Chap., §
1 Int, 3 | herself from every purely human support, in order to live
2 Int, 4 | a clear sense of my own human frailty. Indeed, if Christ
3 Int, 4 | also made clear to him his human weakness and his special
4 Int, 4 | is precisely in Peter's human weakness that it becomes
5 1, 16| she is an institution of human beings here on earth. Therefore,
6 1, 18| Dignitatis Humanae attributes to human dignity the quest for truth, "
7 1, 18| found in the depths of every human heart.~
8 1, 22| to face all the painful human reality of their divisions,
9 1, 22| spite of all weaknesses and human limitations.~
10 1, 26| and the truth about the human nature shared by each and
11 1, 26| opened up vistas closed to human reason. For he implied a
12 1, 28| step along the path towards human self-realization, the self-realization
13 1, 28| individual and of every human community. Although the
14 1, 28| dimension. It involves the human subject in his or her entirety;
15 1, 32| proper to the dignity of the human person and his social nature.
16 2, 43| lead to the trampling of human rights. It is clear, as
17 2, 74| working together to defend human dignity, to promote peace,
18 2, 76| resonant chord deep in the human spirit.~Nor do I wish to
19 3, 82| insofar as she is also a human and earthly institution,136
20 3, 91| reminding him of his own human weakness and need of conversion (
21 3, 91| the backdrop of Peter's human weakness, it were made fully
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