|     Part, Question1   1, 10  |        beyond," eternity stands for age, as ~another rendering has
  2   1, 10  |             He endures beyond every age, i.e. beyond every kind ~
  3   1, 10  |        every kind ~of duration. For age is nothing more than the
  4   1, 10  |           eternal "Wisdom is before age." Therefore it ~is not simultaneously
  5   1, 10  |  Aeviternity is sometimes taken for age, that is, a space of ~a
  6   1, 39  |           fathers by reason ~of old age are sometimes feeble; lest
  7   1, 39  |         sometimes by ~reason of old age. "Wisdom" has likeness to
  8   1, 41  |           for instance, death, ~old age, and like ills. This appears
  9   1, 39  |           fathers by reason ~of old age are sometimes feeble; lest
 10   1, 39  |         sometimes by ~reason of old age. "Wisdom" has likeness to
 11   1, 41  |           for instance, death, ~old age, and like ills. This appears
 12   1, 95  |             and likewise as regards age; ~for some would have been
 13   1, 96  |           lost. Last of all, in old age, it does not suffice even ~
 14   1, 96  |       banish the breaking up of old age"; and (QQ. Vet. et Nov.
 15   1, 97  |         parents were created at the age of perfect ~development.
 16   1, 98  |        Further, the weakness of old age seems to correspond to that
 17   1, 98  |            been no weakness ~of old age. Therefore neither would
 18   1, 101 |             the ~humors, and by old age, as above explained (Q[97],
 19   1, 118 |            body of a man of perfect age would be more ~imperfect
 20   2, 37  |                A joyful mind maketh age ~flourishing: a sorrowful
 21   2, 53  |             lost either through old age or through death. Therefore ~
 22   2, 89  |           before a man comes to the age of discretion, the lack
 23   2, 89  |       discretion at that particular age, he will sin mortally, for
 24   2, 94  |       through the deficiency of his age, a ~child cannot use the
 25   2, 95  |           surpass us in experience, age and prudence, as to their ~
 26   2, 102 |             fulfilled in the eighth age, which is the age of those
 27   2, 102 |            eighth age, which is the age of those who ~rise from
 28   2, 102 |           the "red ~cow was of full age," because all Christ's works
 29   2, 107 |           enjoined on men of mature age, who can forthwith accomplish
 30   2, 10  |           when they come to perfect age, might easily be persuaded
 31   2, 30  |         take into consideration his age and his weakness; ~and sometimes
 32   2, 45  |             Further, the changes of age are according to nature.
 33   2, 45  |          Now prudence ~results from age, according to Job 12:12: "
 34   2, 61  |             be honored, because old age is a sign of virtue, ~though
 35   2, 61  |              4:8,9, ~"venerable old age is not that of long time,
 36   2, 61  |             a spotless life ~is old age." The rich ought to be honored
 37   2, 86  |        house, and yet but a girl in age," she ~is not bound by the
 38   2, 86  |           As soon as a man comes of age, if he be a freeman he is
 39   2, 86  |             boy or girl before the ~age of puberty can be revoked
 40   2, 86  |      validly make a ~vow before the age of fourteen.~Aquin.: SMT
 41   2, 86  |          even before ~attaining the age of puberty, is valid, unless
 42   2, 86  |       concur in children before the age of puberty, because in ~
 43   2, 87  |           for ~instance, before the age of fourteen, and persons
 44   2, 87  |         reason children before ~the age of puberty are debarred
 45   2, 91  |       worshiped by the just in any ~age of the world. Now before
 46   2, 92  |          great extent in the ~sixth age. Therefore idolatry had
 47   2, 92  |            no idolatry in the first age, owing to the recent ~remembrance
 48   2, 92  |            of one God. In the sixth age idolatry was banished ~by
 49   2, 99  |          father in the latter's old age, until at length he ~should
 50   2, 116 | covetousness comes naturally to old age and every kind of defect, ~
 51   2, 116 |             Ethic. iv, 1) that "old age and ~helplessness of any
 52   2, 117 |          prodigal on the way to old age, which is opposed to prodigality,
 53   2, 122 |              they attained the ripe age of ~eternity through the
 54   2, 145 |        fasting, on account of their age: for it is written (Joel
 55   2, 145 |            in accordance with their age. Nevertheless when some
 56   2, 145 |             on account of sickness, age, or some similar reason,
 57   2, 147 |           greater standing. For old age gives a man a certain standing;
 58   2, 162 |   condemning them to decline to old age."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[164]
 59   2, 182 |       reached the ~state of perfect age. Therefore seemingly also
 60   2, 187 |          confined to any particular age; He ceases not when ~men
 61   2, 187 |      tonsured unless he be of legal age and ~willing." But children,
 62   2, 187 |         seemingly, are not of legal age; nor have they a ~will of
 63   2, 187 |             But ~children under the age of fourteen ought not to
 64   2, 187 |            if any persons of unripe age ~bind themselves to religion,
 65   2, 187 |          maid under twelve years of age shall take the sacred veil
 66   2, 187 |     children, ~especially of unripe age, to be admitted or bound
 67   2, 187 |             as a rule, at about the age of fourteen, and girls at ~
 68   2, 187 |         fourteen, and girls at ~the age of twelve, this being what
 69   2, 187 |           being what is called "the age of puberty," ~although in
 70   2, 187 |           boys and girls under the ~age of puberty are naturally
 71   2, 187 |  Accordingly if before reaching the age of puberty a child makes
 72   2, 187 |          reason before reaching the age of puberty, ~he is bound,
 73   2, 187 |           the ~child has passed the age of puberty, his vow cannot
 74   2, 187 |          profession made before the age of puberty, ~however much
 75   2, 187 |             be professed before the age of ~puberty, they can, with
 76   2, 187 |            1~Reply OBJ 1: The legal age for receiving the tonsure
 77   2, 187 |       solemn vow of religion is the age of puberty, when a man is
 78   2, 187 |            own will; but before the age of puberty it is possible
 79   2, 187 |            have ~reached the lawful age to receive the tonsure and
 80   2, 187 |          Church before reaching the age of fourteen.~Aquin.: SMT
 81   2, 187 |             who has not reached the age of puberty is not ~rebuked (
 82   2, 187 |         command, because ~after the age of puberty every freeman
 83   2, 187 |        multitude of youth and every age, grave widows and ~aged
 84   3, 1   |       written (Ps. 91:11): "My old ~age in plentiful mercy" - i.e. "
 85   3, 1   |             by charity"; and to old age - i.e. the sixth age - on
 86   3, 1   |            old age - i.e. the sixth age - on account of ~the number
 87   3, 1   |            Christ came in the sixth age. And although ~youth and
 88   3, 1   |             although ~youth and old age cannot be together in a
 89   3, 1   |            Christ came in the sixth age - i.e. in the old age -
 90   3, 1   |         sixth age - i.e. in the old age - of the ~human race.~Aquin.:
 91   3, 7   |             advanced ~in wisdom and age and grace with God and men."
 92   3, 7   |         wisdom and grace even as in age, since in the course of
 93   3, 12  |             advanced in wisdom and ~age and grace with God and men";
 94   3, 12  |     knowledge and grace, even as in age, since as His age ~increased
 95   3, 12  |             as in age, since as His age ~increased He wrought greater
 96   3, 12  |           time, i.e. in His perfect age; and this is plain from
 97   3, 12  |         increased in "knowledge and age" together.~Aquin.: SMT TP
 98   3, 12  |            empiric knowledge, as in age, as stated ~above (A[2]).
 99   3, 12  |             A[2]). Now as a fitting age is required for a man to
100   3, 12  |           nothing unbecoming to His age; and hence He did not give ~
101   3, 12  |             the twelfth year of His age He ~deigned to question
102   3, 12  |           not vouchsafed before the age of perfection."~Aquin.:
103   3, 33  |              advanced in wisdom and age." Therefore it seems for
104   3, 33  |          But Christ at ~the perfect age was of becoming and middle
105   3, 36  |             the different stages of age from babyhood to youth, ~
106   3, 36  |         also by ~people advanced in age and virtue": whose testimony
107   3, 36  |        worked miracles at an ~early age, there would have been no
108   3, 36  |          work miracles at an ~early age. For people would have thought
109   3, 39  |           have been baptized at the age ~of thirty.~Aquin.: SMT
110   3, 39  |       longer time, beginning at the age of twenty, ~or even before.
111   3, 39  |             was beginning about the age ~of thirty years."~Aquin.:
112   3, 39  |          for which purpose perfect ~age is required, such as is
113   3, 39  |            required, such as is the age of thirty. Thus we read (
114   3, 39  |             to be ~baptized at this age which admits of all sins;
115   3, 39  |             baptized at the perfect age, we are ~given to understand
116   3, 39  |            unto the measure of the ~age of the fulness of Christ."
117   3, 39  |           youth, but at the perfect age. To faith, ~because in this
118   3, 39  |             had reached the perfect age: to humility, lest anyone ~
119   3, 39  |         before attaining to perfect age.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[39] A[
120   3, 39  |         after reaching ~the perfect age. But, as Gregory Nazianzen
121   3, 39  |            attained to ~the perfect age, when the time came for
122   3, 42  |            are reckoned not only in age and authority, but also ~
123   3, 43  |            thirty-first year of His age. Therefore it ~seems that
124   3, 43  |             He reached the ~perfect age, as we stated above, in
125   3, 46  |           not in young, but in old, age.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[46] A[
126   3, 46  |             and rising ~at an early age Christ might exhibit beforehand
127   3, 46  |             unto the measure of the age of the ~fulness of Christ."~
128   3, 69  |          they arrive at the perfect age. But this is evidently false, ~
129   3, 70  |        circumcision, in ~the eighth age (which is the age of those
130   3, 70  |            eighth age (which is the age of those that rise again),
131   3, 71  |            having come to the right age, will give ~its assent to
132   3, 71  |          when it comes to the right age, ~else he would say: "He
133   3, 72  |            attaining to the perfect age, and being able to perform
134   3, 72  |           is brought to the perfect age. So ~therefore does man
135   3, 72  |             arrives at the perfect ~age, as it were, of the spiritual
136   3, 72  |        which belongs to the perfect age. Now ~when man comes to
137   3, 72  |           when man comes to perfect age he begins at once to have
138   3, 72  |            man to perfect spiritual age. But it is evident, from
139   3, 72  |         when he has come to perfect age. And therefore by the sacrament
140   3, 72  |             come spiritually to the age of virility, according to
141   3, 72  |          can be brought to ~perfect age unless he be first born:
142   3, 72  |             spiritually to perfect ~age. But perfect age is inconsistent
143   3, 72  |           perfect ~age. But perfect age is inconsistent with childhood.
144   3, 72  |           this sacrament to perfect age. Now the intention of nature
145   3, 72  |              should come to perfect age: yet this is ~sometimes
146   3, 72  |        birth and perfect spiritual ~age belong, is immortal; and
147   3, 72  |           and just as it can in old age attain to ~spiritual birth,
148   3, 72  |       attain to perfect (spiritual) age in youth or ~childhood;
149   3, 72  |             2: As stated above, the age of the body does not affect
150   3, 72  |            perfection of ~spiritual age, of which it is written (
151   3, 72  |           Wis. 4:8): "Venerable old age is ~not that of long time,
152   3, 72  |        earthly ~contests fitness of age, physique and rank are required;
153   3, 72  |           equally to all, to every ~age, and to either sex." Again,
154   3, 72  |           soul, to which spiritual ~age belongs, is immortal. Wherefore
155   3, 72  |             unto the measure of the age of the fulness of Christ."
156   3, 72  |            perfection of ~spiritual age, as stated above (AA[2],
157   3, Note|          was under ~thirty years of age. Everywhere it reveals the
158 Suppl, 6 |           as they shall come to the age of discretion."~Aquin.:
159 Suppl, 11|     instance, by lack of knowledge, age, ~or the like: so that by
160 Suppl, 39|           appointed a certain fixed age in those who receive ~Orders.
161 Suppl, 39|         raised to Orders before the age of ~discretion is sometimes
162 Suppl, 39|             in the minor orders the age of discretion ~is required
163 Suppl, 43|           fittingly assigned as the age for betrothal?~Aquin.: SMT
164 Suppl, 43|          fittingly assigned as the ~age for betrothal. For a contract
165 Suppl, 43|          can be arranged before the age of seven ~years as well
166 Suppl, 43|              a boy of five years of age was carried off by the devil ~
167 Suppl, 43|          can take place ~before the age of seven years.~Aquin.:
168 Suppl, 43|          But for marriage ~the same age is not assigned to boy and
169 Suppl, 43|        apparent ~in boys before the age of seven. Therefore they
170 Suppl, 43|       become betrothed ~before that age.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[43] A[
171 Suppl, 43|          and subsequently after the age of seven and before the
172 Suppl, 43|             of seven and before the age of ~maturity renew their
173 Suppl, 43|           be ~contracted before the age of seven.~Aquin.: SMT XP
174 Suppl, 43|       Therefore if one be of mature age, he can contract a betrothal ~
175 Suppl, 43|        years old, since the lack of age in one is ~more than counterbalanced
176 Suppl, 43|              those who at about the age of puberty, but before it, ~
177 Suppl, 43|             before yet close on the age of ~puberty, they are to
178 Suppl, 43|              1/1~I answer that, The age of seven years is fixed
179 Suppl, 43|         wherefore ~children at that age are sent to school. But
180 Suppl, 43|            firm will. Hence at that age ~betrothals can be contracted.
181 Suppl, 43|       person before they ~reach the age of puberty, either of them
182 Suppl, 43|          when they reach the proper age, whence they are ~understood
183 Suppl, 43|          Reply OBJ 3: Regarding the age for the marriage contract
184 Suppl, 43|            is necessary to be of an age adapted to ~procreation.
185 Suppl, 43|             Anim. vii), whereas the age is the same in ~both for
186 Suppl, 43|            hence it is that the one age is assigned for both as
187 Suppl, 43|            regard to boys under the age of seven ~does not result
188 Suppl, 43|          parties are close upon the age of seven, the contract of ~
189 Suppl, 43|            on account of ~deficient age; since what is not cannot
190 Suppl, 43|           null before the requisite age. Therefore it cannot be
191 Suppl, 43|             they come to the lawful age, they should seek a dissolution
192 Suppl, 52|        corruption, defect, and ~old age are contrary to nature,
193 Suppl, 55|            it take place before the age of seven ~years; or if a
194 Suppl, 55|     promises marriage be lacking in age, or be under a solemn ~vow
195 Suppl, 55|             is betrothed before the age of puberty and after the
196 Suppl, 55|            of puberty and after the age of seven years, ~with a
197 Suppl, 55|              with a woman who is of age, from such a contract there
198 Suppl, 55|           not actual, since at that age the boy who is insensible
199 Suppl, 57|            not twenty-five years of age, nor a woman can adopt,
200 Suppl, 57|         father or, if he has, is of age. There can be no ~adoption
201 Suppl, 57|           than twenty-five years of age, or a woman, ~cannot adopt
202 Suppl, 57|             and free, youth and old age ~(Gal. 3:28; Col. 3:11).
203 Suppl, 57|          when the adopted ~comes of age, the latter can marry her.
204 Suppl, 57|            when the child ~comes of age, they can be married.~Aquin.:
205 Suppl, 58|       MADNESS, INCEST AND DEFECTIVE AGE (FIVE ARTICLES)~We must
206 Suppl, 58|              incest, and defective ~age. Under this head there are
207 Suppl, 58|           is?~(5) Whether defective age is?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[58]
208 Suppl, 58|         Para. 1/1~Whether defective age is an impediment to marriage?~
209 Suppl, 58|           would seem that deficient age is not an impediment to ~
210 Suppl, 58|        would seem that ~before that age their reason is not sufficiently
211 Suppl, 58|           ought seemingly to be the age fixed for marrying. ~Yet
212 Suppl, 58|           be contracted before that age. Therefore lack of the ~
213 Suppl, 58|    Therefore lack of the ~appointed age is not an impediment to
214 Suppl, 58|             the fourteenth ~year of age. Therefore neither could
215 Suppl, 58|           person marry if defective age were ~an impediment.~Aquin.:
216 Suppl, 58|         woman can marry before ~the age of fourteen. Therefore a
217 Suppl, 58|            to marriage. But lack of age is neither ~perpetual nor
218 Suppl, 58|           marriage debt ~before the age of fourteen (De Animal.
219 Suppl, 58|       natural, it must have a fixed age ~by defect of which it is
220 Suppl, 58|            be contracted before the age of discretion when each ~
221 Suppl, 58|          Now for the most part this age is the fourteenth year in
222 Suppl, 58|     perfection before the aforesaid age, so that nature ~and reason
223 Suppl, 58|     developed to supply the lack of age, the ~marriage is not annulled.
224 Suppl, 58|       parties who marry before the ~age of puberty have marital
225 Suppl, 58|    intercourse before the aforesaid age, their ~marriage is none
226 Suppl, 58|             that woman comes to the age of puberty sooner ~than
227 Suppl, 58|   impediment arising from defective age, like that which ~arises
228 Suppl, 59|         child has reached a perfect age, and then it is ~free to
229 Suppl, 59|        mother, or ~else it is under age, and then it should be given
230 Suppl, 67|          offspring comes to perfect age. But that provision ~be
231 Suppl, 70|           from his saying that "old age is an ~affection not of
232 Suppl, 74|            qu. 58) "as to the last ~age of the human race, which
233 Suppl, 74|           will consist: even so old age, which is man's last age,
234 Suppl, 74|            age, which is man's last age, has no fixed time ~according
235 Suppl, 77|             die ~before the perfect age. Nor does this derogate
236 Suppl, 78|          rise again in the youthful age?~(2) Whether they will be
237 Suppl, 78|         will rise again of the same age?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] A[
238 Suppl, 78|          same, namely ~the youthful age. Because God will take nothing
239 Suppl, 78|   especially from the blessed. Now ~age pertains to the perfection
240 Suppl, 78|        perfection of man, since old age is the age that ~demands
241 Suppl, 78|           man, since old age is the age that ~demands reverence.
242 Suppl, 78|           rise again of a youthful ~age.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] A[
243 Suppl, 78|           Para. 1/1~OBJ 2: Further, age is reckoned according to
244 Suppl, 78|           those who were of greater age to be brought back to a ~
245 Suppl, 78|         brought back to a ~youthful age.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] A[
246 Suppl, 78|             rise again of the same ~age, it is more fitting that
247 Suppl, 78|            should rise again in the age of ~childhood.~Aquin.: SMT
248 Suppl, 78|             unto the measure of the age of the fulness of Christ."~
249 Suppl, 78|       Christ rose again of youthful age, which begins about the
250 Suppl, 78|              which begins about the age of ~thirty years, as Augustine
251 Suppl, 78|            rise again of a youthful age.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] A[
252 Suppl, 78|           most perfect stage in the age of youth. Therefore ~all
253 Suppl, 78|             will rise again of that age.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] A[
254 Suppl, 78|            which is in the youthful age, at which ~the movement
255 Suppl, 78|          Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 1: Old age calls for reverence, not
256 Suppl, 78|            the reverence due to old age on account of ~the fulness
257 Suppl, 78|              but the defect of old ~age will not be in them.~Aquin.:
258 Suppl, 78|            Reply OBJ 2: We speak of age not as regards the number
259 Suppl, 78|         been formed in the youthful age on account of the particular ~
260 Suppl, 78|     perfection which it has in ~the age of youth, and not to that
261 Suppl, 78|      perfection which it has in the age of a ~child, wherein the
262 Suppl, 78|         will rise again of the same age. Therefore the dimensive ~
263 Suppl, 78|           to rise again of the same age, not as though the same
264 Suppl, 83|         those who die under perfect age will rise again in the stature ~
265 Suppl, 85|           world, which is the ~last age of all, and it is not stated
266 Suppl, 85|           duration appointed to old age, which is the last ~age
267 Suppl, 85|             age, which is the last ~age of man, since sometimes
268 Suppl, 86|         before reaching the perfect age. Therefore they need ~not
269 Suppl, 86|         before reaching the perfect age ~will be present at the
270 Suppl, 95|       faileth; who is in a decrepit age, and that is in care ~about
 
 |