Part, Question
1 1, 80 | temptation of our first parents, the serpent ~presented
2 1, 94 | 10) that "in our first ~parents there was undisturbed love
3 1, 97 | OBJ 2: Further, our first parents were created at the age
4 1, 97 | ad lit. ix, 4), our first parents ~did not come together in
5 1, 98 | impression in the soul (of the parents), which may easily have
6 1, 98 | and not only the first parents. From this it seems to ~
7 1, 99 | have ~been transmitted from parents, to the children.~Aquin.:
8 1, 99 | been ~assimilated to their parents as regards original righteousness.~
9 1, 99 | Homo i, 18): "If our first parents ~had lived so as not to
10 1, 99 | they - that is our first ~parents - had committed any evil
11 1, 99 | that even if our first ~parents had not sinned, any of their
12 1, 99 | greater perfection than their ~parents at the time of begetting.
13 1, 99 | time of begetting. Now the parents, as long as they begot ~
14 1, 99 | Wherefore neither would the parents have transmitted to their ~
15 1, 101 | in ~paradise, where their parents were already.~
16 1, 113 | blandishments as were our first ~parents," as Isidore says (De Summo
17 2, 60 | whereby we pay our debt to our parents or to our country; "Gratitude," ~
18 2, 81 | parent, or of any other ~parents, are transmitted to their
19 2, 81 | any ~sin from one of his parents by way of origin.~Aquin.:
20 2, 81 | receive from their first parents; even as in ~civil matters,
21 2, 81 | the sin of their immediate parents, according to Ex. ~20:5: "
22 2, 81 | are not ~transmitted by parents to their children: for a
23 2, 81 | species, are transmitted by parents to their children, unless
24 2, 81 | punishment on ~account of their parents, unless they share in their
25 2, 81 | bodily punishment on their parents' ~account, inasmuch as the
26 2, 81 | contract original ~sin from our parents, in so far as we were once
27 2, 87 | this man sinned, nor his parents . . . that he should be
28 2, 87 | sometimes punished for their ~parents, as in the case of high
29 2, 87 | but for those of their parents.~Aquin.: SMT FS Q[87] A[
30 2, 87 | e.g. on children for their parents, or on servants for their ~
31 2, 87 | are the property of ~their parents, and posterity, of their
32 2, 87 | being brought up amid their parents' ~crimes, both by becoming
33 2, 87 | and by imitating their ~parents' example, conforming to
34 2, 87 | the punishment of their parents, ~they fail to mend their
35 2, 87 | children can witness their ~parents' sins so as to imitate them,
36 2, 87 | to imitate them, and the parents can see their ~children'
37 2, 87 | up amid the sins of his parents, he is ~more eager to imitate
38 2, 100 | that man should honor his ~parents does not include that he
39 2, 100 | natural affection for his parents, so ~has he also for his
40 2, 100 | is a precept referring to parents, so should ~there have been
41 2, 100 | commandment about honoring ~one's parents. In general, as to all men,
42 2, 100 | to anyone except to one's parents. On ~the other hand parents
43 2, 100 | parents. On ~the other hand parents do not seem to be indebted
44 2, 100 | part of his father; and "parents love their children as being
45 2, 100 | that one which ~regards his parents. Among the other precepts
46 2, 100 | Therefore the precept regarding parents was fittingly placed after
47 2, 100 | about the honor due to parents, the other about the celebration
48 2, 100 | promise of reward. And since parents are already on ~the way
49 2, 100 | precept about honoring one's parents. ~The same applies to the
50 2, 100 | gives due honor to his parents and yet has not the habit
51 2, 100 | prescribing the honor due to parents, is added ~the precept about
52 2, 100 | 21:20) in the person of parents: "He ~slighteth hearing
53 2, 102 | pain: and also lest the ~parents, whose love for their children
54 2, 105 | irreverence towards one's parents, adultery ~and incest. In
55 2, 105 | children, the Law commanded parents to educate them by ~instructing
56 2, 105 | written (Dt. 21:20) that the parents had to say: ~"He slighteth
57 2, 106 | of the sin of our first parents deserved ~to be deprived
58 2, 10 | baptized against ~their parents' will?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
59 2, 10 | baptized ~against their parents' will?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
60 2, 10 | be baptized against their parents' will. For the bond of ~
61 2, 10 | the right of ~unbelieving parents' authority over their children:
62 2, 10 | be baptized against their parents' will.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
63 2, 10 | should they be left to their parents ~who would imbue them with
64 2, 10 | baptize them against their ~parents' wishes.~Aquin.: SMT SS
65 2, 10 | be taken away from their parents, and ~consecrated to God
66 2, 10 | baptized against their parents' will.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
67 2, 10 | against the will of their ~parents, although at times past
68 2, 10 | be baptized against their parents' wishes, in contradiction
69 2, 10 | easily be persuaded by ~their parents to renounce what they had
70 2, 10 | is not distinct from its ~parents as to its body, so long
71 2, 10 | enfolded in the care of its parents, which is like a ~spiritual
72 2, 10 | to be taken away from its parents' custody, or anything done ~
73 2, 10 | done ~to it against its parents' wish. As soon, however,
74 2, 10 | baptized, ~even against its parents' wish; but not before it
75 2, 10 | saved in the faith of their parents; whereby we are given to ~
76 2, 10 | understand that it is the parents' duty to look after the
77 2, 10 | is directed to God by its parents' reason, under whose ~care
78 2, 10 | unbelievers is the duty ~of their parents. Hence it is they whom the
79 2, 21 | concerning the honor due to parents, but not a ~prohibition
80 2, 21 | those who dishonor their parents. And since in order to be ~
81 2, 25 | with us by nature, our ~parents for instance, or our children.
82 2, 25 | about the honor due to our parents (Ex. 20:12). Therefore we ~
83 2, 25 | special duty to afford our ~parents the means of living . . .
84 2, 25 | our children than ~to our parents, since the Apostle says (
85 2, 25 | children to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the
86 2, 25 | for the parents, but the parents for the children." ~Therefore
87 2, 25 | his children more than his parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[26] A[
88 2, 25 | grace perfects nature. But parents naturally love their ~children
89 2, 25 | children more than his ~parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[26] A[
90 2, 25 | our children more than our parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[26] A[
91 2, 25 | love God first, then our parents, then our children, and
92 2, 25 | viii). First, because ~parents love their children as being
93 2, 25 | himself. Secondly, because ~parents know better that so and
94 2, 25 | children are nearer to their parents, as being part of ~them,
95 2, 25 | part of ~them, than their parents are to them to whom they
96 2, 25 | principle. Fourthly, because parents have loved longer, for the ~
97 2, 25 | duty of children to their parents consists chiefly in honor:
98 2, 25 | in honor: while ~that of parents to their children is especially
99 2, 25 | to be provided by ~their parents with what is good for them.
100 2, 25 | received to provide for ~his parents before all.~Aquin.: SMT
101 2, 25 | love himself more than his ~parents. Therefore he ought to love
102 2, 25 | wife also more than his parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[26] A[
103 2, 25 | greater than his love for his parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[26] A[
104 2, 25 | neighbors he should love ~his parents most. Therefore he ought
105 2, 25 | Therefore he ought to love his parents more than his ~wife.~Aquin.:
106 2, 25 | a man should love his ~parents more than his wife, because
107 2, 25 | more intensely, but his parents with greater reverence.~
108 2, 25 | man ought to succor his ~parents rather than his wife. He
109 2, 25 | more than we love Him, and parents love ~their children more
110 2, 25 | benefactors as God and our parents, from ~whom we have received
111 2, 28 | such as our children or our parents, we do not pity their ~distress,
112 2, 29 | a man ought to love his parents more than his children, ~
113 2, 29 | children to lay up for the ~parents," according to 2 Cor. 12:
114 2, 29 | a man receives from his parents: wherefore in ~paying back
115 2, 29 | the first place to our ~parents before all others, unless,
116 2, 29 | 4 Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 4: Parents are like superiors, and
117 2, 29 | love tends to honor their ~parents. Nevertheless in a case
118 2, 29 | children rather than one's parents, to abandon whom it is ~
119 2, 30 | precept ~about honoring our parents. For thus does the Apostle
120 2, 30 | precept about honoring our ~parents contains the promise, "that
121 2, 30 | subjection of children to their parents is founded ~on nature, wherefore
122 2, 30 | Children, obey your ~parents in the Lord." But, apparently,
123 2, 30 | give alms out of ~their parents' property. For it is their
124 2, 31 | about the ~honor due to parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[33] A[
125 2, 32 | 20:12) we must honor our ~parents - as united to us in nature
126 2, 60 | honor due to God and our ~parents, as the Philosopher states (
127 2, 60 | favors from others ~(our parents for instance) than from
128 2, 60 | property, to succor his ~parents, or those from whom he has
129 2, 61 | they be wicked, even as our parents, of whom it is ~written (
130 2, 61 | community: ~and in the same way parents and masters should be honored,
131 2, 63 | Whether it is lawful for parents to strike their children,
132 2, 63 | would seem unlawful for parents to strike their children,
133 2, 63 | Therefore neither should parents strike ~their children,
134 2, 63 | Therefore it is unlawful for parents to strike their children.~
135 2, 63 | therefore, it is lawful for parents to strike their children
136 2, 63 | states (Rhet. ii). Hence when parents are forbidden to provoke
137 2, 73 | comes derision of one's parents, wherefore it is written (
138 2, 77 | if one fail to give one's parents due reverence, while ~it
139 2, 78 | possible to make to one's parents an equal return of what
140 2, 78 | superiors, namely, "piety" to parents, and "religion" to God; ~
141 2, 79 | Sententiae], "Worship thy parents." Therefore ~religion directs
142 2, 86 | children are under their parents' power. Yet children ~may
143 2, 86 | without the consent of their parents. ~Therefore one is not hindered
144 2, 86 | puberty can be revoked by the parents or guardian (20, qu. ii, ~
145 2, 86 | unless it be annulled by her ~parents within a year (20, qu. ii,
146 2, 86 | under the care of their parents, or guardians in place of
147 2, 86 | guardians in place of their parents: ~wherefore in both events
148 2, 86 | way from the care of their parents; for this ~care is subject
149 2, 86 | can be annulled by their ~parents, under whose care they are
150 2, 86 | without the consent of their parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[88] A[
151 2, 95 | disrespectfully ~to one's parents, than to pay others the
152 2, 95 | the respect we owe to our parents. ~Now God should be honored
153 2, 95 | with the honor due to our parents, which can ~without sin
154 2, 99 | and government are our ~parents and our country, that have
155 2, 99 | is debtor chiefly to his parents and his country, after ~
156 2, 99 | to give worship to one's ~parents and one's country.~Aquin.:
157 2, 99 | 2~The worship due to our parents includes the worship given
158 2, 99 | who descend from the same parents, ~according to the Philosopher (
159 2, 99 | includes the worship due to our parents as a particular. Hence it ~
160 2, 99 | provides support for our parents?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101] A[
161 2, 99 | provide support for our parents. ~For, seemingly, the precept
162 2, 99 | provide support for one's ~parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101] A[
163 2, 99 | children to lay up for the parents." Therefore piety does not
164 2, 99 | oblige them ~to support their parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101] A[
165 2, 99 | extends not only to one's parents, but also to ~other kinsmen
166 2, 99 | one bound to support one's parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101] A[
167 2, 99 | children from supporting their parents. ~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101]
168 2, 99 | We owe something to our parents in two ways: that is to ~
169 2, 99 | 6) the ~honor due to our parents includes whatever support
170 2, 99 | beforehand, because ~naturally parents are not the successors of
171 2, 99 | but children ~of their parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[101] A[
172 2, 99 | all, but chiefly to our parents, and to others ~according
173 2, 99 | duty ~and homage to our parents and country, and to those
174 2, 99 | charity we bear towards our parents and country.~Aquin.: SMT
175 2, 99 | which pays homage ~to our parents and country. But things
176 2, 99 | duties of piety towards one's parents should be omitted for ~the
177 2, 99 | duties of piety towards one's parents should be ~omitted for the
178 2, 99 | a man who knows not his parents and other kinsmen, or who
179 2, 99 | just as we ~worship our parents by paying them the duties
180 2, 99 | hindered from supporting their parents, both on the ~score of poverty,
181 2, 99 | of piety towards one's ~parents should be omitted for the
182 2, 99 | refrain from paying one's ~parents the honor we owe them.~Aquin.:
183 2, 99 | duty and homage to one's parents according to the due ~mode.
184 2, 99 | if the worship of one's parents take one away from the ~
185 2, 99 | to pay worship to ~one's parents to the prejudice of God.
186 2, 99 | duties of piety towards one's parents should ~be omitted for the
187 2, 99 | the services due to our parents, we are not withdrawn ~from
188 2, 99 | that "when we find our parents to be a hindrance in our ~
189 2, 99 | from them." For if ~our parents incite us to sin, and withdraw
190 2, 99 | praised for leaving their parents and following our Lord, ~
191 2, 99 | 3: Whatever we give our parents out of piety is referred
192 2, 99 | Accordingly, ~if our carnal parents stand in need of our assistance,
193 2, 99 | in the ~world, if he has parents unable to find support without
194 2, 99 | prescribing the honoring of parents. Some say, however, that ~
195 2, 99 | he would be exposing his parents to danger, in the hope of
196 2, 99 | on the other hand, if the parents can find means of ~livelihood
197 2, 99 | not bound to support their parents except ~in cases of necessity,
198 2, 99 | pretext of supporting his parents, to leave ~the cloister
199 2, 99 | points efforts for ~his parents' support.~
200 2, 100 | paid also by piety to our parents, who excel in dignity. ~
201 2, 100 | done to God, nor to our parents. ~Consequently these matters
202 2, 100 | precept of honoring our parents which refers to piety. ~
203 2, 100 | that the persons of our parents and of our kindred are more ~
204 2, 100 | than the ~persons of one's parents, yet children are under
205 2, 100 | have received from their parents and their ~natural kinship
206 2, 100 | worship and honor to their parents than ~to virtuous persons
207 2, 102 | from reverence for one's ~parents, it is contained under piety;
208 2, 102 | 20): "Children, obey your parents in ~all things," and farther
209 2, 102 | masters, nor children their parents, in the question of ~contracting
210 2, 103 | The sin of disobedience to parents is reckoned (Rm. ~1:30;
211 2, 104 | from God, and ~from our parents. Now the honor which we
212 2, 104 | with which we repay our parents ~belongs to the virtue of
213 2, 104 | whereby we worship our parents, and ~observance, whereby
214 2, 104 | some, for instance, one's parents, as the Philosopher states ~(
215 2, 104 | a son receives from his parents ~namely, to be and to live,
216 2, 105 | written: "Disobedient to parents, ungrateful, wicked." etc.~
217 2, 106 | ignorance, perished with their ~parents (Gn. 19). Again, for the
218 2, 106 | copy the sins ~of their parents, and slaves the sins of
219 2, 106 | matters together with their parents, both because they are a
220 2, 106 | are a possession ~of their parents, so that their parents are
221 2, 106 | their parents, so that their parents are punished also in their ~
222 2, 106 | imitate the sins of their parents, and thus deserve to be ~
223 2, 120 | precept, about honoring one's parents, is fittingly ~expressed?~
224 2, 120 | precept, about honoring one's parents, ~is unfittingly expressed.
225 2, 120 | worship not only to one's parents, but also ~to one's country,
226 2, 120 | OBJ 3: Further, we owe our parents not merely honor but also
227 2, 120 | the mere honoring of one's parents is unfittingly prescribed.~
228 2, 120 | sometimes those who honor their parents die young, and ~on the contrary
229 2, 120 | our neighbor. Now to our parents, of all our neighbors, we
230 2, 120 | precept directing us to our ~parents, who are the particular
231 2, 120 | pay the ~debt due to our parents, a debt which is common
232 2, 120 | OBJ 2: The debt to one's parents precedes the debt to one'
233 2, 120 | because we are born of our parents that ~our kindred and country
234 2, 120 | they direct man to his ~parents rather than to his country
235 2, 120 | precept of honoring our parents is understood to command
236 2, 120 | Reverential honor is due to one's parents as such, whereas ~support
237 2, 120 | precept of honoring ~our parents: and this honor, as a kind
238 2, 120 | whatever else is due to our parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[122] A[
239 2, 120 | to those who honor their parents ~not only as to the life
240 2, 120 | favor of bodily life to our parents ~after God: wherefore he
241 2, 120 | wherefore he that honors his parents deserves the prolongation ~
242 2, 120 | he that honors ~not his parents deserves to be deprived
243 2, 120 | who are dutiful to their parents, are ~sooner deprived of
244 2, 120 | are undutiful to their ~parents, live longer.~Aquin.: SMT
245 2, 120 | pays what is due to his parents - which duty ~includes the
246 2, 152 | the guardianship of her parents, is a determinate ~species
247 2, 152 | with the consent of ~their parents." Therefore rape is not
248 2, 152 | away by force from her parents' house, and have carnal
249 2, 152 | taken away by force from her parents' ~house, and is forcibly
250 2, 152 | lawfully marry her with her parents' consent. ~Otherwise the
251 2, 152 | certain respect to his ~parents and therefore to his other
252 2, 152 | near degree from the same parents: so much so indeed that
253 2, 152 | blood, ~for instance between parents and children who are directly
254 2, 152 | children naturally owe their ~parents honor. Hence the Philosopher
255 2, 152 | directly but through their parents: and, as to ~this, becomingness
256 2, 155 | for instance ~God or one's parents: mercy relieves a neighbor'
257 2, 161 | in the sin of our first parents. ~For it is written (Gn.
258 2, 161 | knowledge resulted in our first parents from ~their inordinate desire
259 2, 161 | likeness to God our first ~parents did not covet, since such
260 2, 161 | Whether the sin of our first parents was more grievous than other
261 2, 161 | that the sin of our first parents was more grievous ~than
262 2, 161 | very ~easy for our first parents to avoid sin, because they
263 2, 161 | Therefore the sin of our first parents was more ~grievous than
264 2, 161 | Now the sin of our ~first parents was most severely punished,
265 2, 161 | Now the sin of our first parents was ~the first among sins
266 2, 161 | little." Now our ~first parents were established on the
267 2, 161 | as the pride of our first parents, as ~stated (A[2]).~Aquin.:
268 2, 162 | punishment of our first parents' sin?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[164]
269 2, 162 | punishment of our first ~parents' sin. For that which is
270 2, 162 | punishment of our first ~parents' sin.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[164]
271 2, 162 | Further, the sin of our first parents was the sin of particular ~
272 2, 162 | punishment of our first parents' sin.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[164]
273 2, 162 | descended from our first parents. ~Therefore if death were
274 2, 162 | punishment of our first parents' sin, it ~would follow that
275 2, 162 | not true, for our first parents ~lived a long time after
276 2, 162 | punishment of our first parents' sin, so also are ~death
277 2, 162 | through the sin of our first parents. Accordingly death is ~both
278 2, 162 | 1~Reply OBJ 3: Our first parents were made by God not only
279 2, 162 | in ~punishment of their parents' sins, inasmuch as the child
280 2, 162 | to the father, wherefore parents are often punished in their ~
281 2, 162 | 32]), "although our first parents lived ~thereafter many years,
282 2, 162 | punishments of our first parents are suitably ~appointed
283 2, 162 | punishments of our first ~parents are unsuitably appointed
284 2, 162 | punishment of our first parents' sin is transmitted ~to
285 2, 162 | described as mocking our first parents, already reduced ~through
286 2, 162 | was appointed to our first parents ~before their sin, so also
287 2, 162 | Now through sin our first parents gained in this, ~that their
288 2, 162 | resulting from our first parents' sin are ~unsuitably described.~
289 2, 162 | of their ~sin, our first parents were deprived of the Divine
290 2, 162 | transmitted from our first parents. And if a woman neither
291 2, 162 | much a mockery of our first parents as a deterrent to ~others,
292 2, 162 | imagine that our first parents were created with their
293 2, 163 | Para. 1/1 - OF OUR FIRST PARENTS' TEMPTATION (TWO ARTICLES)~
294 2, 163 | must now consider our first parents' temptation, concerning
295 2, 163 | temptation of our first parents was by suggestion. ~Now
296 2, 163 | creature. Since then our first parents were endowed with ~a spiritual
297 2, 168 | refuses ~due honor to his parents, which may also be the result
298 2, 183 | receive no goods from their parents and relations should be
299 2, 183 | sufficient income from ~their parents and their own possessions,
300 2, 185 | sufficient income from their parents and ~their own possessions,
301 2, 185 | after ~leaving his home and parents dwelt for three years in
302 2, 187 | through ~deference to one's parents?~(7) Whether parish priests
303 2, 187 | can be withdrawn by their parents or ~guardians. For it is
304 2, 187 | of ~her own accord, her parents or guardians, if they choose,
305 2, 187 | by the ~authority of his parents; though if he has not the
306 2, 187 | with the consent of their parents, be received into ~religion
307 2, 187 | taking a vow without her parents' consent: but ~the vow can
308 2, 187 | can be made void by her parents. Hence it is evident that
309 2, 187 | without prejudice to her parents' ~authority.~Aquin.: SMT
310 2, 187 | through ~deference to one's parents?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[189] A[
311 2, 187 | through deference to one's parents. For it is not lawful to
312 2, 187 | Now ~deference to one's parents comes under an obligation
313 2, 187 | concerning the honoring of our parents (Ex. 20:12); wherefore the
314 2, 187 | a return of duty to her ~parents." But the entrance to religion
315 2, 187 | omit deference to one's parents for the sake ~of entering
316 2, 187 | is more indebted to his parents than to those to ~whom he
317 2, 187 | despite of their duty to their parents.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[189] A[
318 2, 187 | were ~treating of piety, parents as such have the character
319 2, 187 | accidentally competent to parents to be assisted by ~their
320 2, 187 | must say that when their parents are in such ~need that they
321 2, 187 | despite of their duty to their parents. If, however, the parents' ~
322 2, 187 | parents. If, however, the parents' ~necessity be not such
323 2, 187 | the duty they owe their ~parents, enter religion even against
324 2, 187 | religion even against their parents' command, because ~after
325 2, 187 | Heb. 12:9), than obey our ~parents. Hence as we read (Mt. 8:
326 2, 187 | commandment of honoring our parents extends not only to ~bodily
327 2, 187 | commandment of ~honoring their parents, by praying for them and
328 2, 187 | in the world honor ~their parents in different ways as befits
329 3, 25 | children, as love for one's parents is greater, in no way are
330 3, 27 | of the children is their parents. ~Therefore the Blessed
331 3, 27 | be sanctified even in her parents, ~before animation.~Aquin.:
332 3, 27 | Consequently, though the parents of the Blessed Virgin were
333 3, 27 | because the honor of the parents reflects on the ~child,
334 3, 28 | united by being ~of the same parents, of the same nation, of
335 3, 29 | the marriage of Christ's parents, offspring, faith and sacrament.
336 3, 31 | Virgin, as received from ~her parents, was actually a part of
337 3, 31 | Virgin received from her parents was not the matter of Christ'
338 3, 34 | faith, but that of their parents or of the Church. The former ~
339 3, 35 | in man on the part of his parents there is a twofold ~relation,
340 3, 35 | the two ~relations in the parents, as considered by the intellect.
341 3, 35 | of the sin of our first ~parents, according to Gn. 2:17: "
342 3, 44 | this man sinned, nor his parents, that he should be born
343 3, 49 | race, for it is our ~first parents' sin, and by that sin heaven'
344 3, 49 | 24 that after our first parents' sin God "placed . ~. .
345 3, 52 | original sin either by their parents' faith or by ~any sacrament
346 3, 67 | charge of thus: ~that the parents of the child should hand
347 3, 67 | carefully instructed by their parents. ~If, however, they perceive
348 3, 68 | against the will of ~their parents?~(11) Whether anyone should
349 3, 68 | implied in ~the faith of their parents; since the latter are sometimes
350 3, 68 | their salvation if their parents be ~unbelievers, because,
351 3, 68 | the ~unbelief of their own parents, even if after Baptism these
352 3, 68 | against the ~will of their parents?~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[68] A[
353 3, 68 | against the will of their parents. For it is a matter of greater ~
354 3, 68 | temporal death, even if its parents through ~malice try to prevent
355 3, 68 | death, even against their parents' will.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
356 3, 68 | away from their ~carnal parents, and consecrated to God
357 3, 68 | against the will of their parents, they can ~receive Baptism,
358 3, 68 | under the care of their parents as long as they ~cannot
359 3, 68 | through the faith of their parents." ~Wherefore it would be
360 3, 68 | baptized against their parents' will; just as it would
361 3, 68 | natural affection for their parents. Therefore it is not the ~
362 3, 68 | unbelievers against their ~parents' will.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[
363 3, 68 | through the reason of its parents, ~under whose care it naturally
364 3, 70 | probable, however, ~that parents who were believers offered
365 Suppl, 13| in giving honor ~to one's parents or to the gods, as indeed
366 Suppl, 41| derive three things from our parents, namely "existence," "nourishment," ~
367 Suppl, 41| have certain and definite parents, and this would not be the
368 Suppl, 41| needs the support of ~both parents, although for a short time,
369 Suppl, 41| since the child needs the ~parents' care for a long time, there
370 Suppl, 43| I will take thee, if thy parents consent," and then the promise ~
371 Suppl, 43| I will take thee, if thy parents consent," and such a condition ~
372 Suppl, 43| can be ~arranged by the parents without the knowledge of
373 Suppl, 45| through ~bashfulness when her parents give her away to the bridegroom.
374 Suppl, 45| a case the words of the ~parents are taken as being the maid'
375 Suppl, 47| money, or the consent of the parents, and then the judgment about ~
376 Suppl, 47| 20): "Children, obey your parents in ~all things." Therefore
377 Suppl, 47| to keep the promise. Now parents promise future ~marriages
378 Suppl, 47| betrothal contracted by the parents ~would hold good without
379 Suppl, 49| united in ~marriage, since parents naturally "lay up" for their "
380 Suppl, 54| wherefore he says that "parents love their children as ~
381 Suppl, 54| that "children love their parents as being themselves ~something
382 Suppl, 54| who are born of the same parents," as he again says (Ethic. ~
383 Suppl, 54| to the ~reverence due to parents if the son marry his mother
384 Suppl, 54| united carnally to their ~parents does not come from the natural
385 Suppl, 54| But carnal copulation with parents is derogatory to the reverence
386 Suppl, 54| nature has instilled into parents solicitude in ~providing
387 Suppl, 54| reverence towards their parents: yet to no kind of animal
388 Suppl, 54| children or reverence for ~parents; but to other animals more
389 Suppl, 54| or less necessary to its parents, or the parents to their
390 Suppl, 54| necessary to its parents, or the parents to their offspring. ~Hence
391 Suppl, 55| having taken ~place, the parents should be debarred from
392 Suppl, 57| Para. 1/1~OBJ 2: Further, "Parents should lay up for their
393 Suppl, 59| also the first, since the parents endeavor to draw their ~
394 Suppl, 64| conceived: so that those parents who are not ashamed to come
395 Suppl, 65| and learning from their parents, in respect of which three
396 Suppl, 65| which three things the ~parents are bound to their children,
397 Suppl, 65| children remain a ~duty of the parents during a long period of
398 Suppl, 67| it is of natural law that parents should lay up for their ~
399 Suppl, 67| children should be their parents' heirs (2 Cor. ~12:14).
400 Suppl, 67| marriage, ~except in so far as parents have to provide for their
401 Suppl, 67| it is ~necessary that the parents remain together permanently;
402 Suppl, 68| although by natural ~law their parents are bound to provide for
403 Suppl, 68| bishop's care to compel both parents to provide for them.~Aquin.:
404 Suppl, 71| affection ~is towards their parents, in no wise are the bodies
405 Suppl, 75| vouchsafed - either ~to their parents, that the sin of nature
406 Suppl, 77| which is derived from one's parents would especially seem ~to
407 Suppl, 77| them is derived from the parents. If then the ~surplus food
408 Suppl, 92| be given by the maiden's parents, ~it happens sometimes that
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