Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,3 | that flows from all the human and divine depths of the
2 2,3 | His call always appeals to human freedom. Christ says: "If
3 2,4 | centered upon the value of the human person: upon personal "being"
4 2,4 | sin-with the divine and human leaven of the mystery of
5 2,5 | to the question: Why be a human person-and how? This answer
6 2,5 | of good through one's own human condition. This also means
7 2,6 | giving, a law inscribed in human nature, is itself a gift!
8 2,6 | reflects the divine and human image of the mystery of
9 3,7 | consecration and giving of the human person to God, loved above
10 3,8 | that depth it reaches the human soul. By virtue of the grace
11 4,9 | was disfigured in the human heart in various ways. In
12 4,9 | for transforming in the human heart this relationship
13 4,9 | radical way that which in the human heart arises from the pride
14 4,10| profound good hidden in the human soul. This good is manifested
15 4,10| and obedience renders the human soul particularly sensitive.
16 4,10| that emerges in your human "I" precisely from the economy
17 4,10| Redemption and, through this human "I," also into the interpersonal
18 4,10| the mystery of one's own human nature, and to confirm this
19 5,11| particular way to the love of the human heart. It places greater
20 5,11| possibility which for the human heart, whether of a man
21 5,11| all the other loves of the human heart.~
22 5,12| reveals to the eyes of the human soul the perspective of
23 5,12| which, transferred to the human soul in the mystery of grace,
24 5,13| men. And being found in human form he humbled himself
25 5,13| background of their own human nature, with all the inheritance "
26 7,16| dark and gray background of human existence. ~To all of you
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