Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,2 | generation to generation a fundamental inheritance is realized,
2 II,3 | always sought to answer the fundamental and definitive questions
3 III,6 | concise passage contains the fundamental anthropological truths:
4 III,6 | even more profoundly the fundamental truth which it contains
5 III,7 | unity of God. Within this fundamental truth about God the New
6 III,7 | understand that - on this fundamental level - it is a question
7 III,7 | first and, in a sense, the fundamental dimension of this call.
8 IV,9 | in striving towards that fundamental unity which belongs to the
9 IV,10 | of the stability of that fundamental equality which the man and
10 V,14 | directly to man, show the fundamental truth of his responsibility
11 VI,18 | person, corresponds to the fundamental biblical truth about the
12 VI,20 | but also distinct from it. Fundamental to this is Jesus' statement
13 VI,20 | to refer once more to the fundamental idea of Christian anthropology.
14 VI,22 | illustrate the Church's fundamental mission, he finds nothing
15 VII,23 | great mystery" ~23. Of fundamental importance here are the
16 VII,23 | one can also say that this fundamental call appears in the creation
17 VII,24 | In this love there is a fundamental affirmation of the woman
18 VII,27 | of the Bride.~This is of fundamental importance for understanding
19 VIII,30| struggle for his or her fundamental "yes" or "no" to God and
20 VIII,30| Vocation is meant here in its fundamental, and one may say universal
21 VIII,30| This awareness and this fundamental vocation speak to women
22 IX,31 | the family, which is the fundamental sign of the human community;
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