01-abusi | abusu-chall | chamb-disfi | disgr-genui | geogr-lavis | law-a-paupe | payin-right | rigid-tie | tied-zest
       
 501 LumGen     7,  49(2*) |                   Officii, De magne tismi abusu, 4 aug. 1856: AAS (1865)
 502 LumGen     3,  25(43*)|                    Vat. I: Mansi 52, 1213 AC.~
 503 OrEccl     1,  4(4)   |      praecedentium; item quoad baptizatos acatholicos in can. 11 habetur: ritum
 504 IntMir     2,  19     |            Fathers of the Council, freely acceding to the wish of the "Secretariat
 505 OrEccl     1,  2(2)   |                    1278; Leo X, Litt. Ap. Accepimus nuper, 18 maii 1521; Paulus
 506 SacCon     2,  50     |                   suffered injury through accidents of history are now to be
 507 SacCon     1,  30     |                  to take part by means of acclamations, responses, psalmody, antiphons,
 508 ChrDom     2, 16      |                  life in such a way as to accommodate it to the needs of our times. ~
 509 ApAct     6,  28      |                   himself but also by the accommodation of his activity to circumstances
 510 DVerb     6,  25      |               remember that prayer should accompany the reading of Sacred Scripture,
 511 DigHum     0,  14     |                   All is to be taken into account-the Christian duty to Christ,
 512 GaudSp     1,  19     |                  it. Thus atheism must be accounted among the most serious problems
 513 GaudSp     5,  50     |                future may bring. For this accounting they need to reckon with
 514 SacCon     4,  92     |                  better selected. ~c) The accounts of martyrdom or the lives
 515 GaudSp     6,  62     |                 mind to a deeper and more accurate understanding of the faith.
 516 NAet     0, 4         |                  presented as rejected or accursed by God, as if this followed
 517 UniRed     1,  3      |             believing in Christ cannot be accused of the sin involved in the
 518 LumGen     4,  35     |                example and its witness it accuses the world of sin and enlightens
 519 DigHum     0,  11     |                  be saved and come to the acknowledgment of the truth" (1 Tim. 2:
 520 GaudSp     2,  31     |               splendid isolation. Freedom acquires new strength, by contrast,
 521 GaudSp     1,  21     |                 but rather undergirds the acquittal of them with fresh incentives.
 522                       | across
 523 GaudSp     1,  21     |                worldly dimensions, and by activating him toward justice and love,
 524 UniRed     2,  6      |              Church's social teaching and activity-all these should be considered
 525 IntMir     1,  11     |                falls on newsmen, writers, actors, designers, producers, displayers,
 526 SacCon     2,  55(40) |                   Tridentinum. Diariorum, Actorum, Epistolarum, Tractatuum
 527 LumGen Appen,  73     |                  always "fully active [in actu pleno]"; rather, it acts
 528 GaudSp     9,  78     |                   its divine Founder, and actualized by men as they thirst after
 529 AdGent     3,  21     |                and the Decree Apostolicam Actuositatem.~While pastors and laymen,
 530 OrEccl     6,  27(33) |        periculorum vitandorum et formalis adhaesionis errori.~
 531 LumGen     2,  12     |             Through it, the people of God adheres unwaveringly to the faith
 532 LumGen     5,  42(12*)|                   q. 184, a. 1. Pius XII, Adhort. Apost. Menti nostrae, 23
 533 LumGen     3,  25(40*)|                   1712l (3011). Cfr. nota adiecta ad Schema I de Eccl. (desumpta
 534 LumGen     8,  62(16*)|                   Leo XIII, Litt. Encycl. Adiutricem populi, 5 sept. 1895: ASS
 535 SacCon     1,  23     |                 between the rites used in adjacent regions must be carefully
 536 GaudSp Intro,  4      |          identifying permanent values and adjusting them properly to fresh discoveries.
 537 DVerb     3,  13(11)  |       Attemperatio" [in English "Suitable adjustment"] in Greek "synkatabasis."~
 538 LumGen     8,  62     |                 of Advocate, Auxiliatrix, Adjutrix, and Mediatrix.16* This,
 539 PreOrd     3,  21     |             institution, which the bishop administers with the help of priests
 540 OrEccl     4,  14(16) |                 Sacramento Confirmationis administrando etiam fidelibus orientalibus
 541 DigHum     0,  4      |                   by legal measures or by administrative action on the part of government,
 542 LumGen     5,  40     |           abundant harvest of good, as is admirably shown by the life of so
 543 GaudSp     6,  59     |                  growth of the faculty of admiration, of intuition, of contemplation,
 544 SacCon     5,  103    |                   the Church holds up and admires the most excellent fruit
 545 LumGen     6,  45(6*) |             Ecclesia Christi, cap. XV, et Adnot. 48: Mansi 51, 549 s. et
 546 OptTot     2, 3       |                   stage of development of adolescence and fully adapted to the
 547 GaudSp     6,  61     |                the mind of the developing adolescent.~Opportunities for the same
 548 OrEccl     6,  26     |                has always adopted and now adopts rather a mild policy, offering
 549 AdGent     1,  9      |            spiritual temple, where God is adored in spirit and in truth (
 550 SacCon     1,  6      |                 15), and thus become true adorers whom the Father seeks 17.
 551 LumGen     6,  46     |            hospitals, or in the missions, adorn the Bride of Christ by their
 552 GaudSp     5,  49     |                 will never be profaned by adultery or divorce. Firmly established
 553 ApAct     6,  30      |                  being the more urgent in adulthood. For the advance of age
 554 SacCon     1,  35     |               feasts, on some weekdays in Advent and Lent, and on Sundays
 555 IntMir     2,  14     |                  the faithful ought to be advised of the necessity both to
 556 LumGen     3,  25(42*)|                    I, Const. dogm. Pastor Aecrnus: Denz. 1839 (3074).~
 557 LumGen     3,  29(74*)|                  Constitutiones Ecclesiac aegyptiacae, III, 2: ed. Funk, Didascalia,
 558 LumGen     3,  25(47*)|                    I, Const. dogm. Pastor Aesernus, 4: Denz. 1836 (3070) no.
 559 LumGen     2,  13(10*)|                  22, 1-3: PG 7, 925 C-926 Aet 955 C - 958 A; Harvey 2,
 560 OrEccl     6,  27(33) |         dispositio; 3) necessitas salutis aeternae; 4) absentia sacerdotis
 561 LumGen     3,  23(30*)|                Vat. I, Const.Dogm. Pastor aeternis: Denz. 1821 (3050 s.).~
 562 LumGen     1,  6(5*)  |                omni coaptacione sanctorum aeternum tibi condis habitaculum.....
 563 AdGent     6,  37     |            devotes the same care to those afar off as it does to those
 564 PreOrd     1,  3      |               zealous pursuit of justice, affability, and others. The Apostle
 565 LumGen     4,  36     |        remembering that in every temporal affair they must be guided by a
 566 IntMir     1,  6      |                all other spheres of human affairs-the arts not excepted-even though
 567 OptTot     4, 8       |                  develop only a religious affectation. The students should learn
 568 ApAct     3,  11      |                  that in policy decisions affecting migrants their right to
 569 OptTot     5, 14      |                  it is this mystery which affects the whole history of the
 570 LumGen     5,  42(15*)|          praccipua S.Scripturae et Patrum afferuntur in Relatione pp. 152-153.~
 571 UniRed     3,  19     |             retained a particularly close affinity with the Catholic Church
 572 GaudSp     9,  90     |                 the hardships which still afflict the greater part of mankind
 573 GaudSp     9,  81     |                 for the multiple miseries afflicting the whole modern world.
 574 UniRed     2,  12     |                   remedies to relieve the afflictions of our times such as famine
 575 DigHum     0,  4      |                   very nature of religion afford the foundation of the right
 576 IntMir     2,  15     |           Importantly, laymen ought to be afforded technical, doctrinal and
 577 ChrDom     2, 30      |         encourages apostolic action, also affords an example of charity and
 578 LumGen     6,  44     |                   themselves to the three aforesaid counsels either by vows,
 579                       | afterwards
 580 UniRed     3,  22     |             Baptism, and in Him also rose again-through faith in the working of
 581 ApAct     2,  8       |                 the holy Church added the agape to the eucharistic supper
 582 GaudSp     9,  81     |                   free ourselves from the age-old slavery of war. If we refuse
 583 ApAct     3,  11      |                moral crises, help for the aged not only by providing them
 584 AdGent     6,  36     |                national and international agencies.~
 585 SacCon     4,  83     |                 priestly work through the agency of His Church, which is
 586 GaudSp     9,  79     |                  regard themselves as the agents of security and freedom
 587 PreOrd     2,  6(31)  |           congress at Orvieto on pastoral aggiornamento, Sept. 6, 1963: AAS 55 (
 588 GaudSp     9,  81     |                 danger of being gradually aggravated. While extravagant sums
 589 GaudSp Intro,  9      |             result many persons are quite aggressively demanding those benefits
 590 GaudSp     3,  33     |                 the whole human race, men agitate numerous questions among
 591 GaudSp Intro,  5      |                      5. Today's spiritual agitation and the changing conditions
 592 OrEccl     6,  28(34) |                                           Agitur de s. d. communicatione
 593 GaudSp     6,  57     |                   observable data, and an agnosticism about everything else. For
 594 ApAct     4,  20      |                          20. Many decades ago the laity in many nations
 595 GaudSp     9,  79     |               provided however, that they agree to serve the human community
 596 DigHum     0,  14     |                      For this is good and agreeable in the sight of God our
 597 OrEccl     5,  20     |                time as all Christians are agreed on a fixed day for the celebration
 598 DVerb     6,  23      |              Spirit, is concerned to move ahead toward a deeper understanding
 599 GaudSp     8,  75(8)  |                      Pius XI, allocution "Ai dirigenti della Federazione
 600 ChrDom     2, 18      |                  and refugees, seafarers, air-travelers, gypsies, and others of
 601 IntMir     1,  5      |                 that have been vigorously aired in our day. ~The first question
 602 LumGen     4,  35     |               entire mode of family life, ala gradually transforms it,
 603 LumGen     2,  15(15*)|                XII, Nuntius radioph. Nell'alba, 24 dec. 1941: AAS 34 (1942)
 604 ApAct     3,  10(1)   |                  suburbicarian diocese of Albano, "Ad Arcem Gandulfi Habita,"
 605 GaudSp     7,  69(10) |                  186, ff. 112a-113a); St. Albert the Great, In III Sent.,
 606 PreOrd     2,  4(8)   |                priestly ordination in the Alexandrian Jocobite Church: "...Gather
 607 OrEccl     4,  15(19) |                    341, can. 2; Timotheus Alexandrinus, interrogat. 3; Innocentius
 608 LumGen     7,  49(2*) |             evocationis spirituum inde ab Alexandro IV (27 sept. 1958), cfr
 609 OrEccl     4,  13(14) |                  P. II, Cap. III n. 2, et aliae Synodi particulares.~
 610 OptTot     5, 14      |              disciplines be more suitably aligned and that they harmoniously
 611 LumGen     3,  24(38*)|                 maioribus; c. 362-391: de aliis dignitariis; in specie,
 612 LumGen     7,  51(23*)|                           Ex Praefatione, aliquious dioecesibus concessa.~
 613 NAet     0, 3         |                  in Himself; merciful and all-powerful, the Creator of heaven and
 614 LumGen     1,  7      |             things on earth, and with His all-surpassing perfection and way of acting
 615 LumGen     4,  36(5*) |                  397 ss. Pius XII, Alloc. Alla vostra filfale. 23 mart.
 616 OrEccl     2,  5(5)   |                    et documenta in nota 2 allata.~
 617 ChrDom     1, 7       |            sufferings may be assuaged and alleviated through the prayers and
 618 LumGen     3,  28     |                  exercise the ministry of alleviation and reconciliation and they
 619 PreOrd     2,  7(33)  |                    ed. Th. Schermann, Die allgemeine Kirchenordnung, I, Paderborn
 620 GaudSp     9,  86     |                  for this purpose will be allocated as effectively as possible,
 621 LumGen     7,  50(9*) |                AAS 14 (1922 p. 23; plures Allocutiones Pii X de Sanetis: Inviti
 622 LumGen Appen,  71     |               particular office or in the allotment of subjects, and it is done
 623 PerCar     0,  4      |            legislation as well as to make allowance for adequate and prudent
 624 GaudSp     6,  58     |              resulting from the permanent allurement of sin. It never eases to
 625 AdGent     2,  13     |                  to embrace the Faith, or alluring or enticing people by worrisome
 626 AdGent     6,  39     |                them not be ashamed to ask alms of them for this purpose,
 627 NAet     0, 3         |                especially through prayer, almsgiving and fasting. ~Since in the
 628 GaudSp     4,  45     |          according to his works. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first
 629 SacCon     7,  128    |                 shape and construction of altars, the nobility, placing,
 630 PreOrd     3,  16     |            celibacy, in no way intends to alter that different discipline
 631 ChrDom     2, 24      |               bring about the changes and alterations of dioceses as set forth
 632 OrEccl     2,  6      |                 and that these may not be altered except to obtain for themselves
 633 GaudSp     3,  35     |                   a man works he not only alters things and society, he develops
 634 GaudSp     9,  81     |                scientific weapons are not amassed solely for use in war. Since
 635 AdGent     4,  24     |                  mystery of Christ, whose ambassador he is, so that in him he
 636 LumGen     3,  27     |                    Bishops, as vicars and ambassadors of Christ, govern the particular
 637 GaudSp     9,  85     |                 profiteering, to national ambitions, to the appetite for political
 638 LumGen     3,  21(22*)|                  1-52: CSEL 64, 203- 204. Ambrosiascr In I Tim. S 19: PL 17, 479
 639 GaudSp     9,  93     |                 ages of time without end. Amen. (Eph. 3:20-21).~~
 640 SacCon     3,  78     |                prayer for the bride, duly amended to remind both spouses of
 641 GaudSp     9,  88     |              respect for all freedoms and amicable brotherhood between all.
 642 GaudSp     3,  34     |                lives through a monumental amount of individual and collective
 643 OrEccl     6,  26(32) |                  M., Epistula canonica ad Amphilochium, PG. 32, 669 B.~
 644 ChrDom     2, 35      |                   may assume an even more ample role in the ministry of
 645 GaudSp     7,  63     |             thoroughly convinced that the ampler technical and economic possibilities
 646 GaudSp     9,  91     |                have to be followed up and amplified since it sometimes deals
 647 IntMir     1,  11     |      entertainment that offer them decent amusement and cultural uplift. In
 648 LumGen     1,  8      |                   this reason, by no weak analogy, it is compared to the mystery
 649 GaudSp Intro,  5      |                    calling for efforts of analysis and synthesis.~
 650 LumGen     8,  56(5*) |                  A; In Dorm. 2: col. 357. Anastasius Antioch., Serm. 2 de Annunt.,
 651 OrEccl     2,  6      |                  steps to return to their ancestral traditions. ~Those who,
 652 GaudSp     4,  41     |               this belief, the Church can anchor the dignity of human nature
 653 LumGen     8,  56(5*) |               Serm. 3, 2: col. 1388 C. S. Andrcas Cret. Can. in B. V. Nat.
 654 GaudSp     1,  19     |                 God lapses into a kind of anemia, though they seem more inclined
 655 GaudSp     1,  22(22) |                 destroyed (theotheisa ouk anerethe), but rather remained in
 656 SacCon     1,  16     |             history of salvation from the angle proper to each of their
 657 UniRed     3,  13     |               part continue to exist, the Anglican Communion occupies a special
 658 NAet     0, 2         |                They seek freedom from the anguish of our human condition either
 659 LumGen     1,  7(8*)  |        constituitur unum eorpus ex nitate animae, ita Ecelesia ex unil atc
 660 OrEccl     4,  16(20) |              providere intendit, in bonum animarum, pluralitati iurisdictionis
 661 LumGen     4,  38     |                   world that spirit which animates the poor, the meek, the
 662 GaudSp     3,  38     |               come, but by that very fact animating, purifying and strengthening
 663 LumGen     8,  57(10*)|                    Cfr. Conc. Lateranense anni 649, Can. 3: Mansi 10, 1151.
 664 GaudSp     4,  41     |                 the human person, but its annihilation.~
 665 AdGent     2,  13     |                   cf. Col. 4:3), there is announced to all men (cf. Mark 16:
 666 AdGent     6,  38     |                   be obliged to set aside annually for the work of the missions,
 667 GaudSp     1,  22     |                  as He assumed it was not annulled,22 by that very fact it
 668 SacCon     3,  75     |                     75. The number of the anointings is to be adapted to the
 669 UniRed     3,  21     |             ours-some in one way, some in another-regarding the relationship between
 670 LumGen     4,  33(3*) |                 Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Six ans se sont ecoules, 5 oct.
 671 ChrDom     2, 12      |                   ways by which are to be answered the most serious questions
 672 LumGen     3,  29(74*)|                 II, p. 103. Statuta Eccl. Ant. 371: Mansi 3, 954.~
 673 GaudSp     4,  44     |                and still profits from the antagonism of those who oppose or who
 674 GravEd     0,  0(1)   |                   the first series of the ante-preparatrory phase. vol. 3. pp. 363-364;
 675 ApAct     6,  32      |                   in theology but also in anthropology, psychology, sociology,
 676 NAet     0, 4         |                 persecutions, displays of anti-Semitism, directed against Jews at
 677 IntMir     2,  13     |            conditions demand. They should anticipate harmful developments, especially
 678 LumGen     7,  48     |        irrevocably decreed and is already anticipated in some kind of a real way;
 679 OrEccl   End,  30     |                   with fraternal charity, anticipating one another with honor". (
 680 OrEccl     4,  15(19) |                 Apostolorum, 8 et 9; Syn. Antiochena, an. 341, can. 2; Timotheus
 681 LumGen     3,  23(37*)|                   can. 6 de Alexandria et Antiochia, et can. 7 de Hierosolymis:
 682 SacCon     2,  47(37) |                  Christi, Second Vespers, antiphon to the Magnificat.~
 683 SacCon     1,  30     |        acclamations, responses, psalmody, antiphons, and songs, as well as by
 684 PreOrd     2,  4(4)   |            bishops. Cf. Statuta Ecclesiae Antiqua, c. 3 (ed. Ch. Munier, Paris
 685 OrEccl     4,  17(22) |                   redeatur ad disciplinam antiquam singularum Ecclesiarum quoad
 686 LumGen     7,  49(2*) |                         Praeter documenta antiquiora contra quamlibet formam
 687 LumGen     3,  22(24*)|                                   Cfr. de antiquis Conciliis, Eusebius, Hist.
 688 GaudSp     7,  69(12) |                   in PL 54, 591 A (cf. in Antonianum 27 (1952) 349-366)i.~
 689 LumGen     6,  43(1*) |                  Rosweydus, Viqae Patrum, Antwerpiae 1628. Apophtegmata Patrum:
 690 PreOrd   End,  22     |                  strangers in this world, anxiously looking for the ways and
 691 AdGent     1,  8      |         considered foreign anywhere or to anybody.20 Christ Himself is the
 692 NAet     0, 3(5)      |                Gregory VII, letter XXI to Anzir (Nacir), King of Mauritania (
 693 GaudSp     7,  69     |              governments, to remember the aphorism of the Fathers, "Feed the
 694 LumGen     3,  28(64*)|               erdotcs, pontificatus tamen api em non habent.. S. Cyprianus,
 695 GaudSp     4,  44(23) |                   Jesus." Cf. Tertullian, Apologeticus, Chapter L, 13: "Every time
 696 LumGen     6,  44(5*) |                    Bonaventura, Opusc. X, Apologia Pauperum, c. 3, 3: cd. Opera,
 697 LumGen     6,  43(1*) |                  Patrum, Antwerpiae 1628. Apophtegmata Patrum: PG 65. Palladius,
 698 LumGen     4,  33(3*) |                canonica, cfr. Decretum De Apostolatu laicorum, cap. IV, n. 16,
 699 ChrDom     2, 18(15)  |                  p. 652 ff.; Leges Operis Apostolatus Maris, compiled under the
 700 OrEccl     1,  4(4)   |                    8: sine licentia Sedis Apostolicae, sequendo praxim saeculorum
 701 AdGent     3,  21     |              Lumen Gentium and the Decree Apostolicam Actuositatem.~While pastors
 702 LumGen     1,  8(12*) |                             Cfr. Symbolum Apostolicum: Denz. 6-9 (10-13); Symb.
 703 LumGen     3,  25     |              others, nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment. For
 704 UniRed     2,  8      |                 of His death so fervently appealed to His Father: "That they
 705 GaudSp     8,  74     |                all as a moral force which appeals to each one's freedom and
 706 LumGen     8,  58     |                    Mary makes significant appearances. This is so even at the
 707 GravEd     0,  0(1)   |                the Second Vatican Council appearing in the first series of the
 708 IntMir Appen          |                                           APPENDICES~
 709 GaudSp     9,  85     |                national ambitions, to the appetite for political supremacy,
 710 ChrDom     2, 20      |                   right of nominating and appointing bishops belongs properly,
 711 GaudSp     7,  69(11) |                 by which the principle is appplied in the proposed text, besides
 712 UniRed     1,  4      |                 make a careful and honest appraisal of whatever needs to be
 713 GravEd     0          |                  right to be motivated to appraise moral values with a right
 714 ChrDom     2, 20      |                   acknowledges and highly appreciates, are most kindly requested
 715 LumGen     7,  50(9*) |                   Benedictus XV, Decretum approbationis virtutum in Causa beatificationis
 716 PreOrd     2,  8      |                   and competent authority approves-or finally whether they fulfill
 717 GaudSp     7,  68     |                   to their capacities and aptitudes.~When, however, socio-economic
 718 GravEd     0          |                  especially of St. Thomas Aquinas,31 there may be a deeper
 719 GaudSp     5,  50     |                  that they cannot proceed arbitrarily, but must always be governed
 720 LumGen     2,  13     |                  that the people of India arc his members"9*. Since the
 721 ApAct     2,  6(1)    |                  Pius XI, encyclical "Ubi Arcano," Dec. 23, 1922: A.A.S.
 722 ApAct     3,  10(1)   |      suburbicarian diocese of Albano, "Ad Arcem Gandulfi Habita," Aug. 26,
 723 GaudSp     4,  42(11) |      International Union of Institutes of Archeology, History and History of
 724 LumGen     2,  16(19*)|                Epist. S.S.C.S. Officii ad Archiep. Boston.: Denz. 3869-72.~
 725 OrEccl     5,  19     |                also of the patriarchal or archiepiscopal synod, due regard being
 726 LumGen     3,  24(38*)|               Patriarchis; c. 324-399: de Archiepiscopis I maioribus; c. 362-391:
 727 DigHum     0,  10(7)  |                   Epistola ad Arelatensem Archiepiscopum," X., III, 42, 3: Friedberg,
 728 ApAct     1,  2       |               world like leaven, with the ardor of the spirit of Christ.~
 729 AdGent     3,  21     |                  clergy highly esteem the arduous apostolate of the laity.
 730 DigHum     0,  10(7)  |                Innocent III, "Epistola ad Arelatensem Archiepiscopum," X., III,
 731 GaudSp     5,  48     |               fidelity on the spouses and argue for an unbreakable oneness
 732 GaudSp     1,  20     |                   emancipation. This form argues that by its nature religion
 733 GaudSp     3,  36     |               science and which, from the arguments and controversies they spark,
 734 PreOrd     2,  4(9)   |                   Athanasius, Against the Arians, 2, 42 (PG 26, 237); St.
 735 GaudSp     5,  48(1)  |                 art. 3 ad 1, Decretum pro Armenis: Denz.-Schoen. 1327; Pius
 736 LumGen     7,  48     |               things253 and we put on the armor of God, that we may be able
 737 GaudSp     9,  80     |                   can now be found in the armories of the great nations were
 738 SacCon     1,  8      |                  warriors of the heavenly army; venerating the memory of
 739 DigHum     0,  11     |                 to destroy all the forces arrayed against God27 and bring
 740 LumGen     2,  9      |               until through the Cross she arrives at the light which knows
 741 GaudSp     9,  87     |                  the moral order has been ascertained.~
 742 AdGent     2,  18     |                 be able to assimilate the ascetic and contemplative traditions,
 743 PreOrd     3,  13     |               community they cultivate an asceticism becoming to a shepherd of
 744 GaudSp Intro,  4      |                would reduce everything to ashes. True, there is a growing
 745 LumGen     2,  11     |             suffering and glorified Lord, asking that He may lighten their
 746 PreOrd     3,  16     |       contemporary world. This holy synod asks not only priests but all
 747 LumGen     3,  23     |                  churches with one common aspiration is splendid evidence of
 748 OrEccl     1,  4      |                     All clerics and those aspiring to sacred Orders should
 749 GaudSp     1,  13     |                 incapable of battling the assaults of evil successfully, so
 750 PreOrd     2,  9      |                  time, they are strenuous assertors of the truth, lest the faithful
 751 DVerb     5,  19      |                 the Church unhesitatingly asserts, faithfully hand on what
 752 GaudSp Intro,  11     |                   first of all, wishes to assess in this light those values
 753 LumGen Appen          |                has decided to preface the assessment of the Modi with the following
 754 LumGen     4,  37     |              advice. Let them confidently assign duties to them in the service
 755 LumGen     3,  27(58*)|                Corporis, 1. c., p. 211: . Assignatos sibi greges singuli singulos
 756 SacCon Appen          |          expressed by many concerning the assignment of the feast of Easter to
 757 PerCar     0,  13     |                   themselves in their own assignments to be bound by the common
 758 LumGen     3,  20(13*)|                 428; S. Cyprianus, Epist. assim.~
 759 AdGent     2,  18     |           religious life might be able to assimilate the ascetic and contemplative
 760 AdGent     3,  22     |                   which it transforms and assimilates into itself, and finally
 761 GaudSp     7,  69(10) |                      q. de superfluo (ms. Assisi Bibl. Comun. 186, ff. 112a-113a);
 762 ChrDom     2, 30      |              works of the apostolate.~3.) Assistant pastors, as cooperators
 763 GaudSp     2,  30     |                 others, also promotes and assists the public and private institutions
 764 ChrDom     1, 7       |                   their sufferings may be assuaged and alleviated through the
 765 OrEccl     5,  19(24) |                can. 17; Pius VI Litt. Ap. Assueto paterne, 8 apr. 1775; etc.~
 766 IntMir     2,  14     |                ought to be encouraged and assured by every effective means.
 767 LumGen     2,  13     |                    while at the same time assuring that such differences do
 768 GaudSp Intro,  6      |               progress, though it is also astir among peoples still striving
 769 LumGen     1,  7(8*)  |              animae, ita Ecelesia ex unil atc Spiritus.....~
 770 GaudSp     2,  32     |                   the house of Zacchaeus, ate with publicans and sinners.
 771 GaudSp     1,  21     |                  strives to detect in the atheistic mind the hidden causes for
 772 GaudSp     1,  21     |                   She courteously invites atheists to examine the Gospel of
 773 GaudSp     9,  80(1)  |                which prides itself on its atomic power, it is irrational
 774 GaudSp     9,  80     |                catapult men into the most atrocious decisions. That such may
 775 OrEccl     4,  17     |               rights and obligations that attach to them.22 ~
 776 LumGen     5,  42     |                  things of this world nor attachment to riches, which is against
 777 GaudSp     7,  71     |                   pretext is given to the attackers for calling the right itself
 778 LumGen     4,  36     |                   for religion, and which attacks and destroys the religious
 779 DVerb     3,  13(11)  |               Homily l7, 1): PG 53, 134; "Attemperatio" [in English "Suitable adjustment"]
 780 GravEd     0          |                   new churches, which are attended also by students who are
 781 GaudSp     1,  21     |                   as current events often attest; riddles of life and death,
 782 GaudSp     3,  37     |                 last day, as the Lord has attested.8 Caught in this conflict,
 783 DigHum     0,  11     |                 and humble of heart.12 In attracting and inviting His disciples
 784 GaudSp Intro,  10     |                  life. Pulled by manifold attractions he is constantly forced
 785 LumGen     4,  35     |                faith (sensu fidei) and an attractiveness in speech200 so that the
 786 GaudSp     8,  75     |                    must be careful not to attribute excessive power to public
 787 LumGen     2,  14     |                   exalted status is to be attributed not to their own merits
 788 SacCon     4,  90     |                   exhorted in the Lord to attune their minds to their voices
 789 LumGen     6,  45(6*) |                   619 s. Leo XIII, Epist. Au milieu des consolations,
 790 OrEccl     4,  15(18) |                saltem ubi viget obligatio audiendi S. Liturgiam; ceterum cohaeret
 791 DigHum     0,  10(8)  |                XII, allocution to prelate auditors and other officials and
 792 GaudSp     9,  90     |                 should be strengthened by augmenting in them the number of well
 793 LumGen     6,  43     |            multiple and miraculous growth augments both the progress of the
 794 LumGen     2,  11     |                brought about by this most august sacrament.~Those who approach
 795 LumGen     8,  56(9*) |                   21: PL 22, 408. Cfr. S. Augwtinus, Serm. Sl, 2, 3: PL 38,
 796 GravEd     0          |         university centers under Catholic auspices in which priests, religious
 797 DigHum     0,  14     |                 to give utterance to, and authoritatively to teach, that truth which
 798 GaudSp     7,  70     |           individuals or groups of public authorities-are bound to keep these objectives
 799 SacCon     1,  35     |               deacon or some other person authorized by the bishop should preside
 800 ChrDom     2, 27      |                named by the bishop. These automatically enjoy the same authority
 801 GaudSp     7,  66     |               industrial society in which automation, for example, is advancing,
 802 LumGen     8,  62     |                   the titles of Advocate, Auxiliatrix, Adjutrix, and Mediatrix.16*
 803 GaudSp     8,  73     |           victimize large numbers through avarice and political crimes, and
 804 IntMir Intro,  1      |                  which have uncovered new avenues of communicating most readily
 805 GaudSp     2,  30     |                  limits; they do not even avert to the fact that by such
 806 LumGen     2,  10(3*) |                 Pius XII Alloc. Vous nous avez, 22 sept. 1956: AAS 48 (
 807 GaudSp     9          |                             SECTION 1 The Avoidance of War ~
 808 OrEccl   End,  30     |         deprivations for their unwavering avowal of the name of Christ.~"
 809 GaudSp     9,  92     |              unity of Christians is today awaited and desired by many, too,
 810 LumGen     7,  48     |                  restoration which we are awaiting has already begun in Christ,
 811 AdGent     2,  11     |                  divine; rather, let them awaken in him a yearning for that
 812 IntMir     2,  14     |             through critical approval and awards, by patronizing or jointly
 813 AdGent     6,  41     |              international organizations, aways having before their eyes
 814 PreOrd     2,  8      |                  a desert place, and rest awhile" (Mk 6:31). And further,
 815 GaudSp     7,  69(12) |                   Friedberg I, 302). This axiom is also found already in
 816 UniRed     2,  6(27)  |                 Constituti: Mansi 32, 988 B-C. ~
 817 AdGent     1,  4      |            supersedes the divisiveness of Babel.6 For it was from Pentecost
 818 GaudSp     9,  81     |               according to agreement, and backed up by true and workable
 819 GaudSp     3,  37     |                  of values is jumbled and bad is mixed with the good,
 820 AdGent     3,  19     |              support. Therefore, they are badly in need of the continued
 821 AdGent     3,  20     |               since men are more and more banding together into associations,
 822 IntMir     1,  7      |              handling or which, given the baneful effect of original sin in
 823 PerCar     0,  13     |         sustenance and works, they should banish all undue solicitude and
 824 LumGen     2,  14(12*)|                       Cfr. S. Augustinus, Bapt. c. Donat. V, 28, 39; PL
 825 SacCon     7,  128    |            dignity and suitability of the baptistery, the proper ordering of
 826 OrEccl     1,  4(4)   |                 praecedentium; item quoad baptizatos acatholicos in can. 11 habetur:
 827 LumGen     2,  17     |             however, all the faithful can baptize, the priest alone can complete
 828 DVerb     1,  2       |                 and lives among them (see Bar. 3:38), so that He may invite
 829 LumGen     3,  21(21*)|                    Pall1us VI, Homelia in Bas, Vaticana, 20 oct. 1963:
 830 ApAct     6,  28      |         apostolate should rest upon those bases which have been stated and
 831 GaudSp     7,  69(10) |                                   Cf. St. Basil, Hom. in illud Lucae "Destruam
 832 LumGen     4,  37(7*) |                   1. c., p. 789: Dans les batailles decisives, c'est parfois
 833 GaudSp     4,  43     |                   of the faithful will be bathed in the light of the Gospel.
 834 GaudSp     1,  13     |                himself he is incapable of battling the assaults of evil successfully,
 835 LumGen     3,  22(26*)|                    Hartel, 111 B, p. 650; Bayard, p.154.~
 836 LumGen     8,  62(15*)|             Mariae, Hom. 1, 8: PG 96, 712 BC-713 A.~
 837 LumGen     8,  56(5*) |              Annunt., 18: PG 87 (3), 3237 BD.~
 838 LumGen Appen          |                   in Chapter III ought to be-explained and understood in accordance
 839 PreOrd     2,  7      |                 into effect, there should be-in a manner suited to today'
 840 AdGent     3,  21     |              Christ, and become a shining beacon of the salvation which comes
 841 LumGen     3,  22     |                 alone as the rock and the bearer of the keys of the Church,156
 842 UniRed     1,  4      |               full catholicity in all her bearings. ~This Sacred Council is
 843 LumGen     1,  6(5*)  |                     Hymnus Urbs Ierusalem beata in Breviario monastico,
 844 LumGen     7,  50(9*) |           approbationis virtutum in Causa beatificationis et canonizationis Servi
 845 LumGen     8,  64(20*)|                1010; etc. Cfr. ctiam Ven. Beda, In Lc. Expos. I, cap. 2:
 846 IntMir     1,  12     |                   watch lest grave damage befall public morals and the welfare
 847 SacCon     1,  21     |                   fully, actively, and as befits a community.~Wherefore the
 848 GaudSp  Pref,  3      |              Christ under the lead of the befriending Spirit. And Christ entered
 849 AdGent     2,  15     |                 of the baptismal font, He begets to a new life those who
 850 GaudSp     5,  50     |                nature ordained toward the begetting and educating of children.
 851                       | begin
 852 AdGent  Pref,  1      |            preached the word of truth and begot churches."2 It is the duty
 853 GaudSp Intro,  7      |              manner and even the norms of behavior.~Finally, these new conditions
 854 OptTot     2, 3       |                initiated for those with a belated vocation are to be carefully
 855 LumGen     3,  25(40*)|                Eccl. (desumpta ex.S. Rob. Bellarmino): Mansi 51, I 579 C, necnon
 856 GaudSp     5,  48(1)  |                     Cf. St. Augustine, De Bene coniugali PL 40, 375-376
 857 LumGen     3,  27(58*)|                 oct. 1752, p 1: Bullarium Benedicti XIV, t. IV, Romae, 1758,
 858 GaudSp     3,  37     |                   of God. Grateful to his Benefactor for these creatures, using
 859 LumGen     7,  50     |                brothers and extraordinary benefactors, that we render due thanks
 860 GravEd     0          |                  preserve and enhance its beneficent influence upon today's world,
 861 GaudSp     9,  93     |              faithfully to the Gospel and benefiting from its resources, by joining
 862 GaudSp Intro,  10     |           likewise holds that in her most benign Lord and Master can be found
 863 LumGen     7,  50(14*)|                   christianae vereres, 1, Berolini, 1925, nn. 2008 2382 et
 864 GaudSp     8,  75(8)  |                   Discorsi di Pio XI (ed. Bertetto), Turin, vol. 1 (1960),
 865 ApAct     4,  20(8)   |                   Quae Nobis" to Cardinal Bertram, Nov. 13, 1928: A.A.S. 20 (
 866 PerCar     0,  25     |                  16). Therefore, let them beseech the Virgin Mary, the gentle
 867 LumGen     4,  33     |                   the measure of Christ's bestowal".197~Besides this apostolate
 868 ChrDom     2, 28      |            possess a necessary freedom in bestowing offices and benefices. Therefore,
 869 SacCon     2,  47     |                  on the night when He was betrayed, our Saviour instituted
 870 LumGen     1,  6      |                 even from family life and betrothals, the images receive preparatory
 871 GaudSp     5,  49     |                   several times urges the betrothed and the married to nourish
 872 GaudSp     2,  30     |                 institutions dedicated to bettering the conditions of human
 873 GaudSp     7,  70     |              monetary matters they should beware of hurting the welfare of
 874 GaudSp     7,  69(10) |                  de superfluo (ms. Assisi Bibl. Comun. 186, ff. 112a-113a);
 875 GaudSp Intro,  5      |                  by planning.~Advances in biology, psychology, and the social
 876 GaudSp     7,  69(9)  |                  1941), p. 199; Pius XII, birthday radio address 1954: AAS
 877 ChrDom     1, 10      |                   too-especially diocesan bishops-will be chosen as members of
 878 GravEd     0,  0(14)  |            Encyclical letter, Non Abbiamo Bisogno June 29, 1931: A.A.S. 23 (
 879 PreOrd   End,  22     |                   work done, and also the bitter loneliness which men experience
 880 GaudSp Intro,  4      |                   disputes still continue bitterly, and with them the peril
 881 GaudSp     5,  51     |                   control which are found blameworthy by the teaching authority
 882 GaudSp     1,  22     |                   for our imitation,26 He blazed a trail, and if we follow
 883 LumGen     3,  29     |               Eucharist, to assist at and bless marriages in the name of
 884 GaudSp Intro,  10     |                 practical materialism are blinded against any sharp insight
 885 AdGent     1,  9      |               shame of the demon, and the bliss of men.24 Thus, missionary
 886 AdGent     6,  41     |                   Do not be a stumbling - block to Jews and Greeks and to
 887 GaudSp     1,  13     |                   sin has diminished man, blocking his path to fulfillment.~
 888 AdGent     1,  6      |                   to every creature16 and blocks the way to the faith for
 889 AdGent     6,  36     |                   a new spiritual wind to blow for the whole Church, which
 890 DigHum     0,  11     |               against it. Not by force of blows does His rule assert its
 891 LumGen     7,  50(8*) |                   Symposion, VII, 3: GCS (Bodwetseh), p. 74~
 892 OrEccl     6,  27(33) |               validitas sacramentorum; 2) bona fides et dispositio; 3)
 893 OrEccl     4,  16(20) |              canon providere intendit, in bonum animarum, pluralitati iurisdictionis
 894 PreOrd     2,  5      |             contains the entire spiritual boon of the Church,16 that is,
 895 GaudSp     8,  76     |            justice and charity within the borders of a nation and between
 896 DigHum     0,  11     |          revelation to completion. For He bore witness to the truth,19
 897 GaudSp     7,  69(10) |                   d. 33, a.3, sol. 1 (ed. Borgnet XXVIII, 611); Id. In IV
 898 LumGen     4,  34     |           hardships of life, if patiently borne-all these become "spiritual
 899 AdGent     3,  22     |            inheritance (cf Ps. 2:8). They borrow from the customs and traditions
 900 LumGen     2,  16(19*)|                  C.S. Officii ad Archiep. Boston.: Denz. 3869-72.~
 901 LumGen     2,  9      |                   of Christ.98 For He has bought it for Himself with His
 902 PreOrd     2,  7(41)  |                Priests are counselors or 'bouleytai'" (PG 11, 957 d-960 a). ~
 903 ChrDom     2, 23      |                 In determining a diocesan boundary, as far as possible consideration
 904 GaudSp Intro,  10     |              other he feels himself to be boundless in his desires and summoned
 905 LumGen     2,  9      |                 will give my law in their bowels, and I will write it in
 906 ApAct     6,  29(2)   |                   the first international Boy Scouts congress, June 6,
 907 LumGen     6,  43     |                   religious families have branched out in a marvelous and multiple
 908 GaudSp     5,  48     |           loneliness. Widowhood, accepted bravely as a continuation of the
 909 LumGen     6,  44     |                  men both the unsurpassed breadth of the strength of Christ
 910 GaudSp     1,  18     |                 inescapably lodged in his breast.~Although the mystery of
 911 LumGen     2,  16     |                 gives to all men life and breath and all things,127 and as
 912 LumGen     7,  50(16*)|                                           Breviarium Romanum, Invitatorium infesto
 913 SacCon     2,  47(37) |                                     Roman Breviary, feast of Corpus Christi,
 914 SacCon     4,  84     |                the bride addressed to her bridegroom; lt is the very prayer which
 915 UniRed     3,  24     |                      24. Now that we have briefly set out the conditions for
 916 GaudSp     5,  49     |                   in body and in mind, in bright days or dark. It will never
 917 IntMir Appen,  24     |               give savor to the earth and brighten the world. Moreover, the
 918 GaudSp     5,  47     |           everywhere reflected with equal brilliance, since polygamy, the plague
 919 SacCon     1,  20     |          important when the service to be broadcast is the Mass. ~
 920 ApAct Intro,  1       |                  that their apostolate be broadened and intensified. With a
 921 GaudSp Intro,  5      |                   human intellect is also broadening its dominion over time:
 922 PreOrd     3,  21     |                  firmly achieved and more broadly based. ~
 923 DigHum     0,  11     |                   who "does not break the bruised reed nor extinguish the
 924 ApAct     3,  12(8)   |                  Young Christian Workers, Brussels, Sept. 3, 1950: A.A.S. 42 (
 925 NAet     0, 2         |               with love and trust. Again, Buddhism, in its various forms, realizes
 926 AdGent     6,  38     |                  in proportion to its own budget;5 they should consider how
 927 GaudSp Intro,  4      |                 discoveries. As a result, buffeted between hope and anxiety
 928 LumGen     1,  6      |            Himself to the stone which the builders rejected, but which was
 929 LumGen     8,  59(12*)|                             Cfr. Pius IX, Bulla Ineffabilis 8 dec. 1854:
 930 LumGen     3,  27(58*)|               Ecclesia, 5 oct. 1752, p 1: Bullarium Benedicti XIV, t. IV, Romae,
 931 OrEccl     6,  24(29) |                                 Ex tenore Bullarum unionis singularum Ecclesiarum
 932 GaudSp     3,  39     |                again, but freed of stain, burnished and transfigured, when Christ
 933 GaudSp     5,  49     |              their lives:11 indeed by its busy generosity it grows better
 934 LumGen     6,  43(1*) |                    PG 34, 995 ss.; ed. C. Butler, Cambridge 1898 (1904).
 935 GaudSp     1,  22(33) |                                   Cf. The Byzantine Easter Liturgy.~
 936 LumGen     3,  26(48*)|        consecrationis cpiscopalis in ritu byzantino: Euchologion to mega, Romae,
 937 LumGen     2,  13(10*)|                   III, 22, 1-3: PG 7, 925 C-926 Aet 955 C - 958 A; Harvey
 938 LumGen     2,  11(5*) |                    PG 33, 1009-1012. Nic. Cabasilas, De vita in Christo, lib.
 939 LumGen     2,  16(20*)|                             Cfr. Eusebius Caes., Praeparatio Evangelica,
 940 GaudSp     9,  81     |               making ready. Warned by the calamities which the human race has
 941 GaudSp     1,  18     |             useful in the extreme, cannot calm his anxiety; for prolongation
 942 GaudSp     2,  28     |                   those who persecute and calumniate you" (Matt. S:43-44).~
 943 LumGen     6,  43(1*) |                   995 ss.; ed. C. Butler, Cambridge 1898 (1904). Pius XI, Const.
 944 ApAct     3,  12(8)   |                   Archbishop of Montreal, Canada, to be relayed to the Assemblies
 945 ApAct     3,  12(8)   |              relayed to the Assemblies of Canadian Young Christian Workers,
 946 LumGen     7,  51(24*)|                            Cfr. S. Petrus Canisius, Catechismus Maior seu Summa
 947 OrEccl     4,  15(19) |                                      Cfr. Canones Apostolorum, 8 et 9; Syn.
 948 LumGen     7,  50(9*) |                  Causa beatificationis et canonizationis Servi Dei Ioannis Nepomuecni
 949 GaudSp     5,  49(10) |                 20; 31:10-31; Tob. 8:4-8; Cant. 1:2-3; 1:16; 4:16-5, 1;
 950 SacCon     4,  83     |                   His own singing of this canticle of divine praise.~For he
 951 PreOrd     2,  11     |                  common cause between the captain of a ship and the sailors,64
 952 AdGent     1,  3      |               hearted, to proclaim to the captives release, and sight to the
 953 GaudSp     1,  17     |             emancipating himself from all captivity to passion, he pursues his
 954 ApAct     4,  20(8)   |                    letter "Quae Nobis" to Cardinal Bertram, Nov. 13, 1928:
 955 GravEd     0          |                   to undertake a teaching career. ~
 956 LumGen     2,  15(15*)|                    p. 738. Epist. Encycl. Caritatis studium, 25 iul. 1898: ASS
 957 DigHum     0,  11     |              Therefore they rejected all "carnal weapons:26 they followed
 958 GaudSp     1,  22(20) |                    14. Cf. Tertullian, De carnis resurrectione 6: "The shape
 959 LumGen     5,  41     |                  who plied His hands with carpenter's tools and Who in union
 960 LumGen     5,  41(11*)|                    Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Castf Connubii, 31 dec. 1930.
 961 GaudSp     1,  13     |                 renewing him inwardly and casting out that "prince of this
 962 LumGen     2,  11(7*) |                    sed coniugatorum etiam castitas.~
 963 GaudSp     4,  40     |               life to men but in some way casts the reflected light of that
 964 LumGen     7,  50(6*) |                  Plurimae inseriptione in Catacumbis romanis.~
 965 GaudSp     9,  80     |                   chain of events, it can catapult men into the most atrocious
 966 LumGen     7,  51(24*)|                  Cfr. S. Petrus Canisius, Catechismus Maior seu Summa Doctrinae
 967 DVerb  Pref,  1(1)    |                    cf. St. Augustine, "De Catechizandis Rudibus," C.IV 8: PL. 40,
 968 PreOrd     2,  6(30)  |                                     Other categories could be named, e.g. migrants,
 969 LumGen     1,  8(13*) |                 III, Const. dogm. de fide cath.: Denz. 1782 (3001).~
 970 LumGen     3,  21(19*)|                 122: Tribuas eis, Domine, cathedram episcopalem ad regendam
 971 OrEccl     6,  24(29) |                   Ecclesiarum orientalium catholicarum.~
 972 GravEd     0,  0(16)  |                  XI's motu proprio. Orbem Catholicum, June 29 1923: A.A.S. 15 (
 973 LumGen     4,  37(7*) |                   importance de la presse catholique, 17 febr. 1950: AAS 42 (
 974 SacCon     1,  26(33) |              Cyprian, On the Unity of the Cathotic Church, 7; cf. Letter 66,
 975 GaudSp     8,  75(8)  |                 Federazione Universitaria Cattolica". Discorsi di Pio XI (ed.
 976 LumGen     7,  50(9*) |                 approbationis virtutum in Causa beatificationis et canonizationis
 977 GaudSp     3,  38     |                 is not a hopeless one. He cautions them at the same time that
 978 PreOrd     2,  7(41)  |                    cf. Code of Canon Law, cc. 423-428). It is our desire
 979 GaudSp     3,  38     |                 ready the material of the celestial realm by this ministry of
 980 LumGen     3,  23     |               them a common duty, as Pope Celestine in his time recommended
 981 LumGen     5,  42     |                  held by virginity or the celibate state.231 This is a precious
 982 PreOrd     2,  7(41)  |                   10-12); Origen, Against Celsus, 3, 30: "Priests are counselors
 983 SacCon     1,  41     |            liturgical life of the diocese centered around the bishop, especially
 984 ChrDom     1, 10      |                such a way the offices and central organs of the Catholic Church
 985 SacCon     4,  101    |                    In accordance with the centuries-old tradition of the Latin rite,
 986 AdGent     2,  17     |            publicly celebrated liturgical ceremony, so that in the eyes of
 987 LumGen     2,  14(12*)|                    V, 28, 39; PL 43, 197: Certe manifestum est, id quod
 988 LumGen     1,  7(8*)  |                  S. Thomas, In Col. 1, 18 cet. 5 ed. Marietti, II, n.
 989 OrEccl     4,  18(23) |              patriarchatus, Metropolitis, ceterisque Ordinariis locorum... qui
 990 OrEccl     1,  2(2)   |                Innocentius IV, Ep. Cum de cetero, 27 aug. 1247; Ep. Sub catholicae,
 991 OrEccl     4,  15(18) |          obligatio audiendi S. Liturgiam; ceterum cohaeret diei liturgicae
 992 GaudSp     1,  13     |                  as though he is bound by chains. But the Lord Himself came
 993 GaudSp     1,  22(22) |                 291 (556); Cf. Council of Chalce, don:" to be acknowledged
 994 UniRed     3,  13     |                   Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon were challenged, and later
 995 OrEccl     4,  17(21) |                 quidem, 13 ian. 444; Syn. Chalcedonen., can. 6; Syn. Constantinopolitana
 996 OrEccl     3,  7(8)   |      Constantinopolitanam I, can. 2 et 3; Chalcedonensem, can. 28; can. 9; Constantinopolitanam
 997 OrEccl     3,  11(13) |                   an. 419, can. 17 et 57; Chalcedonensis, an. 451, can. 12; S. Innocentius
 998 OrEccl     5,  22(27) |                  can. 18; Syn. Mar Issaci Chaldaeorum, an. 410, can. 15; S. Nerses
 999 UniRed     3,  13     |                Ephesus and Chalcedon were challenged, and later when ecclesiastical
1000 LumGen     1,  8      |              overcome its sorrows and its challenges, both within itself and
 
  |