105-contr | conve-glass | gone-obscu | obsta-sever | shamb-youth
bold = Main text
Part, Chapter, Paragraph grey = Comment text
505 ApCreed, 5 | was seen upon earth ~and conversed with men."4 Another example
506 LordPray, 8, 1 | evil and from affliction by converting them to his good. This is
507 ApCreed, 14 (2) | Apostles had for object thus to convey ~an important truth, the
508 10Command, 7 (2) | and when he cannot be convicted of open dishonesty and malice,
509 LordPray, 5 (9) | that we may be thoroughly convinced of the fact that upon Him
510 Preface, 2 (8) | the beautiful "O Sacrum Convivium." The Prayer said by the
511 LordPray | prayers our devotion grows cool; hence Our Lord taught us
512 Sacramen, 2 (11) | example, has the quality of ~cooling as well as of making clean,
513 10Command, 6, 1 | of murder when his anger cools, or of fornication when
514 10Command, 2, 2 | disciples plucking the ears of corn on the ~Sabbath, as we read
515 ApCreed, 11 (11) | animae, sicut anima vita corporis."~ ~
516 Preface, 2 | Office ~for the Feast of Corpus Christi" with its familiar
517 LordPray, 1, 1 | by Him: "Reject not the correction of the Lord; and do not
518 LordPray, 4 (6) | propose to us, as the sole corrective of all our evils, a conformity
519 Intro | sufficiently developed to grasp correctly a ~religious truth without
520 Intro | explanation of the Sacraments is correlated with ~the Tenth Article
521 Intro | The principle of doctrinal correlation is frequently in ~evidence.
522 Question, 1, 3 | any errors to-day which ~correspond somewhat to the other errors
523 ApCreed, 15, 3 | the pain of loss which corresponds to aversion, and is a greater
524 Preface, 4 | faith. Numerous Synods and Councils of the Church at this time ~
525 ApCreed, 7, 1 | power and free will: "I am counted among them that go down
526 ApCreed, 14, 4 | not be ~brilliant: "Their countenances shall be as faces burnt." 20
527 HailMary, 2 | received the Angels with all ~courtesy and showed them reverence.
528 10Command, 4, 1 | that judges in the civil courts are ~murderers, who condemn
529 10Command, 5 | and hath forgotten the covenant of ~her God."7~ ~Thirdly,
530 Sacramen | hidden manner under the cover of visible things. The ~
531 ApCreed, 15, 1 | thing fully satisfy the craving of man. God ~only satisfies
532 ApCreed, 3, 1 | things, and He not only creates the form but also the matter. ~
533 ApCreed, 3, 1 | difference between ~making and creating. To create is to make something
534 10Command, 7 (2) | the strongest claim for credit. ~Such testimony, therefore,
535 ApCreed, 8, 1 | yielded up the ghost; He cried out with a loud ~voice,8
536 Sacramen, 0 (3) | the images of the Saints, crosses, and the like, ~although
537 Preface, 1 | six more years. They ~were crowded years of writing, teaching,
538 ApCreed, 6, 2 | ridiculed, spat upon, ~bruised, crowned with thorns, given to drink
539 ApCreed, 12, 4 | St. Peter is called the crowning ~head.28~ ~The firmness
540 Preface, 1 | ecstasy, and a voice from the crucifix above the altar was heard
541 Question, 1, 7 | men who died before the crucifixion of Our Lord?~ ~4. Discuss
542 10Command, 4 (10)| motives of ~ambition or cruelty, but by a pure desire to
543 10Command, 4 (1) | mandatory and commands us to cultivate charity, peace, ~and friendship
544 ApCreed, 11 (11) | Cum ipse Deus sit vita animae,
545 LordPray, 7, 2 | The devil proceeds most cunningly in tempting us. He operates
546 10Command, 2, 2 | the ~Sabbath the Saviour cured one having a withered hand,
547 10Command, 1 (1) | with an oath and teems with curses and imprecations? To such ~
548 10Command, 0, 2 | similar ~to this in the customs of men. Reverence is due
549 Sacramen, 4 (25) | Ps. cv. 39.~ ~
550 LordPray, 4 (25) | Ps. cxix. 5.~ ~
551 LordPray, 2 (12) | Ps. cxlii. 6.~ ~
552 LordPray, 1 (51) | Ps. cxliv. 18.~ ~
553 ApCreed, 14 (22) | Ps. cxlix. 8.~ ~
554 10Command, 0 (11)| Ps. cxlv. 3.~ ~
555 10Command, 2 (41)| Summa Theol.," III, Q. cxlvii, ~art. 5).~ ~
556 ApCreed, 3 (7) | Ps. cxlviii. 5.~ ~
557 HailMary, 9 (39) | Ps. cxvii. 26.
558 10Command, 1 (35)| Ps. cxxiii. 8.~ ~
559 LordPray, 4 (27) | Ps. cxxv. 6.~ ~
560 10Command, 9 (16)| Ps. cxxvi. 1.~ ~
561 LordPray, 0 (13) | Ad Probam," Epist. cxxx.~ ~
562 LordPray, 2 (11) | Ps. cxxxv. 6.~ ~
563 ApCreed, 10 (25) | Ps., cxxxviii. 8.~ ~
564 Note | JOSEPH B. COLLINS, S.S., D.D., PH.D.~ ~ ~
565 LordPray | is good for him. St. John Damascene says: "Prayer is the asking
566 HailMary, 6 | that is, remedies against dangers, "hang therefrom."17 Likewise, ~
567 ApCreed, 1 | his seal, no one would dare to say that those letters
568 10Command, 1 (1) | Commandment from ~shamelessly and daringly outraging His divine majesty
569 10Command, 7 | his neighbor is like a ~dart and a sword and a sharp
570 Preface, 1 (1) | P. mandonnet, "Date de la naissance de S. Thomas
571 Preface, 1 | same Pontiff, in a Brief dated August 4, ~1880, designated
572 Preface, 1 (4) | vexed question of exact dates in the life of St. Thomas,
573 10Command, 0, 2 | distributor, ~that is, "dator" of all things, because
574 ApCreed, 8 | of the ~widow,5 and the daughter of the Ruler of the synagogue.6
575 Sacramen, 7 | seven orders: priesthood, ~deaconate, subdeaconate, acolyte,
576 Sacramen, 7 (32) | sacred orders (priesthood, deaconship. subdeaconship) and ~minor
577 LordPray, 2 | if they shall drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt
578 ApCreed, 14, 2 | He will not be ~blind or deaf or bear any kind of physical
579 ApCreed, 2 | causes and method of God's dealing with men. ~"I wish that
580 10Command, 4, 2 | us to deeds. In all our dealings ~we should observe two things,
581 Question, 3, 3 | power would cease at the deaths of the Apostles?~ ~4. Discuss
582 Intro | other ages, "truths are decayed, they are diminished among ~
583 ApCreed, 4, 2 | word and not ~hearers only, deceiving your own selves."23~ ~The
584 10Command, 3, 3 | thy father, and he will declare to thee; thy elders and
585 Intro | prove it from the infallible decrees of the Church, from the
586 Preface, 3 | noteworthy that the famed "Decretum pro Armenis" (Instruction
587 Intro | The medieval theologians deemed it ~inadvisable to appeal
588 ApCreed, 14, 2 | bear any kind of physical defect: "The dead shall rise ~again
589 ApCreed, 3, 1 | but mixed with evil and defective, they ~believed that all
590 ApCreed, 14, 2 | mean, wholly free from the defects of ~the present life.13~ ~(
591 10Command, 2, 2 | that they were not able to ~defend themselves on the Sabbath,
592 10Command, 7 (8) | applies to plaintiffs, ~defendants, promoters, representatives,
593 Question, 1, 15 | of man ~are set forth and defended.~ ~2. The true end of love
594 ApCreed, 10, 3 | themselves accusing or also defending one another, in the day
595 ApCreed, 6, 1 | man incurs by sin is the defilement of his soul. Just ~as virtue
596 ApCreed, 6, 1 | blood, and hence when one ~defiles one's soul by sin, one offers
597 LordPray, 5 | goods burden others and defraud them. This vicious practice
598 ApCreed, 3 | things arranged in different ~degrees of beauty and worth, and
599 ApCreed, 5 (24) | II Peter, i, 4. "God deigned to assume the lowliness
600 ApCreed, 5, 2 | assuming a living ~body and deigning to be born of the Virgin,
601 LordPray, 4 (6) | the divine will. Now, God deigns to propose to us, as the
602 10Command, 7 (2) | The witness swears by the ~Deity and thus pledges God's holy
603 Sacramen, 5 (28) | priest possessing ordinary or delegated jurisdiction, as is ~evident
604 10Command, 7, 1 | One should not listen deliberately to such ~things, but ought
605 ApCreed, 6, 2 | My brow;" how falsely to delicacies of the ~table, for "in My
606 10Command, 0, 1 | neighbor.~ ~Now God, in delivering the law to Moses, gave him
607 ApCreed, 15, 3 | salvation. If some hope of delivery from their punishments ~
608 LordPray, 6 (16) | subsist between all men demand of each of us that, being
609 Question, 1, 9 | humility and meekness, what is demonstrated by the Ascension ~into heaven?~ ~
610 ApCreed, 14 (2) | dies with the body, and denies ~that both are to be raised
611 Preface, 3 | practical instruction, as Denzinger points out. 11~ ~The latest
612 ApCreed, 5, 1 | would ~have the Holy Spirit deposit a heavenly body in the Blessed
613 ApCreed, 7, 1 | it was punished by being ~deprived of the beatific vision;
614 10Command, 6 (9) | inasmuch as it not only deprives another of his property,
615 Preface, 2 | are exhaustive, of great ~depth, and of permanent value.
616 Sacramen, 3 | such ~persons are not truly deputed to baptize outside of cases
617 Preface, 3 (10) | Mandonnet, "Des Ecrits," etc., 66; Grabmann, "
618 Sacramen, 3, 2 | thou shalt see the Spirit ~descending, and remaining upon Him,
619 Question, 5 | between Mary and Eve.~ ~12. Describe the visitation of Mary to
620 Question, 1, 9 | Ascension ~into heaven as it is described by St. Luke in the Acts
621 ApCreed, 1 (1) | principal parts. The first part describes the First Person of ~the
622 ApCreed, 7 (5) | temptation of Our Lord in the desert.~ ~
623 LordPray, 3 (23) | be found no traitor, no deserter, and that all may so act
624 10Command, 3, 2 | dishonor their parents ~deserve to forfeit their lives: "
625 10Command, 4 (10)| caused, not by intent or design, but by ~accident, is not
626 ApCreed, 12 (2) | word was afterwards used to designate the ~Christian society only,
627 Preface, 1 | Brief dated August 4, ~1880, designated St. Thomas Patron of all
628 LordPray, 6 | which they have in mind. "Designs are strengthened by counsels."1
629 LordPray, 5 | wanteth nothing of all that he desireth; yet God doth not give him
630 LordPray, 6, 1 | As the Apostle says: "Who despairing, have given themselves up
631 ApCreed, 7, 1 | therefore, descended there, and despoiled the devil of ~everything
632 ApCreed, 7, 1 | taking away his prey:7 "And despoiling the ~principalities and
633 Preface, 1 | sent two of ~her sons and a detachment of soldiers to intercept
634 Question, 2, 1 | COMMANDMENT~ ~1. Recall in detail the circumstances when God
635 Preface, 4 | Christian Doctrine by giving detailed attention to ~the Creed,
636 ApCreed, 14, 4 | because they shall never deteriorate and, although ~burning eternally
637 10Command, 1 (1) | Angels glorify. Men are not deterred by this Commandment from ~
638 LordPray, 4 (23) | will be done,' we expressly detest the works of the flesh,
639 10Command, 0, 1 | is the greatest and most detestable of all ~sins. Even now there
640 10Command, 7, 1 | and the seventh His soul ~detesteth . . . him that soweth discord
641 10Command, 1, 1 | a lie."6 Or, ~again, you detract from His power, as if He
642 LordPray | me a return of love, they detracted me, but I gave myself to
643 ApCreed, 5 (20) | homo, ut hominem faceret Deum."~ ~
644 10Command, 5, 1 | in Leviticus (xx. 10) and Deuteronomy (xxii. 22). Sometimes ~the
645 Intro | powers are not sufficiently developed to grasp correctly a ~religious
646 Preface, 1 | career, which was marked by developing intellectual power and ~
647 LordPray, 7, 2 | but to give consent is devilish.~ ~But does God lead one
648 Preface, 2 (8) | Eucharistic poem, ~"Adoro te devote," is also probably by St.
649 10Command, 3, 3 | reasonable, but because of the ~dictates of our conscience. Because "
650 LordPray, 6 (4) | a sin" (Oxford English Dictionary). What we pray for is that
651 LordPray, 4, 3 | wills to put into effect diet, medicine, and other needs.
652 Sacramen, 5 (27) | this Sacrament. That it differs from the other ~Sacraments
653 10Command, 6 | restitution. Concerning spiritual ~dignities: "Amen, amen, I say to you,
654 Sacramen, 7 (32) | salvation with supreme care and diligence." Roman ~Catechism," "Holy
655 10Command, 7 | the law. "When after ~most diligent inquisition, they shall
656 ApCreed, 3, 2 | Let us not, therefore, diminish his ~dignity by sin and
657 Sacramen, 7 (32) | placed over the various dioceses to ~govern, not only the
658 ApCreed, 11, 2 | Thou hast made."18 ~Thus, Dionysius says: "Divine love did not
659 ApCreed, 13 (6) | Immersion is the act of dipping or plunging the subject
660 ApCreed, 1 | from faith is that right direction which it gives ~to our present
661 LordPray, 7, 2 | forsake me."23 God, however, directs man by the fervor of charity
662 ApCreed, 4 (9) | Among the dirferent comparisorls brought forth
663 10Command, 5, 1 | bodily, which is to his disadvantage ~since punishment of the
664 ApCreed, 10, 1 | despair; but this despair disappears from men ~if they are to
665 HailMary, 9 | tree, just as the sinner is disappointed in ~his sins. We must seek
666 Preface, 1 | Countess Theodora completely disapproved of this journey, and sent
667 10Command, 3, 1 | mother . . . he cannot be ~My disciple."17 This is to say that
668 10Command, 7, 1 | detesteth . . . him that soweth discord among brethren."14 Fourthly,
669 10Command, 7, 2 | thus: "Even thy speech doth discover thee."18 Even so, some men
670 HailMary, 9 | the contrary, she at ~once discovered she was naked and was stricken
671 ApCreed, 2, 1 | revealing the future or discovering hidden things. We must, ~
672 10Command, 2, 2 | judgment,"33 that is to say, discretion. ~Wherefore, we read that
673 ApCreed, 10, 2 | whose works are not to be discussed because, as St. John says: "
674 Intro | of ~the truths they were discussing. In no one's career, perhaps,
675 ApCreed, 13, 1 | iniquities; who healeth all ~thy diseases."10 Three things must be
676 10Command, 6 (21)| difficult to emerge and disengage oneself from [ill-~gotten
677 10Command, 3, 1 | father without honor is the disgrace of ~his son."12~ ~Again,
678 10Command, 7 (2) | cannot be convicted of open dishonesty and malice, even the ~judge
679 LordPray, 8 (15) | suppliant and graciously dismisses him after He has kindly
680 ApCreed, 1 | The devil would have us ~disobey God and not be subject to
681 LordPray, 4 (6) | this state of misery by disobeying and despising the divine
682 10Command, 2, 1 | just as the darkness is dispelled with the rising ~of the
683 LordPray, 6, 2 | are by him permitted can dispense these merits where it is
684 ApCreed, 13, 1 | powers these Sacraments are dispensed. Nor need one note the life
685 Sacramen, 2 (11) | Although God is the author and ~dispenser of the Sacraments, He nevertheless
686 10Command, 4 (27)| even though he does not display his wrath. So also he who
687 10Command, 2 (29)| month. The Lord here is displeased not with the external ~ritual
688 10Command, 1, 3 | unfaithful and foolish promise displeaseth Him."38~ ~ ~ ~
689 10Command, 0, 2 | corruptible man."14 This is highly displeasing to God: "I will not give
690 LordPray, 1, 1 | and "with great favor disposest of us."3 God is our Father
691 LordPray, 6 (11) | of the penitent "and the disposition can be such that in virtue
692 Preface, 1 | Testaments, theological ~disputations; above all, in 1267 or 1268
693 ApCreed, 2 | Divine Providence ~seems to disregard human affairs. Hence the
694 ApCreed, 2 | number of heads often brings dissension in their subjects. But since ~
695 10Command, 9 (4) | these two Commandments are dissimilar; ~how one covetousness looks
696 ApCreed, 6 (2) | that when His soul was ~dissociated from His body, His Divinity
697 Sacramen, 8 (33) | highest perfection. Moreover, ~dissolubility of marriage is immediately
698 ApCreed, 14 (11) | resurrection they were subject to ~dissolution; but when reanimated they
699 ApCreed, 9 (10) | power and traversed the distant regions ~of the earth (Acts,
700 ApCreed, 12 (4) | The distinctive marks of the Church are
701 ApCreed, 1 (1) | of faith whatever must be distinctly and separately believed
702 Sacramen, 2 (13) | perform a sacred act, and distinguishes us by some mark one from
703 ApCreed, 3, 1 | itself good. Thus, not distinguishing what is evil and what is
704 10Command, 0, 2 | Deus, which is said to be distributor, ~that is, "dator" of all
705 ApCreed, 11 (19) | Div. Nom., IV.~ ~
706 LordPray, 8, 1 | sign of supreme wisdom to divert evil to good. And patience
707 Sacramen, 4 (21) | the Saviour: 'Take ~and divide it among you' (Luke, xxii,
708 10Command, 0, 2 | Him by practitioners of divination, and of them it is said: "
709 10Command, 0, 1 | Commandment: all such as ~practise divinations and fortune-telling. Such
710 ApCreed, 12, 1 | since they are but so many divisions. Of her it is said: "One
711 ApCreed, 4, 2 | God into practice: "Be ye doers of the word and not ~hearers
712 ApCreed, 2, 1 | that he takes delight in a dog or cat ~that is offered
713 10Command, 9 | provided that ~it is allowed to dominate the reason.5 Hence the precept
714 10Command, 5, 1 | which is whenever the flesh dominates the spirit. Secondly, they ~
715 Preface, 1 | members of the Order Or St. Dominic, which had been founded
716 LordPray, 0 (5) | De oratione dominica."~ ~
717 10Command, 7, 1 | wicked tongue, and make doors ~and bars to thy mouth."12
718 10Command, 2, 3 | day the number should be doubled. And this showed that on
719 10Command, 1, 1 | another. Matters that are doubtful may be ~confirmed by oaths: "
720 Preface, 2 | is the most profound ~and doubtless the most powerful apologetically
721 ApCreed, 12, 1 | her it is said: "One is My dove; ~My perfect one is but
722 10Command, 2, 1 | And man always tends downwards ~towards earthly things
723 Intro | of the ~Catechism. It is Dr. Collins' latest contribution
724 LordPray, 2, 1 | affirmed that it could not be dragged from his mouth. Then, the
725 ApCreed, 15, 3 | works ~lead to life, evil drags us to death. For this reason,
726 10Command, 4, 1 | some kill the soul ~also by drawing it away from the life of
727 10Command, 5 (23)| indulgence of the ~eyes, immodest dress, immodest conversation and
728 Intro | leave him as cold as do ~the drills of the multiplication table.
729 LordPray, 6, 1 | up hope, lest our despair drive us into greater and different
730 10Command, 7, 1 | countenance: "The ~north wind driveth away rain as doth a sad
731 10Command, 8 | and hurtful desires which drown men in destruction and ~
732 LordPray, 5 | And: "A workman that is a drunkard shall not be rich."11~ ~
733 10Command, 6 | therefore to all men their dues. ~Tribute, to whom tribute
734 ApCreed, 2, 1 | number of gods. ~(1) The dullness of the human intellect.
735 ApCreed, 13 (15) | through ~the Sacraments, when duly administered. The Church
736 ApCreed, 6, 2 | slaughter and shall ~be dumb before His shearer, and
737 Intro | and retains them with the durability of marble. If a child, through
738 LordPray, 1, 2 | I lifted up my eyes, who dwellest in heaven."26~ ~The words, "
739 ApCreed, 10, 4 | receive you into everlasting dwellings."31 The fourth ~is charity,
740 ApCreed, 7, 1 | Therefore, since Christ had dwelt among His friends in this
741 10Command, 2, 3 | on the Sabbath is to be eager to ~hear the word of God.
742 HailMary, 8 | upon man in that he shall earn his bread ~by the sweat
743 LordPray, 3 (23) | Let us, therefore, earnestly implore . . . that His commands
744 ApCreed, 14 (18) | of moving with the utmost ease and quickness ~wheresoever
745 HailMary, 9 | made ~like God after having eaten of the fruit, but rather
746 10Command, 5 (23)| idleness, intemperance in eating and drinking, indulgence
747 ApCreed, 5, 1 | And He was incarnate."~ ~Ebion, who was a Jew, said that
748 HailMary, 6 (18) | Eccl., xxiv. 25.~
749 Preface, 3 (10) | Mandonnet, "Des Ecrits," etc., 66; Grabmann, "op.
750 ApCreed, 12, 1 | increase of the body unto ~the edifying of itself in charity."10
751 Note | translation is the Parma, edited by P. Mandonnet, ~O. P., "
752 Preface, 3 | points out. 11~ ~The latest editions of the "Opuscula" are the
753 LordPray, 6 (10) | See Editor's Note in English Translation
754 ApCreed, 12 (4) | happiness to be born and ~educated in her fold" ("Roman Catechism," "
755 Sacramen, 8 | birth of children and the ~educating of them to the worship of
756 10Command, 9 (5) | fly to Him who alone can efface the sordid stains ~of sin" ("
757 ApCreed, 7 (7) | the damned only ~"per suum effectum" ("Summa Theol.," III, Q.
758 10Command, 5, 1 | nor adulterers, nor the effeminate, nor ~liers with mankind
759 Sacramen, 8 | Christ and the Church. The efficient cause of Matrimony is the
760 10Command, 4, 2 | reason is that greater ~effort deserves a better reward: "
761 Sacramen, 5 | says: "I absolve thee" ("Ego te absolvo"). The minister
762 Sacramen, 6 | Sacrament is the error of the Elaeonitae, who are said to ~anoint
763 10Command, 3, 3 | will declare to thee; thy elders and they ~will tell thee."45
764 ApCreed, 15 (15) | Redeemer will address His elect in these infinitely ~loving
765 ApCreed, 9 (10) | power of another as did ~Elias, who was taken up into heaven
766 Intro | a little prompting will ~elicit the desired answer. Unfortunately
767 ApCreed, 14 (15) | happiness of the soul; it is an emanation of the beatitude ~which
768 Preface, 4 | first great works which embody ~this fourfold division
769 10Command, 6 (21)| because it is difficult to emerge and disengage oneself from [
770 Intro | the imagination and to the emotions in the quest ~of truth.
771 LordPray, 2, 1 | from his mouth. Then, the emperor threatened to have him beheaded,
772 Preface, 1 | family was related to the Emperors Henry VI and Frederick II,
773 ApCreed, 14, 1 | destroy him who had the empire of death, that is to ~say,
774 Question, 4, 3 | is preserved in "Hallowe'en," etc. Discuss the other
775 LordPray, 4 (15) | ask our Heavenly Father to enable us to obey His divine commands,
776 ApCreed, 13, 1 | saved; and thereby they are enabled to live without ~mortal
777 10Command, 6 | At times they steal by enacting laws and enforcing them
778 LordPray, 7, 2 | led man into sin, he so enchains him as to prevent his rising
779 LordPray, 0 (8) | Enchir., lxxviii.~ ~
780 Preface, 3 (11) | Enchiridion Symbolorum," n. 695.~ ~
781 10Command, 5 | that such a one should encourage her children to enter religion,
782 Sacramen, 1 | of ~Jerusalem till you be endued with power from on high."5
783 LordPray, 1, 2 | eternity: "But Thou, O Lord, endurest forever."41 And again: "
784 LordPray, 7, 2 | Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he
785 LordPray, 5 (9) | use it to regain the vital energy that is daily consumed. . . .
786 10Command, 6 | steal by enacting laws and enforcing them for ~profit only: "
787 Preface, 1 | continue his study. He was engaged n teaching in 1250. This
788 LordPray, 7, 2 | second way is the fears engendered by persecutors and tyrants: "
789 Preface, 3 | Reverend H. A. Rawes in England in 1891. It is now out of
790 LordPray, 2, 1 | gold. This name had been engraved on the heart as a seal.~ ~
791 Preface, 1 | Aristotle, and was deeply engrossed in the ~literature of the
792 Question, 1, 5 | thought of the Incarnation enkindle our charity?~ ~6. Explain
793 Question, 4, 1 | Luke, xviii. 10-14).~ ~5. Enlarge upon the three effects of
794 HailMary, 6 | which means ~"in herself enlightened": "The Lord will fill thy
795 LordPray, 2, 3 | because of its power of enlightening; for as light illumines
796 ApCreed, 7 (1) | indeed in the ~flesh. but enlivened in the spirit, in which
797 ApCreed, 5, 2 | nature was exalted and ~ennobled by its union with God to
798 ApCreed, 15, 3 | evil, but from fear and the enormity of ~their punishments. Thirdly,
799 Preface, 1 | of Naples where he was ~enrolled in or about the year 1239.
800 10Command, 6 | amen, I say to you, he that entereth not by the door into ~the
801 Sacramen, 4 (21) | which the faithful cannot ~entertain a doubt. Wisely, however,
802 ApCreed, 2, 1 | High."11 The devil still ~entertains this desire. His entire
803 LordPray, 7, 2 | then after betraying him, enthralls him in his sin.~ ~Temptations
804 Intro | out of love and a joyous enthusiasm.~ ~The teacher must carefully
805 LordPray, 3, 2 | that he follows at once the enticement of sin. "Let not sin reign
806 LordPray, 7, 2 | the flesh tempts man by enticing him away from good. For
807 Preface, 4 | explanations of Christian Doctrine, entitle him ~to a place in the history
808 Intro | presuppose.~ ~In his translation entitled "The Catechetical Instructions
809 ApCreed, 4, 2 | out of season; ~reprove, entreat, rebuke in all patience
810 ApCreed, 13, 1 | sickness and prepare him for entry into the ~heavenly kingdom.
811 ApCreed, 15 (13) | Ps. xv. 11. "To enumerate all the delights with which
812 10Command, 8 (1) | the present traditional ~enumeration) before the Ninth. The Tenth
813 Intro | the children of men." The environment in which we live and the
814 10Command, 2 (32)| Ep. ad Rusticum."~ ~
815 LordPray, 1 (20) | reason the Apostles in their Epistles call the faithful, 'brethren'" ("
816 10Command, 0 (1) | Decalogue is the summary and epitome of the entire law of God,"
817 ApCreed, 11 (15) | the Father and the Son, equaily ~omnipoent, eternal, perfect,
818 ApCreed, 2, 1 | caused ~statues of them to be erected after their death, and gradually
819 Preface, 2 (8) | Pangua lingu" with "Tantum ergo" among its verses, ~"Sacris
820 ApCreed, 4, 1 | from himself. Sabellius errs therefore, and in the "Symbol"6
821 HailMary, 8 | women." ~Moreover, she alone escaped the curse of sin, brought
822 10Command, 2 (45)| II Esdras, viii. 10.~ ~
823 ApCreed, 1 | akin to marriage. "I will espouse thee in faith."2 When a
824 ApCreed, 7 (7) | just or to Limbo "per suam essentiam," but to the hell of the
825 ApCreed, 13 (2) | which she is governed, establisha among all her members a
826 10Command, 3, 2 | The father's ~blessing establisheth the houses of his children,
827 10Command, 3, 2 | livest; and give not thy estate to another, lest thou repent."25~ ~
828 LordPray, 1, 1 | Honor also consists in just estimate of one's neighbor, for: "
829 Intro | catechization - are in their estimation, after all, very simple ~
830 ApCreed, 14, 4 | deteriorate and, although ~burning eternally in fire, they shall never
831 Intro | means unacquainted with the ethical appeal of ~the truths they
832 Preface, 2 (8) | part of this Office. The Eucharistic poem, ~"Adoro te devote,"
833 Preface, 1 | quartered half the ~kingdoms of Europe in his shield," wrote Chesterton, "
834 Preface, 1 | German and in every way ~European."2 At the early age of five
835 ApCreed, 5, 1 | was made man. The error of Eutyches ~particularly is destroyed
836 ApCreed, 13 (2) | The evangelist St. John, writing to the
837 Sacramen, 4 (21) | from the narrative of the ~Evangelists. It is not to be supposed
838 ApCreed, 12, 4 | to whom ~it was given to evangelize Italy when the disciples
839 10Command, 1 (12)| be: Yea, yea; No, no,' He evidently forbids the habit of ~swearing
840 10Command, 7 (13)| regarded as a detractor and evil-speaker, if his revelation ~seriously
841 ApCreed, 2 | mightest understand that He exacteth much less of thee ~than
842 Question, 2, 2 | footnote 1. Do you think it ~exaggerates conditions?~ ~4. Discuss
843 10Command, 7 (13)| the character. but also by exaggerating ~the faults of others. He
844 Preface, 1 | same time prepared for the examinations for the degree of Master ~
845 10Command, 0 (1) | Moses. . . . If carefully examined and well understood, it
846 HailMary, 3 | found in ~human nature who exceeded the Angels in these three
847 LordPray, 3, 2 | seeks for in this world more excellently and more perfectly in God
848 HailMary, 7 | THEE"~ ~The Blessed Virgin excels the Angels in her closeness
849 HailMary, 4 | sin, all of them, with the exception of the Blessed ~Virgin,
850 10Command, 3, 1 | parents in all things."15 This excepts, of course, those things
851 10Command, 5 (23)| carefully ~avoided, almost every excitement to lust will be removed.
852 10Command, 5, 1 | justice. When it is a cause of exciting lust, ~although within the
853 10Command, 4, 1 | shalt ~not kill men."~ ~The Execution of Criminals. - Some have
854 HailMary, 5 | that they are the special exemplars of these virtues - ~as,
855 10Command, 3, 3 | their doctrine and their exemplification of ~faith: "For if you have
856 ApCreed, 6, 2 | Cross. Great patience is exemplified in two ways: either when
857 HailMary, 5 (12) | human race, was preserved exempt from all stain of ~original
858 LordPray, 3, 1 | do the just; or God shall exert His will and punish those
859 Preface, 2 | the Sacred Scriptures are exhaustive, of great ~depth, and of
860 Sacramen, 7 | subdeaconate, acolyte, exorcist, lector, and porter. Tonsure ~(
861 10Command, 4, 2 | because a greater reward is expected.~ ~The Lord mentioned this
862 LordPray | from the divine strength expects all that he asks for.~ ~
863 10Command, 5 | grave theft in that ~she expends her heredity upon children
864 ApCreed, 14 (17) | they shall be ~capable of experiencing heat and cold and of feeling
865 ApCreed, 6, 1 | value that it sufficed to expiate for all the sins of the
866 ApCreed, 6, 1 | is removed, punishment is expiated, and the exiles are ~called
867 LordPray, 4, 4 | of the flesh; and so in expiating for these the soul is in
868 LordPray, 6 (4) | type of offense requiring expiation, a sin" (Oxford English
869 Preface, 4 | others. 14~ ~The method of explaining Christian Doctrine by giving
870 Preface, 4 | of ~religion. Many of the explanatory passages in both works are
871 10Command, 4, 2 | take care lest our wrath explode in angry words: "A fool ~
872 ApCreed, 7, 1 | principalities and powers, He hath exposed them confidently in open
873 ApCreed, 9, 1 | ascended into heaven. This is ~expounded in three ways. Firstly,
874 LordPray, 1 (1) | Yet, He omitted all such expressions as they might be associated
875 LordPray, 1 (1) | with some other word more expressive of His majesty, such as '
876 10Command, 1, 3 | The third purpose is the expulsion of our adversary; hence,
877 LordPray, 5 (5) | understood an abundance of exquisite food and of rich clothing,
878 ApCreed, 13, 1 | their concupiscence does not extend beyond the rights of matrimony;
879 10Command, 8 (1) | Commandment is wider in extension ~than the Ninth, which is
880 Sacramen, 5 (27) | matter which is applied ~externally, such, for instance, as
881 Preface, 1 | University of Paris. He made extraordinary progress in his ~studies,
882 10Command, 6, 1 | which one cannot easily ~extricate himself.21~ ~The third reason
883 10Command, 2 (41)| fast of joy" ("iejunium exultationis"), which is ~a joyful lifting
884 ApCreed, 4 | Jesus Christ; ~but we were eyewitnesses of His greatness. For He
885 ApCreed, 7, 2 | punishments as did that holy ~man, Ezechias: "I said: In the midst of
886 ApCreed, 4 | Peter says, is not mere fable, but is certain and proved
887 ApCreed, 4 | by following artificial ~fables made known to you the power
888 ApCreed, 5 (20) | factus est homo, ut hominem faceret Deum."~ ~
889 ApCreed, 14, 4 | countenances shall be as faces burnt." 20 Likewise they ~
890 LordPray, 6, 2 | known that there are two factors in sin: the fault by which
891 ApCreed, 5 (20) | Et sic factus est homo, ut hominem faceret
892 LordPray, 1, 2 | undefiled, and that cannot fade, reserved in heaven for
893 ApCreed, 12, 4 | threatened29 ~completely failed: "And whosoever shall fall
894 10Command, 5 | their duties, a priest who fails is ~more guilty than a layman,
895 HailMary, 4 | Thus it is said: "Thou ~art fair, My beloved, and there is
896 Preface, 3 | the other prayers were ~faithfully reported by his secretary
897 10Command, 6 | violence: "Thy princes ~are faithless companions of thieves, they
898 Preface, 1 | Pope Leo XIII wrote his famous Encyclical, ~"Aeterni Patris,"
899 ApCreed, 7 (1) | Hell here means those far-removed places in which are detained
900 10Command, 4, 2 | till thou repay the last farthing."34~ ~We should beware lest
901 LordPray | be filled with marrow and fatness."15 Many times because of
902 Intro | If a child, through a ~faulty presentation on the part
903 ApCreed, 2, 1 | adulation. Some men, wishing to fawn upon ~kings and rulers,
904 10Command, 7 (16)| this Commandment, for by fawning and insincere praise they
905 10Command, 3, 2 | just as the soldiers owe fealty to the king, and lose their ~
906 LordPray, 7, 2 | The second way is the fears engendered by persecutors
907 Sacramen, 1 | similarity is that man must be fed with spiritual food: "Unless
908 ApCreed, 15, 3 | like sheep; death shall feed upon them."24 Fourthly,
909 10Command, 7, 2 | He that trusteth in ~lies feedeth the winds."31~ ~Finally,
910 ApCreed, 3 | a certain house, should ~feel-a warmth at the door of the
911 ApCreed, 9, 1 | place.5 The devil once ~feigned to do this: "I will ascend
912 Sacramen, 2 | recipient, for example, if one feigns to receive it and with a
913 Preface, 2 | some brief, came ~from the fertile mind of the Angelic Doctor. 6
914 ApCreed, 15, 1 | face."4 Secondly, in a most fervent love; for the better one
915 Sacramen, 4 (23) | this Sacrament piously and fervently must, without ~any doubt,
916 10Command, 2 (37)| they should perform on the ~festival days. These are: to go to
917 10Command, 2, 2 | The Sabbaths and other festivals I will not abide." And why? ~"
918 ApCreed, 14, 4 | To bind ~their kings with fetters, and their nobles with manacles
919 Preface, 3 | part of the ~treatise, "De fidei articulis et septem sacramentis,"
920 ApCreed, 9 (10) | taken up into heaven in a fiery chariot (IV Kings, ii. 1); ~
921 Preface, 4 (14) | to Christ" in the early fifteenth century. St. ~Charles Borromeo,
922 ApCreed, 9 (5) | word from its literal to a figurative meaning, something which
923 ApCreed, 9, 1 | the literal sense, ~but figuratively, that Christ is at the right
924 10Command, 2, 1 | reality and the truth, ~figures of it must cease, just as
925 ApCreed, 1 | it in prosperity, or by filling us with fear of ~adversity.
926 10Command, 0, 2 | of all things, because He fills all things with His ~goodness.
927 ApCreed, 6, 2 | on Jesus, the author and finisher of faith, who, having joy
928 Preface, 1 | attended as a boy. ~He put the finishing touches on his numerous
929 LordPray, 5 | he be a cleric, clothes fit for a bishop. This vicious
930 ApCreed, 12, 1 | body, being compacted, and ~fitly joined together, by what
931 LordPray, 1, 2 | familiarity with Him, and of the fitness of our requests.~ ~The power
932 ApCreed, 3, 2 | all this, one is led to a fivefold benefit. (1) We ~are led
933 ApCreed, 5, 2 | re-ignited and burst ~into flame.~ ~(4) This induces us to
934 10Command, 4, 1 | threw themselves into the flames, as St. Augustine relates
935 10Command, 0, 1 | servants."8~ ~(2) Because of Flattery. - Thus being unable to
936 10Command, 9, 1 | four ~ways.~ ~Firstly, by fleeing the external occasions such
937 ApCreed, 14, 4 | will be in a certain manner fleshly both in soul and body: ~"
938 LordPray, 6 (11) | labors" ("magnis nostris fletibus et laboribus"). For other
939 Sacramen, 4, 2 | of the earth and of their flocks. Against this, ~however,
940 Preface, 3 | authority of the Council of Florence, is taken ~almost verbatim
941 Sacramen, 4, 2 | body, and mixing this with flour made a bread of it; ~and
942 ApCreed, 12, 4 | errors. The Church ~of Peter flourishes in faith and is free from
943 10Command, 0, 2 | the law of ~Christ. Rivers flowing with milk and honey are
944 ApCreed, 5, 2 | partakers of the ~divine nature; flying the corruption of that concupiscence
945 ApCreed, 12 (4) | born and ~educated in her fold" ("Roman Catechism," "loc.
946 ApCreed, 10, 2 | to you that you, who have followed Me, in the regeneration
947 Intro | readers that strong faith, fond hope, and ~burning love
948 10Command, 1, 2 | who takes the name of God ~foolishly, by blasphemy, takes the
949 Sacramen, 3, 4 | scandal and to the pagans ~foolishness. For this reason he is signed
950 ApCreed, 2 | among the people, and, you fools, be wise at last. He that
951 Note | the change is noted in the footnotes. The edition of the "Roman ~
952 LordPray, 3, 1 | Until I make Thy enemies Thy footstool."4~ ~It is enjoined upon
953 10Command, 9 | And thus after the precept forbidding desire for the ~house of
954 Preface, 1 | burning ~brand from the fire, forced the temptress from his room.
955 10Command, 8 (16)| justly and lawfully - if we foresee that by such acquisition
956 10Command, 2, 1 | given to strengthen and ~foreshadow the fulfillment of the promise
957 HailMary, 4 (11) | Lord is with thee'; and it foretells the honor ~which will follow
958 LordPray, 6, 1 | spoke truly when He said: "I forgave thee all the debt, because
959 ApCreed, 6, 1 | also is it that the priest forgives ~sins; and, again, the more
960 LordPray, 8 | time of tribulation Thou forgivest sins."12~ ~
961 ApCreed, 13, 1 | Sacrament of Penance: "Who forgiveth all thy iniquities; who
962 ApCreed, 13, 2 | there is the full power of forgiving ~sins in the Church, although
963 Intro | strikes the child as a mere ~formality and as a hard law, and he
964 | formerly
965 Preface, 4 | and Prayer" came to be a formula ~of the faith. Numerous
966 Intro | to grasp these abstract formulas ~without first becoming
967 10Command, 5 | husband; thirdly, she hath ~fornicated in adultery, and hath gotten
968 ApCreed, 7, 2 | She [that is, wisdom] forsook ~not the just when he was
969 10Command, 1, 1 | of ~old: Thou shalt not forswear thyself. . . . But I say
970 ApCreed, 9 | ascended into heaven on the fortieth day. Hence, the Creed says: "
971 Preface, 1 | died on March 7, 1274, ~at Fossanuova in Northern Italy while
972 ApCreed, 12, 4 | that the city ~has "twelve foundations," and therein were "written
973 Preface, 4 (14) | of Milan, was one of the founders of the ~Confraternity of
974 10Command, 4, 2 | Christ, in whom ~was the full fountainhead of wisdom. Then, secondly,
975 Preface, 1 | II, and to the ~Kings of France, Aragon, and Castile. "He
976 10Command, 6 | fourth kind of theft is fraud in buying and selling: "
977 10Command, 6 | money-changers who commit many frauds, and ~against the sellers
978 Preface, 1 | the Emperors Henry VI and Frederick II, and to the ~Kings of
979 Preface, 1 | thereafter had complete ~freedom from the motions of concupiscence. :
980 LordPray | justified."22 Prayer, also, frees one from the fear of future
981 Preface, 1 | shield. He was Italian and French and German and in every
982 Preface, 1 | of soldiers to intercept Friar Thomas on his way ~to Paris.
983 Question, 1, 8 | number of days from Good Friday to Easter Sunday?~ ~4. St.
984 LordPray | writes St. Cyprian: "It is a friendly, familiar, and devout prayer
985 10Command, 4 (1) | cultivate charity, peace, ~and friendship towards our enemies, to
986 10Command, 9 | without sin who composes frivolous songs. Even the ~philosophers
987 LordPray, 5 | but are only brought to fruition in the life eternal. Thus,
988 10Command, 9 (5) | Concupiscence, the fuel of sin, which originated
989 ApCreed, 15, 1 | fire ~is in Sion, and His furnace in Jerusalem."5 Thirdly,
990 ApCreed, 5, 1 | Christ's birth except to furnish a place for ~Him. Thus,
991 10Command, 3 | them."6 Secondly, they ~furnished nourishment and the support
992 LordPray, 3, 2 | be a crown of glory and a garland of joy to the residue of
993 10Command, 5, 1 | husband it is said: "He ~gathereth to himself shame and dishonor,
994 Preface, 4 (12) | Mary, and the ~Decalogue" (Gatterer-Kruz, "The Theory and Practice
995 ApCreed, 7 (1) | unquenchable fire. This is gehenna or the ~'abyss,' and is
996 10Command, 4, 2 | Commandments, should be ~more generous because a greater reward
997 Preface, 1 | manifold outpourings of his genius. All of ~the Second Part
998 Intro | works will be greeted with genuine satisfaction by all. In ~
999 Preface, 1 | was Italian and French and German and in every way ~European."2
1000 LordPray, 8 (15) | contains, as it were, the germs of many of those thoughts
1001 10Command, 5 (23)| salutary effect. ~Chastity is a gilt of God. To those who ask
1002 ApCreed, 4, 2 | to hear the Word of God ~gladly; for such is a sign that
1003 ApCreed, 15, 1 | St. Augustine.6 ~"Joy and gladness shall be found therein,
1004 ApCreed, 15, 1 | vision: "We see now through a glass in a dark manner; but then ~
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