Document, Part
1 1 | journey at the peril of our life: our conscience is our witness,
2 3,1 | lead a quiet and peaceable life, may enjoy peace, and see
3 4,1 | the Lord, and the giver of life, who proceedeth from the
4 4,1 | resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come. Amen. ~
5 6,1 | regeneration for the obtaining life everlasting,--whence it
6 6,2 | of the place, as to his life, conversation, and knowledge:
7 6,2 | approved of as regards their life, manners, and knowledge,
8 7,1 | baptism, to begin a new life, and to keep the commandments
9 7,1 | heir according to hope of life everlasting. ~Of this Justification
10 7,1 | and of Jesus Christ, and life everlasting; while the efficient
11 7,1 | the faith which bestows life everlasting, which, without
12 7,1 | If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.
13 7,1 | Jesus Christ, and may have life everlasting. ~CHAPTER VIII. ~
14 7,1 | although, during this mortal life, men, how holy and just
15 7,1 | as he is in this mortal life, ought so far to presume
16 7,1 | exercises of a spiritual life; not indeed for the eternal
17 7,1 | reward. And, for this cause, life eternal is to be proposed
18 7,1 | according to the state of this life, and to have truly merited
19 7,1 | have truly merited eternal life, to be obtained also in
20 7,1 | water springing up unto life everlasting. Thus, neither
21 7,1 | anything; because the whole life of man is to be examined
22 7,1 | justly, and to merit eternal life, as if, by free will without
23 7,1 | who are predestined unto life; but that all others who
24 7,1 | absolute promise of eternal life, without the condition of
25 7,1 | is able, during his whole life, to avoid all sins, even
26 7,1 | increase of grace, eternal life, and the attainment of that
27 7,1 | attainment of that eternal life,-if so be, however, that
28 7,2 | worthy,-and whose previous life, in every stage thereof,
29 8,1 | meanwhile to a Christian life by any other penalty, save
30 8,1 | whether by way of union for life, or in perpetual commendam,
31 9,1 | also the imminent danger to life, and the other notoriously
32 14,1 | those who live with His life who said, He that eateth
33 14,1 | may be to them truly the life of the soul, and the perpetual
34 14,3 | to keep in propriety of life and conversation those subject
35 14,3 | agree, and they be of a good life, in good esteem and reputation;
36 15,1 | hath bestowed a remedy of life even on ./. those who may,
37 15,1 | and the beginning of a new life, but also a hatred of the
38 15,1 | vehement hatred of their past life, and from an exceeding detestation
39 15,1 | the preservation of a new life and a medicine of infirmity,
40 15,2 | also of the whole Christian life, which ought to be a perpetual
41 15,2 | greatest aids, whereby, during life, Christians may preserve
42 15,2 | did He guard the close of life, by the sacrament of Extreme
43 15,2 | seizes opportunities, all our life long, to be able in any
44 15,2 | perceives the end of our life to be at hand. ~ ./. CHAPTER
45 15,2 | be about to depart this life: whence also it is called
46 15,3 | the purpose of a better life,--is not a true and profitable
47 15,3 | penance is merely a new life; let him be anathema. ~CANON
48 15,5 | connivance, lead a disorderly life: for if they suffer them
49 19,1 | back, to a better method of life, manners, which have divaricated
50 22,1 | blood, you shall not have life in you (v. 54), also said;
51 22,1 | my blood hath everlasting life (v. 55), also said; The
52 22,1 | give is my flesh for the life of (lie world (v. 52); and,
53 22,2 | otherwise of a blameless life, coadjutors, or vicars for
54 22,2 | observed, the manner of life required by the institutes
55 23,4 | The Canons relative to the life, and propriety of conduct
56 23,4 | service of God, more than the life and example of those who
57 23,4 | to regulate their whole life and conversation, as that
58 23,4 | councils,--relative to the life, propriety of conduct, dress,
59 23,4 | birth, age, morals, and life, and, in other respects,
60 24,2 | have chosen this manner of life, that they may render unto
61 24,2 | birth, age, morals, and life of those who are to be ordained,
62 24,2 | obligation of this their state of life; and may exercise themselves
63 24,2 | may grow in worthiness of life and in learning; of which
64 24,2 | worthy, and whose commendable life is an old age. Regulars
65 24,2 | married clerics of approved life; provided they have not
66 25,4 | wedlock, and who, by their life, learning, and in all other
67 25,4 | same Synod, touching the life, age, learning, and the
68 25,4 | bring back to an upright life by the testimony of his
69 25,4 | exempted to lead a more relaxed life; the holy Synod ordains,
70 25,4 | dispensations and unions for life whatsoever to the contrary
71 26,2 | to be raised unto eternal life, and to be glorified,--are
72 26,3 | the substance of a regular life cannot be by them relaxed.
73 26,3 | discipline suitable to a monastic life. But the present state of
74 26,3 | profession of the religious life which is peculiar to the
75 26,4 | continency and integrity of life which becomes them; and
76 26,4 | them to be more pure of life: the holy Synod forbids
77 26,4 | a manifest amendment of life, it shall seem good to their
78 26,14| To the most holy bishops, life, and a happy return to their
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