Chapter, Paragraph
1 5,8 | principle began with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.~
2 5,8 | immediately subjected Adam and Eve to punishment, but as St.
3 5,8 | be stated that Adam and Eve sinned and then were condemned.
4 5,8 | repent, although Adam blamed Eve, and Eve blamed the serpent.
5 5,8 | although Adam blamed Eve, and Eve blamed the serpent. When
6 5,8 | states that had Adam and Eve repented, then, “even though
7 5,8 | therefore saw that if [Adam and Eve] remained in the paradise
8 6,17| God, and even as Adam and Eve yielded to temptation in
9 9,13| stands in direct contrast to Eve's disobedience in the Garden
10 9,13| reason, Mary is the New Eve.~ ~
11 9,42| along to decay by Adam and Eve. Their sin had immense consequences
12 9,42| arose concerning Adam and Eve's transgression and how
13 9,42| curse that followed Adam and Eve's fall?~ In all likelihood
14 9,42| Even though most of his and Eve's progeny lived far away
15 9,42| descendants of Adam and Eve through Cain, who mixed
16 9,42| reestablished since Adam and Eve's time only aboard Noah'
17 10,23| after the fall of Adam and Eve before there arose a woman
18 10,23| Incarnation counterbalanced Eve's unbelief and disobedience
19 10,23| loosened the knot which Eve had bound, and Mary is therefore
20 10,23| therefore referred to as the New Eve, which means that she is
21 10,23| consequently no redemption. Through Eve came sin; through the Virgin,
22 10,26| that the guilt of Adam and Eve's sin was transmitted through
23 10,26| nature, rejected the bitter Eve and overthrew the laws of
24 11,4 | the Holy Liturgy).~ On the eve of major feasts and Sundays,
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