Chapter, Paragraph, Part
1 Int | accumulated that has great value and supports the mission
2 1, 1 | promoting the human being. Their value lies in highlighting the
3 1, 1 | generations. Their artistic value reveals the creative capacity
4 1, 1 | community. On account of their value as culture, they hand on
5 1, 1 | an exclusive owner. ~The value that the Church places on
6 1, 1 | artefacts of minor artistic value witness to the exertion
7 1, 2 | importance or simply for their value as memories. In other cultures,
8 1, 2 | considered a fundamental value that must be cultivated
9 1, 2 | acquired an entirely aesthetic value due to secularization. It
10 1, 2 | artefact with an aesthetic value may not be totally detached
11 1, 3 | for objects of particular value used in worship and particularly
12 1, 3 | possessed an exhibitional value, especially in the case
13 1, 4 | has an effective universal value since it recommends the
14 2, 1,1 | to their art-historical value. The actual conservation
15 2, 1,2 | as well as their artistic value. Consequently, by stating
16 2, 3,2 | anthropological, cultural value but it should show, above
17 3, 1,1 | architectural-historical value that alone can identify
18 3, 1,1 | architecture and the proper value of the works displayed. ~
19 4, 2,3 | best way to understand the value of artworks, and thus the
20 5, 2,1 | formed to appreciate the value of the cultural assets of
21 5, 2,1 | Seminarians Regarding the Pastoral Value of Cultural Ecclesiastical
22 5, 2,4 | reflect a purely cultural value but may be planned according
23 5, 2,4 | also the religious-pastoral value of the cultural heritage
24 6 | art-historical patrimony, combine the value of memory with prophecy
25 6 | the ecclesial and civil value of the ecclesiastical art-historical
26 6 | sentimental and religious value of the art-historical patrimony
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