| 01-beset | besid-discr | disgu-helpf | hence-morni | morta-relat | relax-thing | think-zeal- 
      1001 MaterMagist 172         |                        of colonialism-cleverly disguised, no doubt, but actually
1002 PacemTerris 161         |                     building on the ruins that disharmony has left in its wake."68 ~
1003 PetrCathed   4,146      |                        and yet in the midst of dishonor they find honor. Their good
1004 PetrCathed   4,146      |                     all in abundance. They are dishonored, and yet in the midst of
1005 MaterMagist 217         |                        s experience of so much disillusionment and bloodshed only goes
1006 MaterMagist 208         |                        God it must necessarily disintegrate. Moreover, man is not just
1007 MaterMagist 170         |                        national mold.~Offering Disinterested Aid~
1008 MaterMagist 193         |                     which no man may ignore or disobey. He is not therefore permitted
1009 MaterMagist 58          |                        or deficient, incurable disorder ensues: in particular, the
1010 MaterMagist 137         |                 authority cannot be altogether dispensed with. ~
1011 PaenitAgere 27          |                     are inspirations that will disperse and remedy the first and
1012 AeterDeiSap 30          |                     the universal Church. They display his exceptional qualities
1013 MaterMagist 109         |                     withdrawing man's right to dispose freely of the means indispensable
1014 PrincPastor 52          |                       whom they find favorably disposed, in order first to arouse
1015 SacerNostri   3,65      |                    office. He was so humble by disposition and so much aware through
1016 MaterMagist 70          |                      value, frequently carry a disproportionately high rate of remuneration,
1017 MaterMagist 152         |                    development. ~International Disproportions~
1018 PetrCathed   2,38       |                   attempting, beyond doubt, to disrupt and divide human society;
1019 MaterMagist 204         |                resources on projects which are disruptive of human society rather
1020 MaterMagist 211         |                        the increasing sense of dissatisfaction with worldly goods which
1021 PetrCathed   4,127      |                     straitened fortune who are dissatisfied with their very difficult
1022 PetrCathed   1,12       |                  people have a serious duty to disseminate, not lies, error, and obscenity,
1023 PacemTerris 90          |                     utter rejection of ways of disseminating information which violate
1024 PrincPastor 21          |                  promoted "the publication and dissemination of Catholic books of every
1025 PetrCathed   2,25       |                      reason for living. Lusts, dissensions, and disputes would erupt
1026 PrincPastor 44          |                    thwart valuable efforts and dissipate valuable energy through
1027 PacemTerris 112         |                     and the moral excesses and dissolution that accompany it, must
1028 PaenitAgere 15          |                      one views the faith which distinguishes the Church, the sacraments
1029 SacerNostri   1,12      |                    would undoubtedly be both a distortion of the real mind of this
1030 MaterMagist 202         |                          The Effects of Mutual Distrust~
1031 MaterMagist 53          |                  injustice, a grave evil and a disturbance of right order, for a larger
1032 SacerNostri   3,73      |                      those pastors who are not disturbed by the fact that many sheep
1033 PacemTerris 4           |                          4. And yet there is a disunity among individuals and among
1034 PacemTerris 49(32)      |                      XIII's encyclical epistle Diutumum illud, Acta Leonis XIII,
1035 GrataRecord 1(1)        |                       Virginis, XVII, 285 ff.; Diuturni temporis, XVIII, 153 ff. ~
1036 PacemTerris 52(36)      |                      XIII's encyclical epistle Diuturnum illud, Acta Leonis XIII,
1037 PacemTerris 47          |                        endowed with authority. Divest it of this authority, and
1038 MaterMagist 81          |                 management, and as interest or dividends to investors. ~The Structure
1039 PacemTerris 14(10)      |                                                Divinae Institutiones, lib. IV,
1040 AeterDeiSap 43          |              indissoluble bond between Peter's divinely-given authority and that of the
1041 AeterDeiSap 9           |                     Nestorius, upheld Christ's Divinity and the fact that the Virgin
1042 PacemTerris 153         |                  reason for this very frequent divorce between faith and practice
1043 SacerNostri    ,1       |                       the parish priest of the dny town of Salzano), as he
1044 MaterMagist 72          |                      and these can-and in fact do-vary from country to country,
1045 AeterDeiSap 27          |                     other of the Church's holy doctors."22~The Sermons~
1046 PaenitAgere 16(16)      |                   Council of Trent, Sess. XIV, doctrina de Sacramento Paenitentiae,
1047 AeterDeiSap 16          |                       to impose the groundless dogmatic assertions of this "very
1048 PetrCathed   2,22       |                        no motives of political dominance, no desires for the things
1049 PacemTerris 129         |                      that love, not fear, must dominate the relationships between
1050 MaterMagist 12          |                     the force of law, but also dominated the ordinary business relationships
1051 MaterMagist 189         |                       to deepen and extend his dominion over Nature. The progress
1052 SacerNostri   2,36      |                      from external affairs; we don't know what we really ought
1053 SacerNostri   1,15      |                    When beggars knocked at his door, he received them with love
1054 SacerNostri   3,116     |                       Us to link together this double centenary, of Lourdes and
1055 MaterMagist 127         |                        means of communication; drinking water; houseing; health
1056 PacemTerris 64          |                transportation, communications, drinking-water, housing, medical care,
1057 PaenitAgere 12          |                     Only so will he be able to drive away the enemy of his soul
1058 PrincPastor 19          |                        purifying them from all dross of error. So, too, the Church,
1059 SacerNostri   1,26      |                   unshaken throughout his life drove him to an uninterrupted
1060 MaterMagist 217         |                 imagine that they can do so by drying up the source from which
1061 SacerNostri   1,17(26)  |                                    Cf. Sermons du B. Jean B.M. Vianney, 1909,
1062 AeterDeiSap 5(4)        |                                        Cf. Ed. Duchesne, I, 238. ~
1063 SacerNostri   1,28      |               principles; in acknowledging and duly obeying ecclesiastical authority,
1064 PetrCathed   4,99       |                children are lost, pathetically duped by falsehood; you are confronted
1065 MaterMagist 115         |                   private property in terms of durable consumer goods, houses,
1066 PacemTerris 15          |                   woman enjoy equal rights and duties-or to embrace the priesthood
1067 MaterMagist 125         |                 possible those enjoyed by city dwellers who draw their resources
1068 PacemTerris 164         |                        world will never be the dwellingplace of peace, till peace has
1069 PetrCathed   1,8        |                      plight, "became flesh and dwelt among us,"3 that He might "
1070 GrataRecord 12          |                 contribute with a selfless and dynamic will to mutual respect,
1071 PacemTerris 82          |                  intellectual qualities, which earned for them their reputation
1072 GrataRecord 4           |                      even greater emphasis and earnestness, for reasons which this
1073 PacemTerris 1           |                Apostolic Benediction.~Peace on Earth-which man throughout the ages
1074 SacerNostri   1,19      |                        Lord on detachment from earthIy things, he excluded possible
1075 PetrCathed   4,136      |                       numbers and with greater ease, but we are even more concerned
1076 MaterMagist 47          |              modernization of agriculture; the easing of communications, especially
1077 MaterMagist 255         |                    Paul insisted: "Whether you eat or drink, or whatsoever
1078 AeterDeiSap 21(18)      |                   Kirch, Enchir. fontium hist. eccl. antiquae, Freiburg in Br.,
1079 AeterDeiSap 63          |                 intended, therefore, to be the echo of that which was made many
1080 SacerNostri   3,114     |                     souls a century later, and echoing far and wide almost endlessly. ~
1081 MaterMagist 179         |              past-brought them many social and economical advantages. For true Christians
1082 MaterMagist 137         |                   agricultural produce, modern economists must devise a suitable means
1083 MaterMagist 168         |                     Again, every sector of the economy-agriculture, industry and the services-must
1084 MaterMagist 104         |                        to play in the national economy-do not conflict in any way
1085 MaterMagist 79          |                        various branches of the economy-that is, between agriculture,
1086 AeterDeiSap 21(18)      |                     antiquae, Freiburg in Br., edn. 4, 1923, n. 943. ~
1087 PrincPastor 15          |                        governing, forming, and educating their own seminarians. That
1088 MaterMagist 233         |               important role to play in social education-especially those associations and organizations
1089 PacemTerris 74          |                      what policies are in fact effectual for the common good; and
1090 MaterMagist 94          |                   becoming more modernized and efficient-more so than ever before. Hence
1091 PaenitAgere 19          |                       fly the more swiftly and effortlessly to the holy ears of God,
1092 SacerNostri   3,85      |                      see him each year reached eighty thousand according to the
1093 MaterMagist 46          |                        twenty years which have elapsed since the changing economic
1094 PacemTerris 6           |                      which regulate the blind, elemental forces of the universe.
1095 PetrCathed   4,125      |                       to purify the soul; they elevate and ennoble us and can win
1096 PetrCathed   3,82       |                    that humility of soul which elevates us to great heights, that
1097 PrincPastor 20          |                    members of the intellectual elite of their country."38~Study
1098 AeterDeiSap 28          |                        is not just the exegete elucidating a Book of Sacred Scripture,
1099 PrincPastor 26          |                   Universal Church, from which emanates the supernatural life of
1100 PacemTerris 160         |                      one would think they were embarking on some political revolution. ~
1101 PacemTerris 68          |                       to be given a form which embodies a threefold division of
1102 PetrCathed   3,77       |                     Church wears robes of rich embroidery.32~
1103 PacemTerris 118         |                      that eventually there may emerge some point of agreement
1104 MaterMagist 172         |                     many nations have recently emerged. Such action would, moreover,
1105 PacemTerris 3           |                                    3. But what emerges first and foremost from
1106 PetrCathed   4,135      |                     flocks. Thus, wherever the emigrant may journey, he sees the
1107 PaenitAgere 36          |                 frequent rein to the turbulent emotions of the soul and seriously
1108 AeterDeiSap 54          |                      and even by the Byzantine emperors.49~
1109 MaterMagist 87          |                      of all it is necessary to emphasize that if these two kinds
1110 MaterMagist 78          |                      But a further point needs emphasizing: Any adjustment between
1111 AeterDeiSap 45          |                     pronouncement is clear and emphatic enough; yet unhesitatingly
1112 AeterDeiSap 51          |                      of God you gained a wider empire than you did by earthly
1113 PacemTerris 122         |                      economic development that enables their citizens to live in
1114 AeterDeiSap 21(18)      |                                  Cf. C. Kirch, Enchir. fontium hist. eccl. antiquae,
1115 SacerNostri   1,25      |                chastity is preserved, does not enclose the priest's soul within
1116 AeterDeiSap 33          |                                    33. "We are encompassed by both the gentleness of
1117 AeterDeiSap 18(17)      |                                                Encycl. letter Sempiternus Rex,
1118 MaterMagist 176         |                 well-being were the be-all and end-all of life. This attitude is
1119 PacemTerris 159         |                    arranged for some practical end-though hitherto they were thought
1120 PacemTerris 170         |                    souls of men whatever might endanger peace. May He transform
1121 PetrCathed   1,8        |                 goodness, and civilization are endangered. ~Truth and Error~
1122 PaenitAgere 36          |                      of the soul and seriously endangers its eternal salvation. They
1123 PrincPastor 43          |                   bishops of mission countries endeavored to do their best to carry
1124 PaenitAgere 37          |                      which the Council will be endeavoring to inspire to truth and
1125 PrincPastor 7           |                       nations. When it finally ended, Benedict XV's Apostolic
1126 SacerNostri   3,86      |                   Penance for what seemed like endless periods of time, especially
1127 SacerNostri   3,114     |                    echoing far and wide almost endlessly. ~
1128 PetrCathed   2,49       |                         bears with all things, endures all things; (1 Cor. 13.4-
1129 MaterMagist 256         |                     things, hopeth all things, endureth all things."59~
1130 PrincPastor 7           |                invitation of a fatherly voice, enflamed the souls of all Catholics
1131 MaterMagist 261         |                       illumines, enkindles and enflames. No age but hears her warning
1132 PetrCathed   1,11       |                        innocence of others and engages in an altogether despicable
1133 MaterMagist 206         |                   States. And so the belief is engendered that if a nation is to assert
1134 MaterMagist 145         |                       service many branches of engineering, chemistry and biology,
1135 MaterMagist 210         |                      be turned by science into engines of destruction. They realize
1136 PacemTerris 85          |                       the Creator Himself, and engraved indelibly on men's hearts . . .
1137 PacemTerris 112         |                        account be permitted to engulf the human race for a third
1138 PetrCathed   2,47       |           counterattack, or like a river which engulfs every obstacle in its course;
1139 AeterDeiSap 57(51)      |                               Menaia tou holou eniautou III, Rome 1896, p. 612.~
1140 PaenitAgere 38          |                        souls by penance and to enkindle them with the fervor of
1141 MaterMagist 261         |                  nations. Her light illumines, enkindles and enflames. No age but
1142 PrincPastor 16          |                      We repeat, whom they must enlight with the truth of the Gospel
1143 PetrCathed   1,8        |                    grasp of reason, unless God enlightens and inspires us. This is
1144 PrincPastor 26          |           particularist spirit, if they arouse enmity in other nations, and if
1145 PetrCathed   4,125      |                     the soul; they elevate and ennoble us and can win us eternal
1146 PacemTerris 50          |                 contrary, we are lifted up and ennobled in spirit, for to serve
1147 MaterMagist 258         |                      is man's work exalted and ennobled-so highly exalted that it leads
1148 PrincPastor 37          |                mysteries of the sacred liturgy enormously enriches and completes the
1149 SacerNostri   2,40      |                          It is great enough to enrich all the souls of the diocese!"53~
1150 AeterDeiSap 76          |                    another's progress they are enriched by their own growth."69~
1151 PrincPastor 37          |                      sacred liturgy enormously enriches and completes the Christian
1152 PrincPastor 19          |                     exist which are capable of enriching the culture of the human
1153 PetrCathed   2,44       |                      men. And this problem can entail even greater difficulties
1154 MaterMagist 65          |              intermediary bodies and corporate enterprises-which are, so to say, the main
1155 SacerNostri   2,51      |                       at the altar and that he enters upon this office by offering
1156 PetrCathed   4,106      |                       people spontaneously and enthusiastically, cooperating zealously and
1157 PetrCathed   1,14       |                         however, they can also entice men, especially the young,
1158 SacerNostri   2,42      |                       spiritual protection and enticed by the attractions of this
1159 PacemTerris 34          |                        of external coercion or enticement. There is nothing human
1160 PetrCathed   3,93       |                       it struggles against the enticements of vice, against those enemies
1161 GrataRecord 3           |                      recite it each day in its entirety and We intend to recite
1162 PacemTerris 88          |                 development. But that does not entitle them to exert unjust political
1163 MaterMagist 256         |                      patient, is kind; charity envieth not, dealeth not perversely,
1164 PrincPastor 47          |                        social and professional environments; in time, they must be able
1165 MaterMagist 192         |                     this question is one which envisages the social and economic
1166 MaterMagist 213         |                    these were little more than ephemeral; others have undergone,
1167 PrincPastor 8           |                      favored the foundation of Episcopal Sees, and if possible, to
1168 PetrCathed   4,98       |                      Venerable Brethren in the episopacy of both the Eastern and
1169 PrincPastor 45(78)      |                                 Cf. Pius XII's Epistola de Actione Catholica, October
1170 MaterMagist 41          |                      of the publication of the epoch-making social encyclical of Leo
1171 PrincPastor 47          |                      influence, which at times equips them even better for nurturing
1172 MaterMagist 213         |                      violence nor cunning, can eradicate. ~
1173 MaterMagist 214         |                      feeling or fantasy, to be eradicated from his soul as an anachronism
1174 PacemTerris 158         |              error-even in the case of men who err regarding the truth or are
1175 PacemTerris 157         |                      to good."66~Error and the Errant~
1176 PacemTerris 6           |                    mischief is often caused by erroneous opinions. Many people think
1177 PacemTerris 158         |                      the person who falls into error-even in the case of men who err
1178 PetrCathed   2,25       |                dissensions, and disputes would erupt from within us. There would
1179 PacemTerris 47          |                      right reason, there is no escaping the conclusion that it derives
1180 AeterDeiSap 49(44)      |                      in C. Silva-Tarouca S. 1. Espistolarum Romanorum Pontificum collect.
1181 PrincPastor 14          |                       tactfully but firmly, to espouse those virtues which are
1182 MaterMagist 175         |                     must realize that they are essentially instrumental in character.
1183 PacemTerris 26          |                     purpose; and so must he be esteemed."23~
1184 PacemTerris 10          |                     revelation, inevitably our estimate of it is incomparably increased.
1185 AeterDeiSap 15          |                  humility; strength, weakness; eternity, mortality; and, in order
1186 MaterMagist 111         |                    striving after an important ethico-social end. She does not intend
1187 PrincPastor 19          |                     one culture, not even with European and Western civilization,
1188 SacerNostri   1,19(28)  |                                       In Lucae Evangelium Expositio, IV, in c. 12;
1189 GrataRecord 8           |                                   8. These two events-the one full of sorrow, the
1190 MaterMagist 49          |                         There is, moreover, an ever-extending network of societies and
1191 MaterMagist 41          |                    Spirit which through it, in ever-growing measure from that time on,
1192 PetrCathed   2,45       |               conveniences an integral part of everyday life; even the poorest citizens
1193 AeterDeiSap 64          |               churches-that is, all Christians everywhere-must be united; and it is through
1194 SacerNostri   3,79      |                     love, the bitter sorrow he evidenced when the mere concept of
1195 PrincPastor 35          |                    whereas they slander you as evildoers, they may, through observing
1196 PacemTerris 151         |                       time, civil institutions evince a high degree of scientific
1197 PacemTerris 70          |                       degree of civic maturity evinced by the State in question,
1198 PacemTerris 120         |                        field of endeavor. ~The Evolution of Economically Under-developed
1199 PacemTerris 42          |                       form of society which is evolving on entirely new social and
1200 PetrCathed   1,12       |                       we must urge to careful, exact, and prudent presentation
1201 MaterMagist 94          |                       of the workers, and more exacting professional qualifications.
1202 PetrCathed   2,41       |                     population: prejudices and exaggerated ambitions for personal advantage
1203 PetrCathed   1,13       |                     written to mock virtue and exalt depravity."8~Modem Media
1204 SacerNostri   2,41      |              recitation of the Rosary, careful examination of conscience, the Church,
1205 PetrCathed   1,8        |                      attain those truths which exceed the capacity of nature and
1206 AeterDeiSap 16          |                      of this "very foolish and exceedingly ignorant man,''12 who obstinately
1207 PrincPastor 29          |                      divine grace, they do not excel in that spirit of vigorous
1208 AeterDeiSap 25          |                      Church, one, that is, who excelled in expounding and sponsoring
1209 AeterDeiSap 27          |                         27. "It was due to his excelling virtue, his teaching, and
1210 PrincPastor 9           |             Propagation of the Faith, with the exception of those at present under
1211 PrincPastor 51          |                     mutual assistance which is exchanged among Catholic organizations
1212 MaterMagist 4           |                     followers, He was moved to exclaim: "I have compassion on the
1213 PrincPastor 53          |                       in fraternal harmony and excludes all selfish considerations"
1214 PaenitAgere 6           |                    would bring about their own exclusion from the plan of divine
1215 PrincPastor 48          |                  solution to these problems in exclusively human advice nor in principles
1216 PetrCathed   2,20       |                       seeks easy and indulgent excuses for vice and immoral behavior. ~
1217 AeterDeiSap 17          |                      and "the strengthening of execrable heresy.''15 ~The Council
1218 AeterDeiSap 28          |                    writings he is not just the exegete elucidating a Book of Sacred
1219 SacerNostri   3,83      |                      all in its path, as it is exemplified in this priest who throughout
1220 SacerNostri    ,4       |                       of the most tireless and exhausting labors, and already famous
1221 PrincPastor 35          |                       Heaven";61 and St. Peter exhorts the faithful to "abstain
1222 PacemTerris 103         |                    political reasons have been exiled from their own homelands.
1223 PetrCathed   4,132      |                      be wasted. ~Emigrants and Exiles~
1224 PacemTerris 83          |                     would immediately cease to exit, being deprived of its whole
1225 MaterMagist 162         |                     follow that one is thereby exonerated from extending emergency
1226 MaterMagist 150         |                        of money, especially in expanding industries. In short, it
1227 PrincPastor 3           |                       Our presence: "We cannot expect anything greater or more
1228 SacerNostri   3,97      |                       souls are hoping for and expecting, or to the many areas of
1229 PrincPastor 47          |                   towns and cities, it will be expedient to open social centers and
1230 MaterMagist 189         |                  problem is not to be found in expedients which offend against the
1231 PetrCathed   4,104      |                     time and belongings, their expenditures, or of their personal inconvenience.
1232 MaterMagist 243         |                      the physical world at the expense of his spirit, which is
1233 MaterMagist 231         |                    training. They must gain an experimental knowledge of the subject,
1234 PaenitAgere 5           |                      of the Law until they had expiated their crime of idolatry
1235 SacerNostri   2,56      |                        with Him; just as Jesus expiates the sins of men, so too
1236 MaterMagist 235         |                        an efficacious means of expiating the punishment due to sin,
1237 SacerNostri   2,56      |                transformed and to share in the expiatory life of the Divine Redeemer
1238 AeterDeiSap 19          |                        intention-as he himself explains-was to thwart the twenty-eighth
1239 PacemTerris 152         |                    gospels. In Our opinion the explanation lies in a certain cleavage
1240 PaenitAgere 1           |               salvation. That is the clear and explicit teaching of Christ, and
1241 MaterMagist 141         |                       a means which they could exploit in the social milieu to
1242 MaterMagist 189         |                     discover ways and means of exploiting these resources for his
1243 PaenitAgere 38          |                    utmost, Venerable Brethren; explore every avenue that is open
1244 MaterMagist 210         |                      hidden depths still to be explored and adequately explained.
1245 PacemTerris 156         |                      into outer space, are now exploring other avenues, leading to
1246 PacemTerris 72          |                      to be of so ambiguous and explosive a nature, that they are
1247 AeterDeiSap 28          |                       truth. He is the saintly exponent of the Christian mysteries.
1248 SacerNostri   1,19(28)  |                            In Lucae Evangelium Expositio, IV, in c. 12; Migne, PL
1249 MaterMagist 16          |                        at the beginning of his exposition of the principles and precepts
1250 AeterDeiSap 49          |                      Gospels which he so often expounded (Matt. 16:17-18; Luke 22::
1251 AeterDeiSap 14          |                    Constantinople, in which he expounds the dogma of the Incarnation
1252 MaterMagist 92          |                        them any opportunity of expressing their wishes or bringing
1253 AeterDeiSap 28          |                         It is through his many extant Sermons and Epistles that
1254 MaterMagist 121         |                       divine Master frequently extends to the rich the insistent
1255 PacemTerris 41          |                       but it is also happening extensively, if more slowly, among nations
1256 SacerNostri   2,57      |                 greatest possible interior and exterior devotion. May not the fact
1257 PacemTerris 95          |                        are aimed at their very extinction . ~
1258 SacerNostri   1,19      |                      even though We praise and extol this wonderful virtue of
1259 AeterDeiSap 54          |                        the apostolic rock" was extolled and venerated not only by
1260 PrincPastor 47          |                      be necessary to resort to extracurricular methods to bring together
1261 MaterMagist 208         |                     considerations of a purely extraneous, material order-which has
1262 PetrCathed   1,13       |                   pages of periodicals and the extravagant advertisements of the theater."7
1263 PrincPastor 16          |                        areas and nations. This extremely wise norm applies to all
1264 MaterMagist 14          |                       tendency to subscribe to extremist theories far worse in their
1265 MaterMagist 156         |             appreciation of the work which the F.A.0. has undertaken to establish
1266 MaterMagist 115         |                        and social policy which facilitates the widest possible distribution
1267 SacerNostri   3,61      |                        want to recall this one fact-that this Saint was in his own
1268 PacemTerris 110         |                        armaments and that this factor is the probable cause of
1269 MaterMagist 242         |                       perversion; for from the factory dead matter goes out improved,
1270 PrincPastor 18          |                    same university; "not a few faculties and chairs of missiology,"
1271 GrataRecord 11          |                  celebrate with its superiors, faculty, and seminarians the completion
1272 GrataRecord 3           |                      Our younger days have not faded or vanished as the years
1273 PrincPastor 29          |                     life does not flourish and fails to produce wholesome fruits;
1274 MaterMagist 204         |                        of nobler enterprises. ~Failure to Acknowledge the Moral
1275 MaterMagist 261         |                        never fail to raise our fainting spirits and give us courage: "
1276 PacemTerris 170         |                        also guarantee them the fairest gift of peace. ~Finally,
1277 MaterMagist 168         |                        produced be distributed fairly among all members of the
1278 PaenitAgere 40          |                       the way; and may all the faithful-especially priests, monks and nuns,
1279 PacemTerris 158         |                        such and the person who falls into error-even in the case
1280 PrincPastor 58          |                      of a faith which does not falter even in mortal danger; and
1281 PacemTerris 15          |                       whether it is to found a family-in the founding of which both
1282 MaterMagist 163         |                      far in relieving want and famine when these are caused-as
1283 MaterMagist 214         |                      the outcome of feeling or fantasy, to be eradicated from his
1284 MaterMagist 155         |                      this point later on. ~The FAO~
1285 MaterMagist 138         |                        part, the reward of the farmer's labor rather than a return
1286 PacemTerris 143         |                      143. A clear proof of the farsightedness of this organization is
1287 MaterMagist 47          |                       by radio and television; Faster transportation and the initial
1288 PetrCathed   1,17       |               contraries can lead only to this fatal conclusion: a reluctance
1289 PacemTerris 11          |                         or whenever through no fault of his own he is deprived
1290 SacerNostri   2,52      |                  Baptism and cleansed of their faults will be gathered together
1291 PrincPastor 52          |                        to those whom they find favorably disposed, in order first
1292 PrincPastor 8           |                      in which local conditions favored the foundation of Episcopal
1293 PacemTerris 56          |                       interest of all, without favoring any individual citizen or
1294 PrincPastor 11          |                        the people, as often as feasible they should praise the dignity,
1295 AeterDeiSap 57          |                      liturgy keeps the 18th of February as his feast day, and most
1296 PetrCathed   3,91       |               long-desired unity, fostered and fed by brotherly love, will
1297 PrincPastor 3(4)        |                      Cf. La propagazione della fede, Scritti di A.G. Roncalli,
1298 PacemTerris 74          |                       far from growing old and feeble, takes on a new vitality
1299 PacemTerris 3           |                 subjected all things under his feet."4~Order in Human Beings~
1300 SacerNostri   3,66      |                    used to open his heart to a fellow-priest -"you have no idea of how
1301 PacemTerris 169(72)     |                          Responsory at Matins, Feria VI Within the Octave of
1302 MaterMagist 258         |                        work-leaven it with the ferment of the Gospel. ~Era of Immense
1303 PrincPastor 2           |                      Congregation's centennial festivities on that day. ~
1304 PacemTerris 155         |                      ours, driven forward by a fever of activity. And yet this
1305 PacemTerris 19          |                   weaken his physical or moral fibre, or militate against the
1306 PaenitAgere 19(19)      |                       spectantes, Epist. 28 ad fideles per Moguntinas provincias
1307 SacerNostri   1,26      |                        be true to say that the fidelity toward his superiors in
1308 GrataRecord 1(1)        |                Adiutricem populi, XV, 300 ff.; Fidentem piumque, XVI, 278 ff.; Augustissimae
1309 MaterMagist 41          |                     the Church's Calendar: the fiftieth anniversary of the publication
1310 PrincPastor 58          |                      in the battle which he is fighting for God's cause: the pastors
1311 PrincPastor 28          |                       And, wherever the Church fights her peaceful battles, she
1312 SacerNostri   3,73      |                  committed to them are growing filthy in the slavery of sin. If
1313 MaterMagist 48          |                    same political communities. Finally-to take a world view-one observes
1314 MaterMagist 75          |                    Because these companies are financing replacement and plant expansion
1315 MaterMagist 202         |                    they are quite incapable of finding an adequate solution to
1316 PetrCathed   2,25       |                     shine in our thoughts; the firebrands of war would blaze there.
1317 PetrCathed   2,33       |                    complete blindness into the fires of a new and terrible war. ~
1318 AeterDeiSap 8           |                brilliant star in the Christian firmament. ~The Pelagian and Nestorian
1319 SacerNostri   3,101     |                                  102. And this fits in perfectly with the words
1320 SacerNostri   3,78      |                        were so apt and so well fitted to the thoughts and feelings
1321 PetrCathed   4,104      |                    never think that there is a fixed limit to their time and
1322 PacemTerris 95          |                   these ethnic minorities is a flagrant violation of justice; the
1323 PacemTerris 104         |                   called in question, and even flatly denied. We have here a complete
1324 AeterDeiSap 52          |                   whole and entire and without flaw. These are the words of
1325 SacerNostri   3,71      |                        vigils, sleeping on the floor, castigation of your body?
1326 PacemTerris 100         |                       such a prohibition would flout the very spirit of an age
1327 MaterMagist 34          |                      liberty, at the same time flouting the true notion of social
1328 PetrCathed   3,92       |                       share in that life which flows from the divine Head into
1329 MaterMagist 54          |                     greater means for limiting fluctuations in the economy and for providing
1330 PaenitAgere 19          |                   these wings that our prayers fly the more swiftly and effortlessly
1331 AeterDeiSap 42          |                       s Vicar on earth, is the focal center of the entire visible
1332 AeterDeiSap 59          |                         Venerable Brethren, in focusing attention on these facts
1333 AeterDeiSap 21(18)      |                          Cf. C. Kirch, Enchir. fontium hist. eccl. antiquae, Freiburg
1334 AeterDeiSap 16          |                       assertions of this "very foolish and exceedingly ignorant
1335 PetrCathed   1,7        |                     this truth, whether out of foolishness, neglect, or malice, we
1336 PaenitAgere 14          |                deserves, who has trodden under foot the Son of God, and has
1337 MaterMagist 11          |                    countries. They were either forbidden, tolerated, or recognized
1338 PetrCathed   4,140      |                       of God, who commands and forbids, is rejected."66 Cicero
1339 SacerNostri   3,113     |                        in these things and the forceful expression We are giving
1340 MaterMagist 8           |                      his arguments, and in the forcefulness of their expression, Pope
1341 PacemTerris 138         |                       good of all peoples. The forcible imposition by the more powerful
1342 MaterMagist 170         |                        they give an excuse for forcing these people into their
1343 PrincPastor 12          |                     These cannot be considered foreigners, for all Catholic priests
1344 PetrCathed   4,149      |                     May it be the occasion and forerunner of heaven's blessings. ~
1345 MaterMagist 5           |                        it was intended also to foreshadow that other bread, that heavenly
1346 PacemTerris 71          |                        with great prudence and foresight often seems inadequate to
1347 PetrCathed   3,92       |                      that happiness which is a foretaste and pledge of heaven's eternal
1348 AeterDeiSap 70          |                        Divine Redeemer clearly forewarned us of them! ~
1349 PacemTerris 158         |                    cease to be a man. He never forfeits his personal dignity; and
1350 PetrCathed   3,64       |                     one another have sought to forge bonds of unity by means
1351 PaenitAgere 15          |                       holy and unsullied. ~Her Forgetful Children~
1352 MaterMagist 242         |                  around him he is in danger of forgetting and of destroying himself.
1353 MaterMagist 231         |                        In Our view, therefore, formal instruction, to be successful,
1354 PacemTerris 3(2a)       |                      assigned it a number. For format reasons we have broken paragraphs
1355 PacemTerris 158         |              philosophy. True, the philosophic formula does not change once it
1356 PrincPastor 31          |                      teaching the faithful the formulas of the Catechism and inculcating
1357 MaterMagist 226         |                        is not enough merely to formulate a social doctrine. It must
1358 PetrCathed   4,137      |                     bishops and priests and to forsake their Catholic faith. ~
1359 GrataRecord 19          |                    persecution, but we are not forsaken; we are cast down, but we
1360 PetrCathed   4,127      |                   Those citizens of straitened fortune who are dissatisfied with
1361 AeterDeiSap 4           |                      as a shining light, goeth forwards and increaseth even to perfect
1362 PrincPastor 19          |                     the human race, the Church fosters and supports these labors
1363 PetrCathed   4,105      |                 achievement of the goals their founders have set forth in those
1364 PacemTerris 168         |                      men's sins, which are the fountainhead of discord, misery and inequality;
1365 PaenitAgere 40          |                      scent of myrrh, the sweet fragrance of their filial devotion? ~
1366 AeterDeiSap 20          |                      the policies of those who framed it. ~
1367 GrataRecord 3           |                    want to declare in complete frankness and simplicity that the
1368 PetrCathed   3,93       |                     This peace combats hatred, fraud, and discord, which can
1369 PacemTerris 162         |                    truth, justice, charity and freedom-relations between individual citizens,
1370 PacemTerris 143         |               observance of all the rights and freedoms outlined in the declaration
1371 GrataRecord 2           |                        very wise, vibrant with fresh inspiration, and directly
1372 SacerNostri    ,7       |                   clergy to foster this divine friendship and grow in it, for it is
1373 SacerNostri   3,90      |                    mortal sin, we would die of fright."93~
1374 MaterMagist 36          |                        cruel and relentless in frightful measure.''15 As a consequence,
1375 PetrCathed   1,10       |                        children, tossed to and fro and carried about by every
1376 PacemTerris 98          |                      to confine men within the frontiers of their own nations, but
1377 SacerNostri   1,27      |                      long as this wish was not fulfilled, he felt cut off from every
1378 SacerNostri   2,51      |                      hero, was most careful in fulfilling his priestly duties, really
1379 PacemTerris 33          |                     the mutual recognition and fulfillment of rights and duties, but
1380 PacemTerris 141         |                     can carry out their tasks, fullfill their duties and claim their
1381 PetrCathed   1,10       |                        system according to the functioning in due measure of each single
1382 SacerNostri   3,76      |                       too readily to his small fund of learning as an adequate
1383 PacemTerris 94          |                     this clash of interests is furnished by that political trend (
1384 MaterMagist 127         |                       modern installations and furnishings for the farm residence.
1385 PrincPastor 4           |                        predecessor Benedict XV furthered the cause of the Catholic
1386 AeterDeiSap 18(16)      |                      PL 54.931; Ep. 103 to the Gallic Bishops, PL 54. 988-991. ~
1387 GrataRecord 2           |                    saying it we weave a mystic garland of Ave Maria's, Pater Noster'
1388 PetrCathed   3,81       |                       was rending the seamless garment of the Church, Bishop Theophilus
1389 PaenitAgere 7           |                       your hearts and not your garments. . . Between the porch and
1390 MaterMagist 101         |               importance of their work must be gauged not merely by its immediate
1391 AeterDeiSap 6           |                       the Pope sent St. Leo to Gaul to settle a dispute between
1392 SacerNostri    ,3       |                        remind everyone of "the gaunt figure of John Baptist Vianney,
1393 AeterDeiSap 58          |                                        58. The Gelasian Menology reechoes these
1394 MaterMagist 79          |                   generation but to the coming generations as well. ~
1395 SacerNostri   1,12      |                       at the present time many generoushearted priests are showing that
1396 MaterMagist 196         |                                           196. Genesis relates how God gave two
1397 AeterDeiSap 38          |                       who gave God birth" [Dei genitrix],30 sea virgin for ever."31~
1398 SacerNostri   3,62      |               protected them from dangers, and gently but firmly looked after
1399 SacerNostri   2,46      |                ceremonies or simply to see him genuflect when he passed the tabernacle."61~
1400 PacemTerris 52          |                 teaching is consonant with any genuinely democratic form of government.36~
1401 PetrCathed   1,17(9)    |                      Encyclical letter Humanum genus: Acta Leonis 4 (1884) 53.~
1402 PetrCathed   2,41(14)   |                        to the 73rd Congress of German Catholics: Discorsi e radiomessaggi
1403 PetrCathed   2,41       |                    addressing the Catholics of Germany, expressed it: "The terrible
1404 MaterMagist 92          |                      so much for what they can get out of it for themselves,
1405 MaterMagist 70          |                       honest, hard-working men gets scant reward. Their rate
1406 SacerNostri   2,54      |                 experience great difficulty in getting the people committed to
1407 PacemTerris 127         |                        arises from fear of the ghastly and catastrophic consequences
1408 SacerNostri    ,2       |                        that wonderful prelate, Giacomo M. Radini-Tedeschi, to the
1409 MaterMagist 243         |                        transforming man into a giant of the physical world at
1410 PacemTerris 13          |                       be devised for affording gifted members of society the opportunity
1411 SacerNostri    ,6       |                      special way with heavenly gifts-a sharer in divine power,
1412 MaterMagist 210         |                        they consider how these gigantic forces for good can be turned
1413 PetrCathed   4,113      |                     teach religion to boys and girls in parochial schools. They
1414 PacemTerris 169         |                     unto you: not as the world giveth, do I give unto you."73~
1415 AeterDeiSap 75          |                         and makes us ready and glad to do all the good we can
1416 SacerNostri   3,79      |                     listeners, the sparkle and gleam of his eyes, his tears,
1417 GrataRecord 2           |                   Maria's, Pater Noster's, and Gloria Patri's. And as we recite
1418 PetrCathed   1,19       |                   human knowledge that our age glories-and rightly-in the amazing progress
1419 PetrCathed   4,107      |                        the Lord may run and be glorified" among them.54~
1420 PrincPastor 35          |                     reason of your good works, glorify God in the day of visitation."62~
1421 MaterMagist 262         |               redemption,"65 reign and triumph gloriously throughout all ages, in
1422 PaenitAgere 17          |                   Councils. "Make our souls to glow in Thy sight with desire
1423 PacemTerris 163         |                      ranks of Christ must be a glowing point of light in the world,
1424 MaterMagist 204         |                     while a growing uneasiness gnaws at men's hearts and makes
1425 PacemTerris 45          |                   better knowledge of the true God-a personal God transcending
1426 MaterMagist 244         |                       the worshippers of false gods are strikingly verified
1427 AeterDeiSap 4           |                      just, as a shining light, goeth forwards and increaseth
1428 PetrCathed   4,107      |                     beloved countries and have gone to foreign lands where they
1429 PrincPastor 49          |                       countries for the common good-men who not only acquit themselves
1430 PetrCathed   4,130      |                        their supreme spiritual goods-the Christian commandments,
1431 PacemTerris 51          |                                            5l. Governmental authority, therefore, is
1432 MaterMagist 66          |                        other grow and develop, governments will the more easily achieve
1433 PetrCathed   2,54       |                        her children firmly and graciously by the mildness of her manner
1434 PacemTerris 64          |                       for suitable employment, graded to the capacity of the workers.
1435 PrincPastor 28          |               including not only the different grades of the hierarchy, but also
1436 PacemTerris 161         |                     that all things must be of gradual growth. If there is to be
1437 MaterMagist 258         |                        is theirs through being grafted on to Christ as shoots on
1438 MaterMagist 199         |                           199. A provident God grants sufficient means to the
1439 GrataRecord             |                                                Grata recordatio~
1440 PrincPastor 12          |                     one heart and one soul,"22 grateful to each other for the mutual
1441 PetrCathed   2,32(10)   |                               Letter Praeclara gratulationis: Acta Leonis 14 (1894) 210.~
1442 MaterMagist 67          |                    individual citizens will be gravely discriminated against or
1443 PetrCathed   2,49(17)   |                                   Letter Inter graves: Acta Leonis 11 (1891) 143-
1444 SacerNostri   1,17      |                 careful not to hang on to them greedily. Instead he should remember
1445 PrincPastor 10          |                        areas which, to use the Greek term, were considered almost
1446 SacerNostri   3,115     |                      Conceived Without Sin and greeted the infallible definition
1447 PaenitAgere 16(16)      |                   Paenitentiae, ch. 2; cf. St. Greg. Naz., Orat. 39.17: PG 36.
1448 PrincPastor 9           |                        remaining native clergy grew in number from 919 in 1918
1449 PrincPastor 7           |                      over the world and caused grievous losses to many individuals
1450 PrincPastor 58          |                      faithful who are being so grievously tried by adversity and are
1451 SacerNostri   3,71      |                        you have wept, you have groaned, you have sighed. Have you
1452 SacerNostri   3,115     |                       the innocent girl at the grotto of Lourdes. For this man
1453 MaterMagist 9           |                        validity of the solidly grounded principles, practical directives
1454 AeterDeiSap 16          |                       they could to impose the groundless dogmatic assertions of this "
1455 PacemTerris 100         |                        the world where we find groupings of people of more or less
1456 PrincPastor 51          |              ordinaries, in order to speed the growing-up process of the new Christian
1457 PrincPastor 28          |                 requirements of this kind have grown, and the greatly increased
1458 MaterMagist 65          |                    main vehicle of this social growth-be really autonomous, and loyally
1459 GrataRecord 18          |                       and its laws, that He is guarantor of the rights and dignity
1460 MaterMagist 1           |                   dignity which she has always guarded most zealously and held
1461 AeterDeiSap 62          |                     His flock to the unfailing guardianship of Peter and his successors.56~
1462 PetrCathed   4,98       |                 Eastern and Western Church. As guides with Us of the Christian
1463 PaenitAgere 32          |                        by so heavy a burden of guilt? ~
1464 SacerNostri   3,80      |                        every kind, in whatever guise it might appear, "in season,
1465 SacerNostri   2,57      |                       lofty virtue, was in the habit of "offering himself as
1466 PrincPastor 1(3)        |                    Homilia in die Coronationis habita, AAS 50 (1958) 886; TPS (
1467 PetrCathed   4,124      |                     have no home fit for human habitation and cannot by any effort
1468 SacerNostri    ,3       |                    that head shining with long hair that resembled a snowy crown,
1469 PacemTerris 30          |                   ignore one's duties, or only half fulfill them, is like building
1470 PetrCathed   4,144      |                        who is holy, let him be hallowed still."73 This is Our earnest
1471 MaterMagist 60          |                        physically and mentally handicapped. ~It is also partly the
1472 PacemTerris 156         |                     which they must turn their hands-industry, trade unions, professional
1473 SacerNostri   1,17      |                      let him be careful not to hang on to them greedily. Instead
1474 PetrCathed   4,141      |                        at length the dawn of a happier day. We earnestly desire
1475 PrincPastor 1           |                      We mentioned as among the happiest events of Our Pontificate
1476 PrincPastor 58          |                  mission territories are being harassed by difficulties and sometimes
1477 PrincPastor 6           |                       God and Jesus Christ are harassing and threatening to destroy
1478 MaterMagist 70          |                       whole classes of honest, hard-working men gets scant reward. Their
1479 SacerNostri   1,21      |                 Aquinas is proved true: "It is harder to lead a good life in the
1480 PacemTerris 53          |                      of this is that they must harmonize their own interests with
1481 MaterMagist 110         |                    political movements for the harmonizing of justice and freedom in
1482 MaterMagist 242         |                      of nature's laws, and has harnessed the forces of nature, making
1483 PacemTerris 2           |                       and devise the means for harnessing those forces for his own
1484 SacerNostri   1,10      |                        sleep, to carry out the harshest kinds of penances, and to
1485 PetrCathed   4,101      |                         that you may reap rich harvests and gather rich crops from
1486 AeterDeiSap 68          |                       in His infinite kindness hasten the dawn of that long-awaited
1487 SacerNostri   1,24      |                        picture of the terrible havoc that is wrought by impure
1488 MaterMagist 133         |                   these are exposed to greater hazards. Consequently, farmers find
1489 PetrCathed   2,33       |                       uncertain whether we are heading for sincere, true, and firm
1490 PaenitAgere 41          |                       what a wonderful, what a heartening spectacle of religious fervor
1491 PetrCathed   4,98       |                        the burden of the day's heat.47 We know your diligence.
1492 PaenitAgere 7           |              inheritance to reproach, that the heathen should rule over them."6~
1493 PaenitAgere 29          |                     was caught up to the third heaven-he reached the summit of holiness-and
1494 PaenitAgere 5           |                      Moses refused to give the Hebrews the tables of the Law until
1495 PetrCathed   1,17       |                    truth wilfully, but work in heedless disregard of it. They act
1496 SacerNostri   3,97      |                         When We gaze from this height of the Supreme Pontificate
1497 MaterMagist 10          |                      and economic upheaval, of heightening tensions and actual revolt.
1498 AeterDeiSap 47          |                        the Apostle Peter whose heir and successor he claimed
1499 SacerNostri   3,104     |                      for they are your closest helpers in your work and are bound
1500 PetrCathed   2,41       |                 together have taught you all a helpful, though bitter, lesson."14~
 
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