1-500 | 501-803
Part, Question
1 1, 1 | avail to prove ~what must be received on faith, nevertheless,
2 1, 3 | OBJ 3: Forms which can be received in matter are individualized
3 1, 3 | else ~prevents it, can be received by many. But that form which
4 1, 3 | that form which cannot be ~received in matter, but is self-subsisting,
5 1, 3 | precisely ~because it cannot be received in a subject; and such a
6 1, 4 | as the receiver is to the received; but rather as the ~received
7 1, 4 | received; but rather as the ~received to the receiver. When therefore
8 1, 4 | principle, ~and as something received; and not as that which exists.~
9 1, 4 | sun, not as though they received the form of ~the sun in
10 1, 7 | common to many; but ~when received in matter, the form is determined
11 1, 7 | divine being is not a being received in anything, but ~He is
12 1, 7 | is self-subsisting, not ~received in any other, and is thus
13 1, 7 | any created forms ~are not received into matter, but are self-subsisting,
14 1, 7 | follows that its being is received and contracted to a ~determinate
15 1, 12 | happen because the object is received more perfectly in the seer,
16 1, 12 | the created light of glory received into any created intellect ~
17 1, 12 | From the images either received from sense in the natural ~
18 1, 12 | images a fuller ~knowledge is received by the infusion of the divine
19 1, 13 | whereas in creatures they are received and divided and ~multiplied.
20 1, 14 | conditions like the images received in the ~imagination and
21 1, 18 | implanted form; but one received through sense. Hence the
22 1, 23 | Cor. ~2:12): "Now we have received not the spirit of this world,
23 1, 23 | glory - and of what is received in this ~life - namely,
24 1, 27 | though that existence were ~received into matter or into a subject (
25 1, 27 | speak of His existence as received, ~we mean that He Who proceeds
26 1, 33 | of grace which they have received, ~according to Rm. 8:16,
27 1, 36 | Reply OBJ 2: If the Son received from the Father a numerically
28 1, 43 | mission; and to all who ~received the invisible mission, whether
29 1, 45 | considered it as a commonly received axiom that "nothing is made
30 1, 46 | sometimes not be; but before it ~received that power, it did not exist.~
31 1, 50 | corporeal form should be received into the same part of ~matter,
32 1, 50 | that their forms are not received ~in anything else; as if
33 1, 50 | infinite ~from below," as not received in any matter.~Aquin.: SMT
34 1, 55 | outpouring, whereby they received from God the species of
35 1, 62 | heaven": but afterwards it received ~its form, and was then
36 1, 62 | in nature ~only, and then received grace, and that last of
37 1, 62 | as every ~perfection is received in the subject capable of
38 1, 63 | he would at ~once have received beatitude after that first
39 1, 65 | there abides the impression received from these ~separate forms,
40 1, 65 | 1/1~Reply OBJ 2: Forms received into matter are to be referred,
41 1, 66 | matter was formless until it received its ~form.~Aquin.: SMT FP
42 1, 66 | measure formless before it received its full form, so time was
43 1, 67 | however, substantial form is received imperfectly, so as to be,
44 1, 67 | were, in process of being received, rather than fully impressed,
45 1, 67 | But if all created things ~received their form at the same time,
46 1, 68 | formation, since the first form received by matter is the ~elemental.~
47 1, 68 | afterwards, on the fourth day, received its form.~Aquin.: SMT FP
48 1, 68 | collected, and which has received ~the name firmament from
49 1, 69 | earth, the lowest body, received its form by the withdrawal ~
50 1, 69 | the ~manner in which it received its form by the equally
51 1, 69 | their causes, ~that is, it received then the power to produce
52 1, 70 | which ~they are attached, received its form. The lights, therefore,
53 1, 70 | earth; and these three received their form from the three
54 1, 70 | the fourth day the ~lights received a definite power to produce
55 1, 73 | the stars and ~elements received at the beginning. Again,
56 1, 74 | anew, but that they then ~received a form that they had not
57 1, 75 | is clear that whatever is received ~into something is received
58 1, 75 | received ~into something is received according to the condition
59 1, 75 | forms of things would be received into ~it as individuals,
60 1, 75 | proportionate to act. But ~the acts received which proceed from the First
61 1, 75 | diversity of the things ~received by each. For primary matter
62 1, 76 | individually; for what is received must be received ~according
63 1, 76 | what is received must be received ~according to the condition
64 1, 76 | thing ~understood is not received into the intellect materially
65 1, 76 | species. Now whatever is received ~into anything must be received
66 1, 76 | received ~into anything must be received according to the condition
67 1, 76 | species of things would be received individually ~into my intellect,
68 1, 77 | as it is actual, and is received into it according as it
69 1, 77 | accident; ~but one accident is received prior to another into substance,
70 1, 43 | mission; and to all who ~received the invisible mission, whether
71 1, 46 | considered it as a commonly received axiom that "nothing is made
72 1, 47 | sometimes not be; but before it ~received that power, it did not exist.~
73 1, 51 | corporeal form should be received into the same part of ~matter,
74 1, 51 | that their forms are not received ~in anything else; as if
75 1, 51 | infinite ~from below," as not received in any matter.~Aquin.: SMT
76 1, 56 | outpouring, whereby they received from God the species of
77 1, 63 | heaven": but afterwards it received ~its form, and was then
78 1, 63 | in nature ~only, and then received grace, and that last of
79 1, 63 | as every ~perfection is received in the subject capable of
80 1, 64 | he would at ~once have received beatitude after that first
81 1, 66 | there abides the impression received from these ~separate forms,
82 1, 66 | 1/1~Reply OBJ 2: Forms received into matter are to be referred,
83 1, 67 | matter was formless until it received its ~form.~Aquin.: SMT FP
84 1, 67 | measure formless before it received its full form, so time was
85 1, 68 | however, substantial form is received imperfectly, so as to be,
86 1, 68 | were, in process of being received, rather than fully impressed,
87 1, 68 | But if all created things ~received their form at the same time,
88 1, 69 | formation, since the first form received by matter is the ~elemental.~
89 1, 69 | afterwards, on the fourth day, received its form.~Aquin.: SMT FP
90 1, 69 | collected, and which has received ~the name firmament from
91 1, 70 | earth, the lowest body, received its form by the withdrawal ~
92 1, 70 | the ~manner in which it received its form by the equally
93 1, 70 | their causes, ~that is, it received then the power to produce
94 1, 71 | which ~they are attached, received its form. The lights, therefore,
95 1, 71 | earth; and these three received their form from the three
96 1, 71 | the fourth day the ~lights received a definite power to produce
97 1, 72 | the stars and ~elements received at the beginning. Again,
98 1, 73 | anew, but that they then ~received a form that they had not
99 1, 74 | is clear that whatever is received ~into something is received
100 1, 74 | received ~into something is received according to the condition
101 1, 74 | forms of things would be received into ~it as individuals,
102 1, 74 | proportionate to act. But ~the acts received which proceed from the First
103 1, 74 | diversity of the things ~received by each. For primary matter
104 1, 75 | individually; for what is received must be received ~according
105 1, 75 | what is received must be received ~according to the condition
106 1, 75 | thing ~understood is not received into the intellect materially
107 1, 75 | species. Now whatever is received ~into anything must be received
108 1, 75 | received ~into anything must be received according to the condition
109 1, 75 | species of things would be received individually ~into my intellect,
110 1, 76 | as it is actual, and is received into it according as it
111 1, 76 | accident; ~but one accident is received prior to another into substance,
112 1, 77 | form of the immuter being received ~according to its natural
113 1, 77 | thing immuted, as heat is ~received into the thing heated. Whereas
114 1, 77 | form of the immuter being received, according to a spiritual
115 1, 77 | as the form of color is received ~into the pupil which does
116 1, 77 | were a storehouse of forms ~received through the senses. Furthermore,
117 1, 77 | intentions which are not received through the senses, the "
118 1, 78 | likeness of the agent is received into the patient ~according
119 1, 78 | suffices for forms to ~be received into it immaterially. Now
120 1, 78 | happen that its ~likeness is received variously into various things,
121 1, 78 | light, which is something ~received into the air: while Plato
122 1, 78 | intelligible species are received into it. Now the intellect
123 1, 78 | opposed to reason. For what is received ~into something is received
124 1, 78 | received ~into something is received according to the conditions
125 1, 83 | and mobile bodies: for the received ~is in the receiver according
126 1, 83 | 4) causes the phantasms received from the ~senses to be actually
127 1, 84 | intelligible species which it has received, so that this species is
128 1, 84 | The likeness of a thing is received into the intellect ~according
129 1, 84 | is that act and form are received into ~matter according to
130 1, 87 | the intelligible objects ~received, so much the nearer do we
131 1, 87 | active intellect, and are received in the passive intellect.
132 1, 88 | the inferior substances received species in the ~same degree
133 1, 88 | understands by means of species, received from the influence of ~the
134 1, 88 | order; because whatever is received into anything is conditioned ~
135 1, 88 | considering the species received: and the aforesaid sensitive
136 1, 88 | aside through not being received by ~the Jews as canonical
137 1, 90 | 3) The disposition it received in its production;~(4) The
138 1, 93 | she thought that he had ~received the faculty of speech from
139 1, 93 | thought that the serpent had received this ~faculty, not as acting
140 1, 95 | 4:10, "As every man hath received grace, ~ministering the
141 1, 97 | woman; or ~because, having received the general Divine command
142 1, 102 | is nothing but an impulse received from the archer. ~Wherefore
143 1, 103 | He make it ~not to have received its being from Himself.
144 1, 105 | saying: "As every man hath received grace, ministering the same ~
145 1, 105 | Nevertheless this gift is not received so excellently by the inferior
146 1, 110 | form in no way previously received from the ~senses (for he
147 1, 114 | heavenly bodies are variously received in ~inferior bodies, according
148 1, 114 | heavenly bodies is of necessity received in ~corporeal matter.~Aquin.:
149 1, 118 | that which has not yet received perfectly the specific nature,
150 2, 3 | speculative sciences are received through the senses, as the
151 2, 5 | who labor in the vineyard "received every ~man a penny"; for,
152 2, 14 | of counsel ~are any facts received through the senses - for
153 2, 19 | indifferent matters can received the character ~of goodness
154 2, 20 | 1~Reply OBJ 3: A form as received into matter, is subsequent
155 2, 22 | sense, ~when something is received, while something else is
156 2, 22 | because ~the ailment is received and health is lost. And
157 2, 29 | the impression has been received it is not felt so keenly
158 2, 48 | great good, through being received unexpectedly, causes greater ~
159 2, 51 | intelligible species which he has received from ~phantasms: and for
160 2, 60 | In this case the forms received into matter are not of one
161 2, 73 | natural affinity or kindness received or any other bond; ~because
162 2, 76 | ignores ~the benefits he has received; or again, they may be an
163 2, 80 | because these ~forms are received originally from the senses.~
164 2, 81 | than that which he has received from another: thus fire
165 2, 94 | unisexual ~lust, which has received the special name of the
166 2, 97 | be changed which we have received from the fathers of old."~
167 2, 98 | given by Moses." But ~Moses received it from God immediately:
168 2, 98 | Acts 7:53): "(Who) have received the Law by the disposition
169 2, 98 | election ~that the patriarchs received the promise, and that the
170 2, 98 | people sprung from ~them received the law; according to Dt.
171 2, 98 | of whom Christ was born, received the Law, but the whole people, ~
172 2, 99 | rewards or punishments to be received from God. In this ~respect
173 2, 100 | those which the people received from God immediately; wherefore
174 2, 100 | children for ~any favors received, but rather the reverse
175 2, 100 | to those from whom he has received kindness, if he ~has not
176 2, 102 | Further, just as man has received from God the dominion over ~
177 2, 102 | and beasts, so also has he received dominion over fishes. ~Consequently
178 2, 102 | recognition of his having received them from God, according
179 2, 102 | have given Thee what we received of Thy hand." Wherefore
180 2, 102 | acknowledgment of benefits already received or yet to ~be received:
181 2, 102 | already received or yet to ~be received: and this typifies the state
182 2, 102 | benefits he has already ~received from Him; fourthly, by reason
183 2, 102 | propitiatory," as though the people received propitiation thence at ~
184 2, 102 | nothing to be rejected that is received with ~thanksgiving" (1 Tim.
185 2, 102 | Rm. 4:9, seqq.) thus: "He received ~the sign of circumcision,
186 2, 102 | hearts of the Jews, they received in their ~flesh such a sign
187 2, 102 | Aaron." But the Levites ~received no other consecration besides
188 2, 102 | hands, to show that they received the power of offering these
189 2, 102 | nothing to be rejected that is received with ~thanksgiving." It
190 2, 103 | those things which they had received from Him, and thus to testify
191 2, 103 | to be rejected that is ~received with thanksgiving" (1 Tim.
192 2, 105 | because then the owner received a certain price for the ~
193 2, 105 | a result of the blows he received. For when a man struck a
194 2, 106 | especially the apostles ~who "received the firstfruits of the Spirit,
195 2, 106 | Hence none of the above received the Acts of the Apostles, ~
196 2, 107 | that is, who had not yet received spiritual grace, was called ~
197 2, 108 | His ~fulness we all have received, and grace for grace." Hence
198 2, 108 | bestowed, which ~cannot be received except through Christ: consequently
199 2, 109 | 9) Whether man having received grace can do good and avoid
200 2, 109 | be preserved in the good received from Him. Hence if after
201 2, 109 | Hence if after having ~received grace man still needs the
202 2, 109 | by Adam's sin. But Adam received what ~enabled him to persevere;
203 2, 109 | in the original state man received a gift whereby ~he could
204 2, 111 | to believe when he has ~received the gift of bodily health
205 2, 112 | in the case of Paul, who received grace whilst he was "breathing ~
206 2, 112 | learn, to come; and hence he received grace ~suddenly.~Aquin.:
207 2, 112 | Cor. 2:12): "Now we have received ~not the Spirit of this
208 2, 113 | as Adam is said to have received original ~justice. Secondly,
209 2, 113 | the free-will. But Solomon received from ~God the gift of wisdom
210 2, 113 | Solomon neither merited nor received wisdom whilst asleep; ~but
211 2, 113 | blackness or ~whiteness, is received successively by its subject.
212 2, 113 | A[4]). Hence it is not received ~suddenly by its subject.
213 2, 113 | reason why a form is not received instantaneously in ~the
214 2, 113 | light would not be suddenly received in the air, which can be
215 2, 114 | just price for anything ~received from another, so also is
216 2, 114 | which is done by one who has received fewer ~benefits. Hence,
217 2, 114 | only natural endowments has received ~fewer gifts from God, than
218 2, 114 | from man, before he has received anything from ~him, by what
219 2, 114 | from ~him, by what he has received from God.~Aquin.: SMT FS
220 2, 114 | may merit a gift already received. Thus if a ~man receives
221 2, 114 | the first grace already ~received from God.~Aquin.: SMT FS
222 2, 114 | grace alone that anyone is ~received into everlasting dwellings,
223 2, 114 | the poor, we ~merit to be received into everlasting dwellings.~
224 2, 114 | some (Mt. 6:2): "They have received ~their reward." Hence, if
225 2, 114 | their sin ~of falsehood they received an earthly reward." And
226 2, 1 | the mysteries, for "they received them ~more fully than others,
227 2, 1 | than others, even as they received them earlier," as a gloss ~
228 2, 1 | the more fully did they received the ~mysteries of salvation."~
229 2, 1 | of faith, they have not received any increase as time went
230 2, 1 | according to faith, not having received the ~promises, but beholding
231 2, 2 | faith in Christ, since ~they received no revelation. Therefore
232 2, 2 | 3: Many of the gentiles received revelations of Christ, as
233 2, 4 | Thess. 2:15): "When you had ~received of us the word of the hearing,"
234 2, 4 | i.e. by faith . . . "you ~received it not as the word of men,
235 2, 4 | three be taken as ~gifts received in this present life, they
236 2, 5 | happiness, by ~reason of grace received but not yet consummated,
237 2, 5 | belief are many and can be ~received more or less explicitly;
238 2, 10 | are some who have never received ~the faith, such as the
239 2, 10 | what they, at one time, received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[10] A[
240 2, 10 | Jews who have in no way received the faith, ought not ~by
241 2, 10 | if, however, they have received ~it, they ought to be compelled
242 2, 10 | faith, when once one has received it, is a ~matter of obligation.
243 2, 10 | who have not in any way received the ~Christian faith, viz.
244 2, 10 | forsaken the faith they once received, either by corrupting the ~
245 2, 10 | unbelievers who have not received ~the faith, such as pagans
246 2, 11 | Whether converts should be received?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[11] A[
247 2, 11 | prostitution, should be received all the same.~Aquin.: SMT
248 2, 11 | Therefore he ought to be received ~by the Church as often
249 2, 11 | wish to be converted are received by the Church. Therefore
250 2, 11 | heretics also ~should be received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[11] A[
251 2, 11 | Therefore they ~should not be received by the Church.~Aquin.: SMT
252 2, 11 | if heretics were always ~received on their return, in order
253 2, 11 | again, after having been received, this seems ~to prove them
254 2, 11 | those who return are always received, ~because God is a searcher
255 2, 11 | relapse after being once received, are not sincere in ~their
256 2, 11 | unbelievers, who have never received the faith ~are converted,
257 2, 12 | Holy ~Order which he had received: and this is called "apostasy
258 2, 12 | in ~those who have never received the faith, according to
259 2, 12 | unbelief ~of those who have received the faith: and it is fitting
260 2, 12 | unbelievers who have never received the faith.~Aquin.: SMT SS
261 2, 15 | lxxxiii in Joan.) that we have received many precepts of faith. ~
262 2, 17 | chiefly in grace already received, but ~on God's omnipotence
263 2, 18 | to Rm. ~8:15, "You have received the spirit of adoption of
264 2, 18 | Rm. 8:15, "You have not received ~the spirit of bondage,"
265 2, 23 | lost by the other being received. On the other hand ~the
266 2, 25 | our neighbor in something received from God, we become ~like
267 2, 25 | bound out of the favors received to provide for ~his parents
268 2, 25 | love those more who have received ~benefactions from us, as
269 2, 25 | that we ~love all who have received good from us, more than
270 2, 25 | parents, from ~whom we have received the greatest favors, to
271 2, 26 | love a man for ~the favors received from him, although after
272 2, 29 | them, or ~because he has received them on loan or in deposit
273 2, 29 | in the case of benefits received gratis. Now no benefactor
274 2, 29 | in ~paying back benefits received, we should give the first
275 2, 29 | connection and the benefit received; and here again no ~general
276 2, 29 | for the benefits we have received from them, as the Philosopher ~
277 2, 30 | the person from whom he received it, ~because he received
278 2, 30 | received it, ~because he received it unjustly, while the latter
279 2, 30 | who are they that shall be received by them into their ~dwellings,
280 2, 31 | ministry which thou hast received in the Lord, that thou fulfil
281 2, 32 | the goods which ~they have received from God: wherefore, in
282 2, 33 | the ~good things he has received from God, this, far from
283 2, 33 | disparage those we have received ourselves, because if we
284 2, 37 | the law ~which they had received that there was one God,
285 2, 37 | Roman Church, should be ~received mercifully and that their
286 2, 37 | essence, in the man who has received it by ~consecration, as
287 2, 37 | 5) that "Baptism ~can be received from a schismatic." Therefore
288 2, 50 | children of God, who "have received the ~spirit of adoption
289 2, 55 | from his master: for she is received into a kind of ~social life,
290 2, 58 | the Egyptian by authority ~received as it were, by divine inspiration;
291 2, 59 | something of his that has been received, as may be seen ~chiefly
292 2, 59 | not between ~the thing received and the thing done, but
293 2, 59 | done, but between the thing received by ~one person and the thing
294 2, 59 | one person and the thing received by another according to
295 2, 60 | the more according as he received less than his ~due: and
296 2, 60 | to God more than he has received from Him, according ~to
297 2, 60 | who deemed that he had received ~nothing from the other,
298 2, 60 | to one from whom we have ~received a greater favor. Now we
299 2, 60 | greater favor. Now we have received greater favors from others ~(
300 2, 60 | she may keep what she has received. If, however, she has ~extorted
301 2, 60 | or those from whom he has received greater benefits; but he ~
302 2, 60 | reason that when he has received sufficient ~compensation
303 2, 62 | man whose life is taken be received by God into glory.~Aquin.:
304 2, 64 | principally, as though he had not received them from ~another, namely
305 2, 69 | slightest gift you have received will be reputed a ~talent."
306 2, 70 | Lord do so, for when He received a blow, He said: "Why strikest ~
307 2, 75 | recompense for a favor received should depend on the utility
308 2, 75 | selling: and he who has received more than he ought must
309 2, 76 | measured according to the favor received. ~Wherefore the borrower
310 2, 76 | bound to repay more than he received in loan: and ~consequently
311 2, 76 | obligation to repayment for favor received is based ~on a debt of friendship,
312 2, 76 | to restore more than he received (since what is acquired
313 2, 79 | Gal. 4:14), "You . ~. . received me as an angel of God, even
314 2, 81 | thou hast asked and not received, is because thou hast asked ~
315 2, 81 | giving thanks for benefits received we merit to receive yet ~
316 2, 81 | finally, when it has been received, we ~give thanks for it.
317 2, 84 | acknowledged ~that he had received the fruits of the earth
318 2, 84 | have ~given Thee what we received of Thy hand." And since
319 2, 84 | out of the things he has received from God, but ~that the
320 2, 85 | were priests, and that they received a double ~portion. For this
321 2, 86 | account of the favors he has received from God. ~Hence man is
322 2, 86 | best of his power to be received ~there. And if his intention
323 2, 86 | should he be unable to be received there, to enter the religious ~
324 2, 91 | offering to Him what we have ~received from Him. But we have received
325 2, 91 | received from Him. But we have received all our goods from God.
326 2, 92 | the faith which they ~have received, from sinning more grievously
327 2, 94 | is certain that some have received wisdom and science infused
328 2, 94 | for their obedience they received knowledge from God, according
329 2, 98 | 10:8): "Freely have you received, freely give."~Aquin.: SMT
330 2, 98 | 4 Kgs. 5:20-24) that he received ~money from the leper who
331 2, 98 | is it a sin. For it is received not as a price of goods,
332 2, 98 | demanded from those who are received ~there. Therefore it is
333 2, 98 | fulfilled when alms are received for making processions in ~
334 2, 98 | those who are ~about to be received into the monastery, if its
335 2, 98 | ecclesiastical benefices for services received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[100] A[
336 2, 98 | ecclesiastical benefice for service ~received seems to indicate a carnal
337 2, 98 | service rendered or money ~received, is guilty of simony."~Aquin.:
338 2, 98 | grant it for the money, received or promised, at which ~that
339 2, 98 | simoniacal: since nothing is received in return, wherefore it
340 2, 98 | to restore ~what he has received, this would sometimes turn
341 2, 98 | that which one has already received. Now sometimes those who
342 2, 98 | deprived of what they have received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[100] A[
343 2, 98 | lawfully retain what he received. Now Our Lord, Whose ~stewards
344 2, 98 | 10:8, "Freely have you ~received, freely give." Wherefore
345 2, 98 | Reply OBJ 1: He that has received a sacred Order simoniacally,
346 2, 98 | the Order, because ~he has received the character by stealth
347 2, 98 | simoniacally granted or received a ~benefice, or through
348 2, 98 | deprived of what one has received is not only the ~punishment
349 2, 98 | deprived of what he ~has received, by forfeiting the exercise
350 2, 98 | or fruits simoniacally received, must be ~restored to the
351 2, 98 | cannot be done, they must be received into monasteries of the
352 2, 98 | other hand, if they were received simoniacally, without their ~
353 2, 98 | after quitting they ~may be received again, their rank being
354 2, 98 | to one who has ~knowingly received a benefice (simoniacally).
355 2, 98 | all renounce what he ~has received simoniacally, so that he
356 2, 99 | and the various benefits received ~from them. on both counts
357 2, 100 | faculty, for the benefits we received from him.~Aquin.: SMT SS
358 2, 100 | of the benefits they have received from their parents and their ~
359 2, 102 | Gal. 4:14): "You . . . received me as an ~angel of God,
360 2, 102 | Thess. 2:13): "When you had ~received of us the word of the hearing
361 2, 102 | the hearing of God, you received it, not as ~the word of
362 2, 104 | according to the favor ~received or the disposition of the
363 2, 104 | pay back more than one has received?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106] A[
364 2, 104 | other virtue. For we have received the greatest benefits from
365 2, 104 | acknowledgment of favor received is requisite for the ~preservation
366 2, 104 | belongs to repay favors received, is not a special ~virtue.~
367 2, 104 | benefactor, from whom ~we have received particular and private favors,
368 2, 104 | benefactor from whom we have ~received some particular favor, it
369 2, 104 | greater the gift one has received from God, ~the more one
370 2, 104 | deserving of ~punishment, he has received grace. Wherefore, although
371 2, 104 | to repayment for ~favors received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106] A[
372 2, 104 | requires that ~he who has received a favor should, by repaying
373 2, 104 | are grateful for favors received should be shown by the ~
374 2, 104 | one from whom you have ~received no favor; how much more
375 2, 104 | ought to equal the ~favor received. Therefore it should be
376 2, 104 | according to the quantity ~received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106] A[
377 2, 104 | should surpass the favor received?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106] A[
378 2, 104 | gratitude to ~surpass the favor received. For it is not possible
379 2, 104 | another more than he has received ~by his favor, by that very
380 2, 104 | should not surpass the favor received.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[106] A[
381 2, 104 | repay more than the favor received is sinful and opposed to
382 2, 104 | repaying more than we have received. Therefore gratitude ~should
383 2, 104 | gratitude regards the favor ~received according the intention
384 2, 104 | the quantity of the favor ~received: because so long as he repays
385 2, 104 | only to return what he has received. ~Therefore gratitude always
386 2, 104 | over and above what he has received.~
387 2, 105 | Gratitude regards a favor received: and he that helps ~another
388 2, 105 | Forgetfulness of a favor received amounts to ingratitude,
389 2, 105 | to recognize the ~favor received, the second to express one'
390 2, 105 | or indicate that he has received a favor, while the ~third
391 2, 105 | find fault with a favor received, and to the third to esteem
392 2, 105 | should never forget having received." ~Now, seemingly, the reason
393 2, 105 | knowing from whom he has received." But this would ~seem to
394 2, 105 | failing to recognize the favor received, or to express his appreciation ~
395 2, 108 | he was ~Esau, and yet he received a blessing (Gn. 27:27-29).
396 2, 108 | and which they might have ~received in eternal life, dwindled
397 2, 109 | he ~is praised withal and received an earthly reward from God,
398 2, 111 | saints" is that which ~is received by divine inspiration.~Aquin.:
399 2, 112 | debt arising out of a favor received. For it regards merely a ~
400 2, 115 | not earned money, but have received the money earned by ~others,
401 2, 115 | As to those who, having received money that others have ~
402 2, 119 | according to Rm. 8:15, "You have received the spirit of ~adoption
403 2, 127 | those from ~whom he has received favors, this points to the
404 2, 130 | Cor. 2:12): "Now we have received not the spirit of this ~
405 2, 130 | thou that thou hast not received? And if thou hast ~received,
406 2, 130 | received? And if thou hast ~received, why dost thou glory, as
407 2, 130 | glory, as if thou hadst not received it?" Or ~again when a man
408 2, 131 | earth ~the money he had received from his master, and did
409 2, 135 | by means of what he had ~received," as Augustine says (De
410 2, 140 | of the revelation that he received immediately afterwards.~
411 2, 145 | 10) of Daniel that he ~received a revelation from God after
412 2, 152 | Nothing is rejected that is received with ~thanksgiving." Therefore
413 2, 152 | while he ~was asleep. He received it in token of his previous
414 2, 159 | set the gifts they have received from God ~above those that
415 2, 159 | that others appear to have received from Him; thus the ~Apostle
416 2, 160 | man deem that he has not received his ~good from God, or that
417 2, 160 | esteems the good he has received of another as though he ~
418 2, 160 | believes that which he has received ~from above to be due to
419 2, 161 | his creation, had not yet ~received this likeness actually but
420 2, 161 | and neither angel nor man received this likeness ~actually
421 2, 163 | in the nature which they received." It is also said to him: "'
422 2, 170 | Our glorious fathers ~received Divine visions by means
423 2, 170 | prophecy. For prophecy is received by the prophet according
424 2, 170 | roar." Now that which is received by a thing according to
425 2, 171 | sensible things not only as received from the senses, but also ~
426 2, 171 | exclusively Divine origin and not received through the senses (for ~
427 2, 172 | the prophetic current is received. Thus as ~regards the enlightening
428 2, 172 | intellectual vision, because both received a ~revelation of intelligible
429 2, 172 | spirit: and from him he received a ~message assuring him
430 2, 174 | Para. 1/1~Whether those who received the gift of tongues spoke
431 2, 174 | It seems that those who received the gift of tongues did
432 2, 174 | His fullness we all have received." ~Now we do not read that
433 2, 174 | even now the Holy Ghost is received, ~yet no one speaks in the
434 2, 175 | 10): "As every man hath received ~grace ministering the same
435 2, 178 | First, by ~means of things received from another. In this way,
436 2, 178 | it makes use of the light received from God.~Aquin.: SMT SS
437 2, 183 | Paul (2 Cor. 11:8) that he "received wages" ~of other churches
438 2, 185 | monasteries or ~churches have received from the munificence of
439 2, 186 | number of those who are received into a religious order. ~
440 2, 186 | was sown [Vulg.: 'He that received the seed'] among thorns,
441 2, 187 | Whether children should be received into religion?~(6) Whether
442 2, 187 | his power in order to be received in that ~order; and if he
443 2, 187 | Whether children should be received in religion?~Aquin.: SMT
444 2, 187 | children ought not to be received in religion. ~Because it
445 2, 187 | that they ought not to be received in religion.~Aquin.: SMT
446 2, 187 | consent of their parents, be received into ~religion to be educated
447 3, 1 | when he failed in it, he ~received the law; whereupon, by the
448 3, 1 | His fulness we have all ~received"; and hence the work of
449 3, 1 | themselves, and they who ~received it would not keep it, being
450 3, 2 | Word, the Holy ~Trinity received no augment of person or
451 3, 2 | self-subsisting unity, not received into another by ~participation.
452 3, 2 | His fulness we all have received" (Jn. ~1:16).~Aquin.: SMT
453 3, 3 | Father" (i.e. which ~is received from the Father by eternal
454 3, 3 | 8:15: "For you have not ~received the spirit of bondage again
455 3, 3 | incarnate, we should have received adoptive sonship from ~Him,
456 3, 6 | His ~fulness we have all received" (Jn. 1:16), i.e. all the
457 3, 7 | His fulness we have all received, and grace for grace."~Aquin.:
458 3, 7 | to men [Vulg.: 'Thou hast received ~gifts in men']." Therefore
459 3, 7 | For the soul of Christ so received grace, that, in a ~manner,
460 3, 8 | in time, since all have received ~grace on account of His
461 3, 8 | His fulness we have all received." And thus it is plain that
462 3, 8 | His fulness we all have ~received." Now He is our Head, inasmuch
463 3, 8 | Q[7], A[9]) grace was received by the soul ~of Christ in
464 3, 8 | pre-eminence of ~grace which He received, it is from Him that this
465 3, 9 | were intelligible species received in the ~passive intellect
466 3, 10 | exceeds any created light received by the ~soul of Christ;
467 3, 10 | act not limited by being received into matter or ~a subject;
468 3, 10 | as material things can be received by the intellect ~immaterially,
469 3, 10 | can infinite things be ~received by the intellect, not after
470 3, 11 | subject receiving it. For ~the received is in the recipient after
471 3, 12 | from man?~(4) Whether He received anything from angels?~Aquin.:
472 3, 12 | say that ~His knowledge received increase.~Aquin.: SMT TP
473 3, 12 | intelligible species ~with what He received through the senses for the
474 3, 12 | potentiality. Now Christ ~received empiric knowledge from sensible
475 3, 12 | Para. 1/1~Whether Christ received knowledge from the angels?~
476 3, 12 | It would seem that Christ received knowledge from the angels.
477 3, 12 | ways. ~First by knowledge received from sensible things; secondly,
478 3, 12 | infused knowledge, which He received directly from ~God. For
479 3, 12 | who in their beginning received the knowledge of things
480 3, 13 | that the soul of Christ received omnipotence in time. ~Aquin.:
481 3, 13 | thing ~known by the aid of received species. But this reason
482 3, 13 | considered that what is received in the ~lower nature from
483 3, 13 | manner; for heat ~is not received by water in the perfection
484 3, 13 | similitudes of things are not received in the soul of ~Christ in
485 3, 14 | of the first man." For He received human nature ~without sin,
486 3, 15 | actively; even as ~Adam received his body materially from
487 3, 15 | words in human flesh, He ~received the strength of Damascus,
488 3, 16 | But the Divine ~Nature received nothing by participation
489 3, 19 | thou that thou hast not received?" ~Nevertheless, in a secondary
490 3, 20 | Ephesus (Part I, ch. xxvi) ~received: "Christ is neither servant
491 3, 21 | human nature He had already received ~certain gifts from His
492 3, 21 | gifts which He had not ~yet received, but which He expected to
493 3, 21 | Father for gifts already received in His human nature, by ~
494 3, 21 | give thanks for benefits received, and ask in prayer for those
495 3, 22 | Secondly, through Him we received ~the grace of salvation,
496 3, 22 | priesthood of ~Melchisedech, who received tithes from Abraham, in
497 3, 23 | written (Rm. 8:15): "You have received the spirit of ~adoption
498 3, 24 | of His grace we all have received, as it is ~written (Jn.
499 3, 25 | the ~Church, says: "I have received of the Lord that which also
500 3, 27 | this sanctification she received the fulness of ~grace?~(
1-500 | 501-803 |