555   2, 184 |         should presume to have ~such great virtue that he can attain
556   2, 185 |           may accept an alms of some great property but not ~bread
557   2, 185 |            spiritual things, is it a great matter if we ~reap your
558   2, 185 |            scattered on all ~sides a great number of hypocrites wearing
559   2, 186 |          David to whom the Lord gave great testimony." Now ~religious
560   2, 186 |               and he got his ~people great honor." It can also be directed
561   2, 186 |          Simon ~said: "You know what great battles I and my brethren,
562   2, 186 |       separated from ~riches whether great or small. For man must needs
563   2, 186 |           weight of care, which is a great distraction to ~man's mind
564   2, 186 |              it is fraught with very great danger, unless the ~grace
565   2, 187 |         matters, so as to accomplish great things." Now the ~great
566   2, 187 |              great things." Now the ~great things are the counsels
567   2, 187 |             especially ~to have such great wealth." This also refers
568   2, 187 |              ones, as though we were great, and forbid the children
569   2, 187 |              not such as to stand in great need of their children's ~
570   2, 187 |             do not ~sin, but merit a great reward. For it is written (
571   2, 187 |             of many are required in ~great matters of doubt, as the
572   3, 1   |              Whom rests the care ~of great things should leave them
573   3, 1   |        corporeal things . . . God is great not ~in mass, but in might.
574   3, 1   |            we are thereby taught how great is man's ~dignity, lest
575   3, 1   |            and cured by ~humility so great," as Augustine says in the
576   3, 1   |         which the Apostle says is "a great sacrament . . . in Christ
577   3, 1   |            that merited such and so ~great a Redeemer!"~Aquin.: SMT
578   3, 1   |      mediator," a ~gloss says: "With great wisdom was it so ordered
579   3, 1   |         would not believe when such ~great wonders were wrought in
580   3, 1   |              have ~done penance with great humility if these signs
581   3, 7   |           Whom He hath given us most great ~and precious promises,
582   3, 7   |              that the Son may be as ~great as the Father is." Or again,
583   3, 8   |           according to Amos 6:1, "Ye great men, heads of the people";
584   3, 12  |           some [*Blessed Albert the ~Great, Alexander of Hales, St.
585   3, 15  |             imagination of something great"; and hence the ~Philosopher
586   3, 15  |              could do whatsoever was great. Therefore it seems that
587   3, 15  |      Centurion's faith as if it was ~great with respect to Himself,
588   3, 15  |          Himself, but because it was great with respect to ~others.~
589   3, 20  |               in such things as ~are great, but not in bulk, to be
590   3, 20  |               but not in bulk, to be great is the same as to be good,"
591   3, 22  |                Having'] ~therefore a great high-priest that hath passed
592   3, 22  |               He hath given us most ~great and precious promises, that
593   3, 22  |              God, but as guilty of a great crime: a similitude of which ~
594   3, 24  |     predestinated to be raised to so great, so ~lofty, so exalted a
595   3, 26  |      Alexander of ~Hales, Albert the Great, St. Bonaventure. It was
596   3, 26  |         Thomas would differ from the great masters of his time, who
597   3, 27  |             as he says, "signify the great ~truth," viz. that the woman
598   3, 30  |           angel a message exceeding ~great, before such an event she
599   3, 30  |         event she needed a vision of great solemnity."~Aquin.: SMT
600   3, 30  |         sleep fell upon Abram, and a great and darksome ~horror seized
601   3, 30  |     conceived, saying: ~"He shall be great"; and further, by making
602   3, 30  |       attention to the hearing of so great a mystery, began by praising
603   3, 31  |          Chrysostom] says: "Just as ~great was the blessing conferred
604   3, 31  |           Achab and Jezabel, so also great was the curse on the house
605   3, 32  |            to God the ~Word, into so great unity of Person, that He
606   3, 35  |          take pride in being born in great cities, where also they
607   3, 35  |              to suffer reproach in a great city.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[35]
608   3, 35  |                 If He had chosen the great city of Rome, the change
609   3, 36  |           the going down, My name is great among the ~Gentiles." Therefore
610   3, 36  |      accomplished a ~journey of very great length in thirteen days,
611   3, 36  |             no idea of showing ~such great homage to such a king as
612   3, 36  |          greatness: "gold, as to the great King; they offer ~up incense
613   3, 38  |        Christ's preaching began in a great ~measure after John had
614   3, 40  |             thou ~mightest learn how great a good is fasting, and how
615   3, 40  |            itself ~is a sign of very great humility.~Aquin.: SMT TP
616   3, 41  |            endeavor to do something ~great: which is for them to be
617   3, 41  |                To ~instruct thee how great a good is fasting, and how
618   3, 41  |           adore him, which is a very great crime, and ~against God.
619   3, 42  |       Socrates, who were teachers of great ~excellence, were unwilling
620   3, 43  |           coming, is to come "with" ~great power and majesty, as is
621   3, 43  |           Chrysostom says: "Mark how great a multitude ~of persons
622   3, 43  |             forth the presence of so great majesty, for the ghostly
623   3, 43  |         their prophecy, and gave Him great glory . ~. . He, therefore,
624   3, 43  |                  But to heal with so great a power ~so many defects
625   3, 44  |          friends, and tell them, how great ~things the Lord hath done
626   3, 44  |            the sea, and there came a great calm." But it was not befitting
627   3, 45  |            lest, after hearing of so great glory, they should be ~scandalized
628   3, 45  |          cannot bear to gaze on such great glory." But men are healed
629   3, 46  |                You are bought with a great price: ~glorify and bear
630   3, 46  |           did ~not simply weigh what great virtue His suffering would
631   3, 46  |              pain would avail for so great a satisfaction.~Aquin.:
632   3, 46  |             divert the thought of so great a crime ~from the Jews to
633   3, 48  |            act, but rather wrought a great wrong. Therefore ~Christ'
634   3, 51  |        person is a sign of something great." ~For myrrh and aloes by
635   3, 51  |             of the tomb." Hence the "great stone" which was set shows ~
636   3, 51  |            enter into ~our hearts, a great stone is rolled against
637   3, 51  |               and that "'he rolled a great stone,' because all things ~
638   3, 51  |               and new, and exceeding great."~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[51] A[
639   3, 52  |              delayed: still they had great joy from ~the very hope
640   3, 55  |        according to Acts 4:33: "With great power did the apostles ~
641   3, 55  |          Himself known to them ~with great power, "showing Himself
642   3, 55  |              was thinking of nothing great, ~although Christ's flesh
643   3, 60  |            Whence hath water this so great virtue, to touch the body ~
644   3, 60  |            sense of the words; or so great that it ~destroys it. But
645   3, 61  |            to Eph. 5:32: "This ~is a great sacrament; but I speak in
646   3, 62  |                He hath given us most great and precious ~promises;
647   3, 62  |                Whence hath ~water so great power, that it touches the
648   3, 64  |              a sacrament should take great care to have actual ~intention.
649   3, 64  |              or schismatics, yet so ~great are his merits, culminating
650   3, 65  |               Eph. 5:32): "This is a great sacrament: but I speak in ~
651   3, 66  |             have ~to hand, is not so great as to destroy the species
652   3, 66  |           either because ~there is a great number to be baptized, as
653   3, 66  |             they who are come out of great tribulation, and have ~washed
654   3, 67  |              to Ex. 18:22: "When any great matter soever shall fall
655   3, 67  |             such ~as suffices for so great a matter." But afterwards
656   3, 67  |             while the other, however great his ~right to baptize, if
657   3, 69  |              I looked and behold (a ~great) door was opened in heaven."
658   3, 72  |         Baptism, know that each is a great sacrament."~Aquin.: SMT
659   3, 72  |      sacrament, which is not of such great necessity, be easily sent
660   3, 72  |           the hand should be held in great ~veneration, and can be
661   3, 74  |            is opposed to little, and great to small. But ~there is
662   3, 74  |          there any quantity, however great, ~which cannot be consecrated.~
663   3, 74  |             water should be added in great quantity?~Aquin.: SMT TP
664   3, 74  |           water ought to be added in great quantity, because ~as blood
665   3, 74  |              except it were used in ~great quantity. Consequently it
666   3, 74  |          water ought to be added in ~great quantity.~Aquin.: SMT TP
667   3, 75  |             1: Some [*Cf. Albert the Great, Sent. iv, D, 11; St. ~Bonaventure,
668   3, 76  |            whole nature ~of air in a great or small amount of air,
669   3, 77  |              has little matter under great dimensions. while a thing
670   3, 77  |          hence Plato also assigned ~"great" and "small" as the first
671   3, 77  |             But if the change be so ~great that the substance of the
672   3, 77  |             the atmosphere, unless a great ~and, in fact, exceedingly
673   3, 77  |              and consecrated wine in great quantity.~Aquin.: SMT TP
674   3, 77  |             beneath it; both because great and little are difference
675   3, 79  |               wherever it is it does great works." And consequently
676   3, 80  |          that, out of honor for this great sacrament, the ~Lord's body
677   3, 80  |            they be not ~swallowed in great quantity, but mixed with
678   3, 80  |         approach this sacrament with great ~reverence and devotion.
679   3, 80  |          Reply OBJ 3: Sinners suffer great loss in being kept back
680   3, 80  |              cannot happen without a great ~sacrilege."~Aquin.: SMT
681   3, 80  |              which is unworthy of so great a mystery. ~Now this could
682   3, 82  |        Register: "Alas, ~into what a great snare they fall who believe
683   3, 83  |           may be made worthy of such great mysteries.~Aquin.: SMT TP
684   3, 83  |        things: and I have seen with ~great joy Thy people which are
685   3, 83  |        Himself, Who is the "Angel of great counsel" (Is. 9:6: Septuagint),
686   3, 83  |            for anyone to approach so great a ~sacrament with hands
687   3, 84  |              O God, according to Thy great mercy: and according to
688   3, 86  |            Dom. in Monte i) that "so great ~is the stain of that sin (
689   3, 86  |             be understood thus: "So ~great is the stain of that sin,
690   3, 88  |            of a subsequent sin is as great as that of the sins previously
691   3, 88  |            of a subsequent sin is as great as that of the ~sins previously
692   3, 88  |              a subsequent sin is ~as great as the debt of punishment
693   3, 88  |           returns to ~the debt of as great a punishment as he had incurred
694   3, 88  |          through ingratitude were as great ~as that incurred through
695   3, 88  |         whence it is evident ~that a great debt of punishment does
696   3, 89  |             their former duties with great negligence if they ~were
697   3, 90  |           but the Divine power is so great that it ~can operate both
698 Suppl    |          should it be about? (3) How great ~should it be? (4) Of its
699 Suppl, 3 |             of contrition can be too great? ~(3) Whether sorrow for
700 Suppl, 3 |             of contrition can be too great?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[3] A[2]
701 Suppl, 3 |             contrition cannot be too great. ~For no sorrow can be more
702 Suppl, 3 |              contrition, if it be so great as to cause ~death or corruption
703 Suppl, 3 |             contrition cannot be too great.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[3] A[2]
704 Suppl, 3 |             of charity cannot be too great. Neither, therefore, ~can
705 Suppl, 3 |          sorrow of contrition be too great.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[3] A[2]
706 Suppl, 3 |           sorrow for sins can be too great.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[3] A[2]
707 Suppl, 3 |           against God, cannot be too great; even as neither can the
708 Suppl, 3 |              love of charity ~be too great, for when this is increased
709 Suppl, 3 |               contrition may be ~too great, even as outward affliction
710 Suppl, 3 |    affliction of the body may be too great. In ~all these things the
711 Suppl, 3 |            slightest sins as much as great ones." Therefore one need
712 Suppl, 4 |        Further, contrition can be so great as to blot out both guilt
713 Suppl, 5 |      contrition suffices to blot out great sins?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5]
714 Suppl, 5 |               contrition is never so great as to blot out the entire
715 Suppl, 5 |          contrition can ~never be so great as to remit the whole punishment. ~
716 Suppl, 5 |      contrition suffices to blot out great sins?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[5]
717 Suppl, 5 |             not suffice to blot out ~great sins. For contrition is
718 Suppl, 5 |             suffice to blot out very great ~sins.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[
719 Suppl, 5 |              suffices also to heal a great sin. ~This is seen in Baptism
720 Suppl, 5 |              in Baptism which looses great and small: and the same ~
721 Suppl, 8 |           salvation. But it seems a ~great inconvenience to be bound
722 Suppl, 8 |        remedy; although sometimes so great a punishment is not strictly
723 Suppl, 9 |          shames ~together are not so great as that with which he confesses
724 Suppl, 9 |        malice of the sinner, or his ~great corruption.~Aquin.: SMT
725 Suppl, 10|       received, nor is his ~merit so great. Moreover he is bound to
726 Suppl, 11|           watch over his flock ~with great care, yet so as by neither
727 Suppl, 16|              he is not ~possessed of great wealth which is the matter
728 Suppl, 16|            repentance, and this is a great punishment for them." Now
729 Suppl, 18|           this disposition may be so great, that ~even by virtue of
730 Suppl, 22|              2: Suspension is not so great a punishment as excommunication, ~
731 Suppl, 25|           had they been incurred. So great is the ~quantity of such
732 Suppl, 25|            in this view have we "too great a market of the Divine mercy" [*
733 Suppl, 27|             in mortal sin is in very great need. Therefore all the ~
734 Suppl, 28|            of having committed ~some great sin. For a man is not certainly
735 Suppl, 28|         Reply OBJ 3: Grave sins need great care in their cure. Hence
736 Suppl, 32|             the whole Church, are of great ~account towards the reception
737 Suppl, 36|               and deacons ~take very great care to be examples of speech
738 Suppl, 36|           there is not ~much need of great knowledge.~Aquin.: SMT XP
739 Suppl, 41|           long time, there is a very great tie between male and ~female,
740 Suppl, 41|             which marriage is a very great obstacle, the ~natural inclination
741 Suppl, 42|               Eph. 5:32): "This is a great sacrament." ~Therefore,
742 Suppl, 50|            First, ~on account of too great a distance separating them,
743 Suppl, 54|        Consequently identity and too great a distance do away with
744 Suppl, 54|             Eve and Adam ~was not so great as between daughter and
745 Suppl, 54|             to be ensured ~with very great care, and consequently only
746 Suppl, 54|              this would prove a very great incentive to ~lust. Yet
747 Suppl, 56|       contrary to the same thing, as great and ~small are contrary
748 Suppl, 60|               on account of the very great provocation which the husband ~
749 Suppl, 62|            the adultery of one is as great a sin against marriage as
750 Suppl, 65|            end; ~for instance a very great excess or a very great deficiency
751 Suppl, 65|          very great excess or a very great deficiency in eating ~hinders
752 Suppl, 65|           sin to which he has not so great an incentive. Thus, ~too,
753 Suppl, 69|           should be troubled with so great a ~sorrow as to obtain,
754 Suppl, 70|            of this union conceives a great love for its body, so it
755 Suppl, 71|              however, is a matter of great uncertainty; wherefore it
756 Suppl, 71|             possible to have ~such a great number of suffrages, that
757 Suppl, 71|        pleasing to God and receive a great reward from ~Him." Now the
758 Suppl, 72|              are his words: "If such great men ~as the patriarchs knew
759 Suppl, 72|            the ~"fourth" day all the great fishes and other things
760 Suppl, 72|          eighth" day there will be a great ~earthquake, and all animals
761 Suppl, 72|              all ~stones, little and great, will be divided into four
762 Suppl, 72|             12 says: "This exceeding great ~fire will engulf the four
763 Suppl, 73|             quoted by St. Albert the Great, ~Sentent. iv, D, 42, A[
764 Suppl, 74|          same body at the end of the great year, or that it would return
765 Suppl, 78|            state is indifferent to a great or small quantity.~Aquin.:
766 Suppl, 79|     perceiving the odor from a very ~great distance, whereas it would
767 Suppl, 79|              on account of ~the very great humidity of the brain, but
768 Suppl, 80|             whole under the small or great dimensions of a ~consecrated
769 Suppl, 80|            able to be in a little or great place, and to have a ~little
770 Suppl, 80|             and to have a ~little or great quantity at will.~Aquin.:
771 Suppl, 80|              they are able to have a great ~quantity, and when they
772 Suppl, 80|           same matter would be under great ~dimensions and sometimes
773 Suppl, 81|         wisdom will shine forth with great ~evidence: for sense can
774 Suppl, 81|              possible to ~imagine so great a subtlety, as will naturally
775 Suppl, 83|                Consequently, however great the pain ~will be, it will
776 Suppl, 84|        manifestation will bring them great glory on account of ~the
777 Suppl, 84|              courageously ~confesses great crimes. Sins are said to
778 Suppl, 85|              We cannot know with any great certainty the manner in ~
779 Suppl, 85|             Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 1: A great multitude can be enclosed
780 Suppl, 85|           there be a ~space, however great, to contain the multitude
781 Suppl, 85|            He will be visible from a great ~distance.~Aquin.: SMT XP
782 Suppl, 87|           man coming in a cloud with great power and majesty." Now
783 Suppl, 87|             condemned who scorned so great mercy, especially those
784 Suppl, 88|        craftsman who would make very great ~instruments for the making
785 Suppl, 88|          person when he encounters a great sorrow so as not to know ~
786 Suppl, 88|            of sorrow to one of ~very great joy. But this is not in
787 Suppl, 89|          intellect will not have so ~great an efficacy in seeing, as
788 Suppl, 89|             bodily sight will see so great a glory of God in bodies, ~
789 Suppl, 89|            Christ's soul, but not so great, so ~as to know all as Christ'
790 Suppl, 92|               Eph. 5:32): "This is a great sacrament: ~but I speak
791 Suppl, 92|        either by ~reason of his very great love for the bride as in
792 Suppl, 92|              on account of his son's great love for the maiden ~wished
793 Suppl, 93|           martyrdom there ~is a very great difficulty, the will to
794 Suppl, 93|              good, cannot confer so ~great a goodness on an act as
795 Suppl, 94|             damned will be exceeding great, ~for "the number of fools
796 Suppl, 94|          fire must also be exceeding great. But it would seem ~unreasonable
797 Suppl, 94|              to say that there is so great a hollow within the earth, ~
798 Suppl, 94|         bowels of the earth a hollow great enough to ~contain all the
799 Suppl, 95|              iii, 7): ~"Consider how great a good it is to be; since
800 Suppl, 95|           saints will give them very great pain; hence it is written (
801 Suppl, 95|            Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 1: So great will be the envy of the
802 Suppl, 95|             world. For there is very great pleasure in the ~consideration
803 Suppl, 95|           world, when one is in very great pain, it is ~impossible
804 Suppl, 95|           that which is granted as a great favor to the saints in ~
805 Suppl, 95|              Now it was granted as a great ~favor to Paul to see the
806 Suppl, 96|               iv), it belongs to the great ~justice of the judge that
807 Appen1, 1|      likewise, albeit deprived of so great a good through no fault
808 Appen1, 1|            little for the loss of so great a good, especially without
809 Appen1, 1|               his grief will be very great, since ~he has lost what
810 Appen1, 1|             own whereby to obtain so great a ~good. Hence they will
 
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