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Alphabetical [« »] auorld 1 aurelius 2 author 2 authority 32 authors 1 authortiy 1 avert 1 | Frequency [« »] 38 from 38 power 34 but 32 authority 32 not 31 have 30 who | Leo PP. XIII Diuturnum illud IntraText - Concordances authority |
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1 1 | waged against the divine authority of the Church has reached 2 1 | formerly, every restraint of authority. So great is the license 3 4 | cast aside the reins of authority, he has never yet been able 4 6 | thereby conferred. Nor is the authority delegated to him, but the 5 9 | divine principle whence all authority flows began to shine forth. 6 9 | Romans, when subject to the authority of heathen princes, is lofty 7 11| argument, that those by whose authority the State is administered 8 11| of others by fetters of authority of this kind. This power 9 11| God. In like manner, the authority of fathers of families preserves 10 11| this way different kinds of authority have between them wonderful 11 11| there is of government and authority, its origin is derived from 12 12| looking for the origin of its authority from the same source, say 13 12| fiction, and that it has no authority to confer on political power 14 13| than this opinion. For the authority of the rulers of a State, 15 13| duty. And by this means authority will remain far more firmly 16 13| that they who resist State authority resist the divine will; 17 14| whom he wrote with so great authority and weight on the reverence 18 15| pervert justice; nor can their authority then be valid, which, when 19 16| the Most High God, by whom authority is given to them; and, placing 20 20| religion than oppose the public authority by means of sedition and 21 21| sanctity was inherent in the authority of rulers. Hence, when people 22 21| was appointed by divine authority.28~ 23 22| Greatly, indeed, was the authority of rulers ennobled; and 24 22| by kindness and partly by authority. So, if, in ruling, princes 25 23| of all; then they place authority on too weak and unstable 26 23| foundation religious and civil authority; and this with so fearful 27 23| is called, and a popular authority, together with an unbridled 28 25| cannot be shaken without your authority being brought down; which 29 25| greater, endeavored by their authority to close the door against 30 26| many ways supports their authority. All things that are of 31 26| to be under the power and authority of the ruler; and in things 32 27| frequently urged by your authority and teaching to fly from