Chap., §
1 1, 6 | true that in general "the sense of God and of his loving
2 1, 7 | an ancient and profound sense of the sacred. Religious
3 1, 7 | Oceania is their powerful sense of community and solidarity
4 1, 7 | God, the peoples' natural sense of community made them receptive
5 1, 7 | the present generation's sense of solidarity with those
6 1, 7 | of the natural religious sense which has led to disorientation
7 1, 8 | walked without an ardent sense of mission; and the core
8 1, 9 | universality of the Church. The sense of unity and fidelity overcame
9 1, 9 | experienced a new and stronger sense of identity and communio.
10 2, 12| an instinctively strong sense of community, but unity
11 2, 13| full of hope and even a sense of adventure.~The call to
12 3, 18| increasingly secularized world. The sense of God and of his loving
13 3, 18| has to be a return to the sense of the sacred, to an awareness
14 3, 18| Church in Oceania. In one sense, her mission is simple and
15 3, 19| them are coming to a deeper sense of their indispensable role
16 3, 21| given a clear and strong sense of the human and Christian
17 3, 27| because it has a diminished sense of distributive justice,
18 3, 32| leads them to a greater sense of what it might mean to
19 4, 37| silence, contemplation and a sense of mystery in life. The
20 4, 39| led in turn to a greater sense of mission, as it was intended
21 4, 41| Penance. At times, the true sense of human freedom is not
22 4, 44| young people for their acute sense of justice, personal integrity
23 4, 44| helpful in conferring a sense of identity and belonging.
24 4, 46| many others find a deep sense of fulfilment in contributing
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