Document, Part
1 1 | all their counsels to the common weal of Christians, a bitter
2 1 | have regard both to the common welfare of Christians, and
3 1 | greatly conducive to the common good, to their own welfare,
4 6,2| the privileges accorded by common law, as regards the reception
5 8,1| whether by ordinance of common law, or by virtue of any
6 8,3| if anything of more than common moment have to be settled
7 14,1| Eucharist has indeed this in common with the rest of the sacraments,
8 14,1| grateful and thankful to their common Lord and Redeemer for so
9 17,2| abbots, and others who, by common law, or by privilege, or
10 19,1| we all, acknowledging our common mother on earth, who cannot
11 23,1| to be considered as truly common; partly because the people
12 24,1| power which they possess is common to them and to priests;
13 24,2| teachers, for promoting the common good of the Church; for
14 26,3| regard the observance of a common mode of living, food, and
15 26,3| applied at once to all, nor common to all places, as It could
16 26,3| possessing real property in common. And forasmuch as the holy
17 26,4| some circumstance of no common kind which moves the mind
18 26,4| itself doth testify, in the common scandal of all the faithful,
19 26,4| completely to meet, for the common advantage, the cases and
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