Chapter, §
1 Int, 4 | which are otherwise full of life and promise. On being elected
2 1, 9 | enjoys the refinements of life, while the rest of the inhabitants,
3 1, 10| one's personal and family life; they cannot be abandoned.
4 1, 10| embrace new forms of societal life. ~The conflict between generations
5 1, 15| self-fulfillment, for every human life is called to some task by
6 1, 16| his own accord direct his life to God, the first truth
7 1, 16| life-giving Christ, man's life is newly enhanced; it acquires
8 1, 16| bestows new fullness of life. This is the highest goal
9 1, 18| maintained. The pursuit of life's necessities is quite legitimate;
10 1, 21| the bare necessities of life, and the moral poverty of
11 1, 21| poverty to the acquisition of life's necessities; the elimination
12 1, 21| calls all men to share God's life as sons of the living God,
13 1, 22| with the necessities of life and the tools for his own
14 1, 23| the bare necessities of life. In short, "as the Fathers
15 1, 25| control over his way of life, he is stimulated to undertake
16 1, 30| the bare necessities of life, whole nations are under
17 1, 30| participation in social and public life. They are sorely tempted
18 1, 39| for a religious outlook on life, for freedom or human dignity.
19 1, 40| institutions required by life in the world, and higher
20 1, 40| intellectual and religious—of the life of the spirit. When the
21 1, 41| tarnish a truly human way of life, while accepting noble and
22 1, 42| the real meaning of human life. Man is not the ultimate
23 2, 50| put due order into human life, and thus enhance man's
24 2, 55| an urgent task. The very life of needy nations, civil
25 2, 72| superiority in every sphere of life. The culture which shaped
26 2, 79| toward a more human way of life certainly calls for hard
27 2, 85| widespread charity, to a way of life marked by true brotherhood,
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