Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 0,2(3) | contemporary writers, both Christian and non-Christian, witnesses
2 Intro, 0,2 | the divisions between the Christian communions that have afflicted
3 Intro, 0,4 | sense penance means, in the Christian theological and spiritual
4 Intro, 0,4 | to deeds and then to the Christian's whole life.~In each of
5 Intro, 0,4 | a fresh impulse for the Christian life And Apostolate, That
6 I, 2,9 | in what is essential for Christian faith and life, in accordance
7 II, 1,17 | overlooked and one which the Christian conscience has never refused
8 II, 1,17 | certainty that comes to the Christian from the fact of having
9 II, 1,17 | the coming of the Son: The Christian possesses a power that preserves
10 II, 1,18 | course of generations, the Christian mind has gained from the
11 II, 1,18 | much one of ignorance of Christian ethics," but ignorance "
12 II, 1,18 | and delicate questions of Christian morals ends by diminishing
13 II, 1,18 | flourish, especially in the Christian world and in the church.
14 II, 2,20 | used in the Greek-speaking Christian communities. ~In the words
15 II, 2,20(106) | The early Christian community expresses its
16 II, 2,20 | the divine promises: The Christian has received the guarantee
17 II, 2,20 | In order not to sin the Christian has knowledge of God, as
18 II, 2,20 | gain freedom from sin the Christian has within himself the presence
19 II, 2,21 | The Effort of the Christian ~21. But there is another
20 II, 2,21 | kindness of God toward the Christian must be matched by the piety
21 II, 2,21 | matched by the piety of the Christian toward God. In this second
22 II, 2,21 | precisely the conduct of the Christian who responds to God's fatherly
23 II, 2,21 | piety in the sense that the Christian accepts the mystery, contemplates
24 II, 2,21 | of spiritual energy, the Christian,being a child of God, is
25 II, 2,22 | abstractions but as concrete Christian values to be achieved in
26 II, 2,22 | sinlessness which is not at all Christian, the people of today too
27 III, 0,23 | and, especially if he is a Christian, he is aware that the mystery
28 III, 1,25(122)| Dominus, 13; cf Declaration on Christian Education Gravissimum Educationis,
29 III, 1,25 | their membership of the Christian community and also those
30 III, 1,25 | with the other churches and Christian communities and with the
31 III, 1,25 | sensitive to all "the truly Christian endowments from our common
32 III, 1,25 | continues with all other Christian brethren to seek the paths
33 III, 1,25 | in common with the other Christian churches- faith in Jesus
34 III, 1,25 | all those who make up the Christian communities. They truly
35 III, 1,25 | and proclaim the human and Christian need for reconciliation
36 III, 1,26 | is clear, however, that Christian penance will only be authentic
37 III, 1,26 | on what the traditional Christian language calls the four
38 III, 1,27 | original constituent of Christian baptism, far from eliminating
39 III, 1,27 | Spirit and in bringing the Christian life to maturity, signifies
40 III, 1,27 | sacrament, teaches that no Christian who is conscious of grave
41 III, 1,27 | age and especially at the Christian's final hour is a sign of
42 III, 2,28 | sacrament which gives to every Christian and to the whole community
43 III, 2,28 | to live an authentically Christian life. And on the other hand,
44 III, 2,29 | others along the path of Christian perfection the minister
45 III, 2,29 | this fund of human gifts, Christian virtues and pastoral capabilities
46 III, 2,29 | civilization permeated with the Christian spirit! Praise then to this
47 III, 2,31 | conviction is that for a Christian the sacrament of penance
48 III, 2,31 | work is often called, from Christian antiquity, medicina salutis. "
49 III, 2,31 | understand why, from the earliest Christian times, in line with the
50 III, 2,31 | personal commitment that the Christian has made to God in the sacrament
51 III, 2,31 | absolution there remains in the Christian a dark area due to the wound
52 III, 2,32 | different reasons that bring a Christian to sacramental penance:
53 Concl, 0,35 | transcendent synthesis of the Christian ethic or, more accurately
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