Chapter, §
1 1, 26 | and habits of thought. The great advances made in science,
2 1, 29 | contribution to this work. So have great scholars and intellectuals,
3 1, 30 | damage resulting from the great crisis in the sixteenth
4 1, 31 | significance and find in it a great source of spiritual strength.
5 1, 32 | We are confident that the great work of the Council will
6 1 | There is a further very great advantage that will result
7 2, 43 | Hence the Council is a great success even now, before
8 2, 46 | hold in our possession that great heritage of truth and holiness
9 2, 46 | we are accountable for so great a benefit, and before the
10 2, 55 | a subject which has made great strides within recent years.
11 3, 64 | it will gain for itself a great store of energy, and in
12 3, 67 | Our first teacher is that great and wise pope Leo XIII,
13 3, 78 | world can be effective in a great variety of ways. The Church
14 3, 83 | express our teaching with great fairness. It will be set
15 3 | before speaking, we must take great care to listen not only
16 3, 91 | ineptitude in the use of this great and mysterious instrument
17 3, 93 | today must take up with a great renewal of fervor, We would
18 3, 100| strength, spurred on by our great zeal for safeguarding the
19 3 | They are sometimes men of great breadth of mind, impatient
20 3, 107| have the followers of the great Afro-Asiatic religions. ~
21 3, 108| is possible in all these great projects, which are our
22 3, 111| Father in earnest prayer and great confidence. ~
23 3, 114| Word, the expression of His great pastoral love. Hence obedience
24 3, 117| 117. We rejoice and find great consolation in the fact
25 3, 117| see that there is still a great way to go. In fact the work
26 3, 119| encyclical on a note of great joy in the union of our
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