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natura 7
natural 4
naturally 2
nature 41
natures 3
nec 1
necessarily 2
Frequency    [«  »]
42 made
42 true
42 whether
41 nature
41 rom
39 indeed
39 says
St. Augustine
Enchiridion

IntraText - Concordances

nature

                                           bold = Main text
   Chapter                                 grey = Comment text
1 3 | in the exploration of the nature of things [rerum natura], 2 3 | of the basic elements of nature, or about the~motion, order, 3 3 | the heavens, the kinds and nature of~animals, plants, stones, 4 3(22)| It has its origin, not in nature, but in the will. Cf. Confessions, 5 4 | 12. All of nature, therefore, is good, since 6 4 | since the Creator of all nature is supremely good. But~nature 7 4 | nature is supremely good. But~nature is not supremely and immutably 8 4 | must remain of its original nature as long as it exists at 9 4 | the good which is its "nature" cannot~be destroyed without 10 4 | good deeds. From a human~nature, which is good in itself, 11 4 | first place except from the nature - good in~itself - of an 12 5 | hidden in the secret maze of nature,~~"Whence earthquakes, whose 13 6 | worship of God or even the nature of God, it~is sometimes 14 8 | 25. Yet such a nature, even in its evil state, 15 8 | not have~been just if the nature that deserted God and, through 16 10 | says, "For we too were by nature children of wrath~even as 17 10 | lacking that belongs to human nature.~But it was a nature entirely 18 10 | human nature.~But it was a nature entirely free from the bonds 19 10 | of all sin. It was not a nature born of both~sexes with 20 10 | Instead, it was the kind of nature that would be fittingly 21 10 | Son - not by grace but by nature - to the~end that he might 22 10 | and yet he~was in the one nature as well as in the other, 23 10 | violation to be what he was by nature, the equal of God. Yet he 24 11 | for what had the human nature in the man Christ merited, 25 11 | such great glory to a human nature - and this undoubtedly an 26 11 | this not by grace but by nature - who,~by grace, assumed 27 11 | by grace, assumed human nature into such a personal unity 28 11 | in respect to his human nature was of the Holy Spirit, 29 12 | Father of Christ's human nature, so that as~God the Father 30 12 | Spirit generated the human nature, and that~from both natures 31 12 | Virgin Mary, there is in each nature (in both the divine~and 32 12 | his assumption of human nature,~grace came to be natural 33 12 | came to be natural to that nature, allowing no power to sin. 34 13 | Son not by grace but by nature. And although he himself 35 13 | was so great that human nature was changed and by it brought~ 36 13 | if they cannot change our nature in the same way, still involve 37 23 | time will still be present. Nature, then, will be cheated of 38 23 | but rather in an amended nature and free from faults. Far 39 25 | both the twins were "by nature children of wrath,"~211 40 28 | 106. Human nature lost the former kind of 41 28 | vanquished by that very nature he~was rejoicing over having


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