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1 I,11 | of subjectivity and the desire for freedom. These two requests
2 I,11 | effectively, reduce the desire for freedom and the subject'
3 I,11 | transparency, who together desire friendship and reciprocity",
4 I,13 | demand for meaning and the desire for truth. For many this
5 I,13 | precisely this demand and this desire which give birth to an authentic
6 I,13 | vocations; and if the demand and desire are in the heart of every
7 II,17 | immersed in the finite; but his desire turns towards the infinite.~
8 II,17 | especially in the ardent desire to communicate to the world
9 II,18 | fruit not only of a human desire or the good will of mankind.
10 II,20 | continent marked by a profound desire for unity, the Churches
11 III,26 | stimulate in the same person a desire to respond and become personally
12 III,27 | itself regularly into a desire and a will to hand on to
13 III,29(94)| vocations, it expresses the desire that, as a gesture of charityand
14 IV,30 | routes, with the sincere desire to provide the various pastoral
15 IV,34 | who seem to have lost the desire to look for their vocation.~
16 IV,34 | with their deep-seated desire for authenticity and the
17 IV,35 | of interior liberty, of desire for the future and newness,
18 IV,35 | need for revelation, the desire that the Author of life
19 IV,37 | with the will to do and the desire to give his utmost, able
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