Lumen gentium
   Chap., Paragraph  1     1,  5     |      the Lord is compared to a seed which is sown in a field;19
 2     1,  5     |     Then, by its own power the seed sprouts and grows until
 3     2,  9     |       but from an imperishable seed through the word of the
 4     2,  9     | nonetheless a lasting and sure seed of unity, hope and salvation
 5     3,  20    |    passers-on of the apostolic seed.8* Thus, as St. Irenaeus
 6     4,  36    |     field of the world for the seed of the Word of God; and
 7     5,  42    |       order that love, as good seed may grow and bring forth
 8     6,  43    |       from this divinely given seed. Such a multiple and miraculous
Gaudium et spes
   Chap., Paragraph  9  Pref,  3     |        championing the Godlike seed which has been sown in him,
10     1,  18    |    bears in himself an eternal seed which cannot be reduced
11     4,  44(23)|       blood of Christians is a seed!" Cf. Dogmatic Constitution
Ad gentes
   Chap., Paragraph 12     1,  5     |       of Christians was like a seed.13~
13     1,  6     |    taken root.14 Thus from the seed which is the word of God,
14     3,  22    |                        22. The seed which is the word of God,
Presbyterorum ordinis
   Chap., Paragraph 15   End,  22    |         night and day, and the seed should sprout without his
16   End,  22    |   earth has been sown with the seed of the Gospel which now
 
  |