Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,1 | levels, make that person a man or a woman, and thereby
2 III,2| In moral matters man cannot make value judgments
3 III,2| depths of his conscience, man detects a law which he does
4 III,2| to obedience. . . . For man has in his heart a law written
5 III,2| it is the very dignity of man; according to it he will
6 III,4| be no true promotion of man's dignity unless the essential
7 III,5| conceived in wisdom and love. Man has been made by God to
8 IV,3 | itself"[7] and which concern man's full development and sanctification.
9 V,2 | of the equal dignity of man and woman while respecting
10 V,3 | of "the sexual nature of man and the human faculty of
11 VII,2| interpersonal relationship between a man and a woman, nor especially
12 VII,2| that He said: This is why a man must leave father and mother,
13 VII,2| then, what God has united, man must not divide."[13] St.
14 VII,2| established between the man and the woman.~
15 VII,4| the exclusive union of the man and the woman and for the
16 IX,3 | certainly to be linked with man's innate weakness following
17 X,5 | precepts. In fact, to the young man who asked, ". . . what good
18 X,7 | following words of Scripture: "Man looks at appearances but
19 XI,2 | I say this to you: if a man looks at a woman lustfully,
20 XII,1| holds him captive.[33] But man can achieve liberation from
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