Chap., §
1 2, 49 | of Trent"88 — lists as "mortal sins" or "immoral practices"
2 2, 49(88)| Testaments which condemn as mortal sins certain modes of conduct
3 2, 68 | With every freely committed mortal sin, he offends God as the
4 2, 68 | lost, but also by any other mortal sin".115 ~
5 2 | Mortal and venial sin ~
6 2, 69 | traditional distinction between mortal sins and venial sins. They
7 2, 69 | According to these theologians, mortal sin, which separates man
8 2, 69 | easily and repeatedly commit mortal sins, as the "matter" itself
9 2, 70 | the distinction between mortal and venial sins, in accordance
10 2, 70 | existence and nature of mortal and venial sins, but it
11 2, 70 | but it also recalled that mortal sin is sin whose object
12 2, 70 | consider the "grave matter" of mortal sin; it also recalls that
13 2, 70 | matter does not constitute a mortal sin because of a lack of
14 2, 70 | to be taken not to reduce mortal sin to an act of 'fundamental
15 2, 70 | rejection of love. "For mortal sin exists also when a person
16 2, 70 | the traditional concept of mortal sin".117 ~The separation
17 2, 70 | of Catholic doctrine on mortal sin: "With the whole tradition
18 2, 70 | tradition of the Church, we call mortal sin the act by which man
19 3, 91 | preferred death to a single mortal sin. In raising them to
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