Chap., §
1 1, 15 | writes: "end not in the sense of a deficiency, but in
2 1, 15 | a deficiency, but in the sense of the fullness of the Law:
3 1, 16 | 3), the humble. In this sense it can be said that the
4 1, 25 | young man continues, in a sense, in every period of history,
5 2, 29 | who performs them; in this sense it is accessible to all
6 2, 31 | have a particularly strong sense of freedom. As the Council'
7 2, 31 | person.54 ~This heightened sense of the dignity of the human
8 2, 32 | doctrines which have lost the sense of the transcendent or which
9 2, 36 | this law, except in the sense that human reason exercises
10 2, 38 | dominion extends in a certain sense over man himself. This has
11 2, 41 | called to intersect, in the sense of man's free obedience
12 2, 43 | the most literal and basic sense, for all creation (cf Wis
13 2, 46 | marked, though in a different sense, by a similar tension. The
14 2, 48 | with all the bodily and sense faculties. The person, including
15 2, 57 | conscience in a certain sense confronts man with the law,
16 2, 66 | an act of faith — in the sense of a fundamental option —
17 3, 93 | by reawakening its moral sense. By witnessing fully to
18 3, 94 | are supported by the moral sense present in peoples and by
19 3, 98 | more widespread and acute sense of the need for a radical
20 3, 98 | culture we find the moral sense, which is in turn rooted
21 3, 98 | fulfilled in the religious sense.154 ~
22 3, 99 | of truth in the objective sense. If there is no transcendent
23 3, 106| or obscuring of the moral sense. This comes about both as
24 3, 109| quality through a supernatural sense of the faith in the whole
25 3, 112| faithful to the supernatural sense of the faith, takes into
|