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1 1 | centuries, the Catholic Church has been accustomed to reform
2 3 | such great attention to the Church. ~
3 4 | especially its doctrine on the Church would be decided in the
4 4 | was for the good of the Church in the long term. ~
5 8 | the documents of which the Church, the universal "sacrament
6 8 | Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium nos. 1, 9,
7 9 | for the use of the entire Church. In all these phases of
8 13| in the episcopate for the Church. Indeed, by a certain analogy
9 13| institutions throughout the whole Church. ~
10 14| legislative tradition of the Church. ~
11 15| importance of discipline in the Church of God (cf. 1 Cor. chapters
12 16| charisms in the life of the Church and of the faithful. On
13 17| legislative document of the Church, founded on the juridical -
14 17| social life, and also in the Church's activity itself. Therefore,
15 17| organic structure of the Church as willed by her divine
16 17| office entrusted to the Church itself, the Code must also
17 18| corresponds to the nature of the Church, especially as it is proposed
18 18| the conciliar image of the Church, nevertheless, in this image
19 20| legislative tradition of the Church, especially in regard to
20 21| and genuine image of the Church, we should emphasize especially
21 21| the doctrine in which the Church is presented as the People
22 21| the doctrine in which the Church is seen as a "communion,"
23 21| Churches and the universal Church, and between collegiality
24 21| laity; and finally, the Church's commitment to ecumenism. ~
25 23| the bishops of the whole Church not only ask for its promulgation,
26 24| extremely necessary for the Church. Since, indeed, it is organized
27 26| means in order that the Church may progress in conformity
28 27| ecclesiastical laws for the Latin Church. ~
29 29| law for the whole Latin Church, and I entrust it to the
30 32| may flower again in the Church a renewed discipline; and
31 32| Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church. ~Given at Rome, from the
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