Chapter,Paragraph,Number
1 Intro, 3,4| in view of more direct service to the poor, sometimes even
2 Intro, 4,5| active -- such as social service, education, and health --
3 Intro, 4,5| religious communities at the service of visible works which characterised
4 II, 4,31 | concrete ways of putting at the service of others and of pouring
5 II, 4,33 | various ministries at the service of the Gospel.~In keeping
6 II, 5,43 | which must carry out its service here and now and together.
7 II, 5,43 | who "fulfil their duty of service and leadership"(59) and
8 II, 6 | Authority in the service of fraternity ~
9 II, 6,47 | professed, is placed at the service of the fraternity, of its
10 II, 6,48 | evangelical roots and thus to the service of the spiritual progress
11 II, 6,48 | is, evangelically, always service.~
12 II, 6,49 | themselves to the total service of God, authority promotes
13 II, 7,54 | The needs of apostolic service cannot therefore be invoked
14 III, 0,58 | is consecrated for active service to others, a service characterised
15 III, 0,58 | active service to others, a service characterised by a specific
16 III, 0,58 | specific forms of apostolic service accent the priority of the
17 III, 1,60 | to forget that the best service a religious community can
18 III, 1,62 | important than undifferentiated service to the poor, and in order
19 III, 1,62 | charitable projects and voluntary service.~All of this bears witness
20 III, 1,67 | long as they can render service, even if limited. Superiors
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