Ad Petri Cathedram
Chapter, § 1 4,133| they must lead a life very different from the one they once knew.~
Aeterna Dei sapientia
§ 2 22 | Things secular stand on a different basis from things divine,
Mater et magistra
§ 3 11 | of trade unions varied in different countries. They were either
4 48 | economic wealth possessed by different countries. ~The Political
5 54 | which may exist between different branches of the economy
6 54 | of the economy or between different regions within the same
7 54 | country or even between the different peoples of the world. It
8 80 | between the economies of different countries; the fostering
9 122 | between countries with a different degree of social and economic
10 136 | reducing imbalances between the different classes of citizens. ~Price
11 139 | proper proportion between different wages is also a matter of
12 150 | are living and working in different areas, some of which are
13 152 | and social balance in the different areas of the same political
14 206 | words frequently take on different or opposite meanings according
15 221 | form and manner that the different situations allow and demand.
Pacem in terris
§ 16 6 | which govern men are quite different. The Father of the universe
17 41 | nations that are heirs to different traditions and imbued with
18 41 | traditions and imbued with a different culture. Women are gaining
19 56 | share in it-although in different ways, depending on his tasks,
20 68 | are things which vary in different places and at different
21 68 | different places and at different times. ~We think, however,
22 94 | territories of a nation of a different ethnic origin. This situation
23 97 | with a people steeped in a different civilization from their
24 100 | of people of more or less different ethnic origin. Nothing must
25 113 | replaced by an altogether different one, namely, the realization
Princeps pastorum
§ 26 16 | circumstances which obtain in different areas and nations. This
27 21 | taken, however, to fulfill different needs, whenever they arise,
28 25 | 25. This danger, in different ways and forms, could arise
29 28 | including not only the different grades of the hierarchy,
30 44 | may be less useful where different conditions and needs prevail.
31 45 | are capable of enkindling different organizations with apostolic
32 47 | type of instruction will be different from that in ordinary schools.
33 48 | of its forms. In all the different parts of the world there
34 53 | society which is not only different from their own but also,
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