Chapter, §
1 Int, 5 | earnest consideration of divine doctrine, for even Christ
2 Int, 10 | characteristics impressed on it by its divine Founder; and in the course
3 1, 18 | better to appreciate the divine plan which it is the Church'
4 1, 19 | whereas it is true that divine revelation was made "in
5 1, 19 | involving both human speech and divine grace. Grace comes secretly
6 1, 20 | willing submission to what the divine Teacher said to those who
7 1, 22 | Church's awareness of its divine mission coincided with its
8 1, 27 | close enough attention to divine revelation and the Church'
9 1 | present discourse: that divine institution through which
10 1 | meditation on this work of divine mercy which concerns us
11 1 | all who are moved by the divine Spirit, and with the light
12 1, 32 | readiness to follow His divine inspirations, our eagerness
13 1, 32 | earnest resolve to make of divine truth an argument for union,
14 1, 36 | raised in the school of the divine word, nourished by the grace
15 1, 39 | life-giving radiance of divine truth, opens heaven to him,
16 2, 41 | envisaged for it by the divine Redeemer. Here, therefore,
17 2, 43 | done consistently with its divine nature. ~Hence the Council
18 2 | to live in acordance with divine grace, faithfulness to the
19 2, 54 | fundamental element of that divine plan by which we are destined
20 3, 68 | it were, the gap between divine and human wisdom, using
21 3, 68 | masterly assurance to bring divine truths as far as may be
22 3, 69 | make the world share in the divine redemption and in the hope
23 3, 91 | mysterious instrument of the divine Word, and be a worthy match
24 3, 91 | enjoyment of some ray of divine light. ~
25 3, 104| perfection, and all but divine. This, for them, is the
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