Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro | references are of a cultural nature. On the threshold of the
2 I | their relationship with nature and their brothers and sisters,
3 I | natural to man that human nature can only be revealed through
4 I | something' is precisely human nature: this nature is itself the
5 I | precisely human nature: this nature is itself the measure of
6 I | Word of God takes on human nature in all things but sin (Heb
7 I,1 | fundamental difference of nature that exists between faith
8 I,1 | Church, with man in his human nature is a creator of culture
9 I,1 | human person and the sublime nature of man's vocation (Cf. Redemptor
10 I,2 | role, to the sacramental nature of his Church, and to the
11 II,1,3 | that they share a common nature makes all people members
12 II,2,1 | humanity and the rest of nature. Saint Francis of Assisi
13 II,2,1 | witnesses of respect for nature, which comes from the fact
14 II,2,1 | comes from the fact that nature does not belong to the human
15 II,2,1 | appointed us stewards of nature (Gen 1,28), so that we might
16 II,2,3 | celebrating everything in human nature which is rich, in the image
17 II,3 | meaning with regard to human nature, reveal the limits of a
18 II,3 | link between humanity and nature was modified artificially;
19 II,3,1 | complexity and the transversal nature of the problem of sects,
20 III,5 | knowledge of an intellectual nature, interiorized through prayer
21 III,8 | evolution, the dynamic nature of the world, scriptural
22 Conclu | 3:10) and «put on a new nature» (cf. Eph 4:24). Christ
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