Part, Paragraph
1 Intro,4| recognise your problems, the questions that live in your young
2 I,11 | or the place where their questions are answered and their expectations
3 I,12 | to offer it to the new questions and conditions of the man
4 I,13 | and annulling the serious questions in the pulping of words,
5 I,13 | courage and zest for the big questions, those related to one's
6 I,13 | future: in fact, the big questions also make small answers
7 I,13 | new generations, pressing questions on the meaning of life,
8 I,13 | to ask oneself the right questions in order to understand any
9 II,14 | clarifying and resolving the big questions which make man a questioning
10 II,14 | themselves, fundamental questions run the risk of being stifled
11 II,14 | more obtuse and the truest questions remain elusive.(27)~Therefore
12 II,16 | to ask ever more precise questions about one's life and oneself;
13 II,19 | particular" because it questions the freedom of every person
14 III,29 | might take more to heart two questions: the promotion of an authentic
15 IV,34 | jars, with their unspoken questions, with their obstinate, often
16 IV,34 | necessarily impose his own questions, but begins from those,
17 IV,34 | listen to them and answer the questions that arise in the encounter". (100)~
18 IV,35 | to welcome expectations, questions, desires from the Other:
19 IV,37 | read as a believer, in his questions, anxieties and aspirations.~
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