Chapter
1 [Title]| expectations, to the ever new problems of humanity. Would
2 1 | about 1500 verses of the New Testament. This is his real
3 1 | continued to be source of ever new forms of evangelical life.
4 1 | from the Old as well as the New Testament, which refer to
5 1 | meditated on the entire New Testament”.5~ The word of
6 1 | Magdaleine: “We must build a new thing. A new thing which
7 1 | must build a new thing. A new thing which is ancient,
8 1 | Gospel texts and to other New Testament writings. (94)
9 2 | which is actualized in ever new forms.10 Pius XII had already
10 2 | are at the origin of a new type of gospel “reading”
11 2 | examine it in depth and with a new method, perhaps never before
12 2(10) | development and experience of new forms, is already in itself
13 2 | foundresses. He says they are “a new interpretation of revelation,
14 2 | enrichment of doctrine regarding new traits not much considered
15 2 | sparked the Word of God with new light for founders and foundresses.
16 3 | current cultural forms and in new environments. The founding
17 3 | transplant it and cultivate it in new soil: in the Ukraine, in
18 3 | Brazil, in the Congo; or in new cultural realities of Europe ,
19 3 | challenges and calls to these new lands and can scatter sprouts
20 3 | and can scatter sprouts of new life, releasing virtualities
21 3 | revitalized and is capable of new shoots of life.~The Council,
22 3 | the constant attention to new situations (what would she
23 3 | journey toward the ever new present, religious of today
24 3 | sparked the Word of God with new light for founders and foundresses”,
25 3 | of men and women led by a new life plan, realizable only
26 3 | relationships between old and new charisms: “We only have
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