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| Redemptor hominis Ioannes Paulus PP. II 1979 03 04 IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1 4, 22(193)| 21, 1964: AAS 56 (1964) 1015.~
2 4, 20(154)| Concilium, 10: AAS 56 (1964) 102.~
3 3, 16(103)| Gaudium et Spes: AAS 58 (1966) 1025-1115; Documenta Synodi Episcoporum:
4 2, 8(40) | Spes, 2, 13: AAS 58 (1966) 1026, 1034-1035.~
5 3, 14(95) | Spes, 10: AAS 58 ( 1966) 1032.~
6 3, 14(96) | Ibid., 10: 1. c., p. 1033.~
7 2, 8(40) | 13: AAS 58 (1966) 1026, 1034-1035.~
8 2, 8(40) | AAS 58 (1966) 1026, 1034-1035.~
9 4, 20(166)| di Paolo VI, III (1965) 1036.~
10 2, 8(47) | 22: AAS 58 (1966) 1042-1043.~
11 3, 13(93) | Spes, 24: AAS 58 ( 1966) 1045.~
12 3, 17(113)| Spes, 31: AAS 58 (1966) 1050.~
13 3, 16(102)| Spes, 35: AAS 58 (1966) 1053; Pope Paul VI: Address to
14 2, 9(53) | Spes, 37: AAS 58 (1966) 1054-1055; Dogmatic Constitution
15 2, 9(53) | 37: AAS 58 (1966) 1054-1055; Dogmatic Constitution on
16 4, 19(151)| 57, 59, 62: AAS 58 (1966) 1064f., 1077ff., 1079f., 1082ff.;
17 4, 19(151)| 62: AAS 58 (1966) 1064f., 1077ff., 1079f., 1082ff.; Decree
18 4, 19(151)| 1966) 1064f., 1077ff., 1079f., 1082ff.; Decree on Priestly
19 4, 19(151)| 1064f., 1077ff., 1079f., 1082ff.; Decree on Priestly Training
20 3, 16(100)| Spes, 74, 78: AAS 58 (1966) 1095-1096, 1101-1102.~
21 3, 16(100)| 78: AAS 58 (1966) 1095-1096, 1101-1102.~
22 3, 13(91) | Ibid., 76: 1. c., p. 1099.~
23 3, 16(100)| AAS 58 (1966) 1095-1096, 1101-1102.~
24 3, 16(100)| 58 (1966) 1095-1096, 1101-1102.~
25 3, 13(89) | Spes, 91: AAS 58 (1966) 1113.~
26 3, 16(103)| Spes: AAS 58 (1966) 1025-1115; Documenta Synodi Episcoporum:
27 2, 11(67) | Sources Chrétiennes, 30, pp. 117-118; 119-120; Vatican Council
28 2, 11(67) | Chrétiennes, 30, pp. 117-118; 119-120; Vatican Council
29 2, 11(67) | Chrétiennes, 30, pp. 117-118; 119-120; Vatican Council II,
30 2, 11(67) | Chrétiennes, 30, pp. 117-118; 119-120; Vatican Council II, Decree
31 2, 11(67) | II, Bonn 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129, 133; Clement of Alexandria,
32 2, 11(67) | Bonn 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129, 133; Clement of Alexandria,
33 2, 11(67) | 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129, 133; Clement of Alexandria,
34 3, 17(111)| brennender Sorge: AAS 29 (1937) 145-147; Pope Pius XII: Encyclical
35 3, 16(106)| 1979, 3: AAS 71 (1979) 157ff.; Address to Indians and
36 4, 20(180)| Cf. AAS 58 (1966) 177-198.~
37 3, 16(103)| 28, 1979: AAS 71 (1979) 187ff.; Address to the Indians
38 2, 11(67) | Florilegium Patristicum, II, Bonn 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129, 133;
39 4, 21(182)| Corporis: AAS 35 (1943) 193-248.~
40 3, 17(111)| Summi Pontificates: AAS 31 (1939) 413-453.~
41 3, 16(103)| December 24, 1947: AAS 40 (1948) 8-16; Pope John XXIII:
42 3, 16(103)| June 1, 1941: AAS 33 (1941) 195-205; Christmas Radio Message,
43 4, 19 | for sacramental life. In 1977 the Synod of the Bishops
44 4, 20(180)| Cf. AAS 58 (1966) 177-198.~
45 3, 13(88) | Cf. Jn. l4:1ff.~
46 1, 1 | already very close to the year 2000. At this moment it is difficult
47 3, 16(103)| 1941: AAS 33 (1941) 195-205; Christmas Radio Message,
48 3, 17(111)| Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931) 213; Encyclical Non Abbiamo
49 3, 16(103)| January 30, 1979: 1. c., pp. 221ff.; Address to the Monterrey
50 3, 16(102)| January 7, 1965: AAS 57 (1965) 232; Encyclical Populorum Progressio,
51 3, 16(103)| January 31, 1979: 1. c., pp. 240-242; Vatican Council II:
52 4, 21(182)| Corporis: AAS 35 (1943) 193-248.~
53 4, 19(150)| Sermo 43, 79: PL 38, 257-258.~
54 3, 16(102)| Progressio, 14: AAS 59 (1967) 264.~
55 3, 14(97) | Progressio, 21: AAS 59 (1967) 267-268.~
56 3, 14(97) | Progressio, 21: AAS 59 (1967) 267-268.~
57 3, 17(111)| Abbiamo Bisogno: AAS 23 (1931) 285-312; Encyclical Divini Redemptoris:
58 1, 4(14) | in Domino: AAS 67 (1975) 289-322; Apostolic Exhortation
59 3, 16(104)| in Terris: AAS 55 (1963) 289ff.; Pope Paul VI, Encyclical
60 1, 4(14) | Divitias Christi: AAS 57 (1965) 298-301; Encyclical Sacerdotalis
61 1, 4(14) | Christi: AAS 57 (1965) 298-301; Encyclical Sacerdotalis
62 3, 16(103)| Terris: AAS 55 (1963) 257-304; Pope Paul VI: Encyclical
63 3, 17(111)| Bisogno: AAS 23 (1931) 285-312; Encyclical Divini Redemptoris:
64 1, 4(14) | Domino: AAS 67 (1975) 289-322; Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
65 4, 20(179)| 20, 1978: AAS 70 (1978) 328-332; Pope John Paul II:
66 4, 20(179)| 1978: AAS 70 (1978) 328-332; Pope John Paul II: Address
67 3, 16(103)| December 24, 1941: AAS 34 (1942) 10-21; Christmas
68 3, 16(103)| December 24, 1946: AAS 39 (1947) 7-17; Christmas Radio
69 3, 17(111)| Pontificates: AAS 31 (1939) 413-453.~
70 3, 16(104)| Magistra: AAS 53 (1961) 418ff.; Encyclical Pacem in Terris:
71 3, 16(107)| Adveniens, 42: AAS 63 (1971) 431.~
72 1, 4(14) | of Faith: AAS 60 (1968) 433-445; Encyclical Humanae
73 4, 19(151)| Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 44, 57, 59, 62: AAS 58 (1966)
74 3, 16(103)| Adveniens: AAS 63 (1971) 401-441; Address to the Cardinals,
75 1, 4(14) | Faith: AAS 60 (1968) 433-445; Encyclical Humanae Vitae:
76 3, 17(111)| Pontificates: AAS 31 (1939) 413-453.~
77 3, 16(103)| Magistra: AAS 53 (1961) 401-464; Encyclical Pacem in Terris:
78 2, 9(53) | the Church Lumen Gentium, 48: AAS 57 (1965) 53-54.~
79 1, 4(14) | Humanae Vitae: AAS 60 (1968) 481-503; Apostolic Exhortation
80 1, 6(18) | 17:11, 22-23; 10:16; Lk 9:49, 50, 54.~
81 3, 16(103)| 23, 1972: AAS 64 (1972) 496-505; Pope Paul VI: Address
82 1, 4(14) | Testificatio: AAS 63 (1971) 497-535; Apostolic Exhortation
83 1, 4(14) | Vitae: AAS 60 (1968) 481-503; Apostolic Exhortation Quinque
84 3, 16(103)| 1972: AAS 64 (1972) 496-505; Pope Paul VI: Address to
85 4, 20(179)| Impertiendam: AAS 64 (1972) 510-514; Pope Paul VI: Address
86 4, 20(179)| Impertiendam: AAS 64 (1972) 510-514; Pope Paul VI: Address to
87 1, 4(14) | Testificatio: AAS 63 (1971) 497-535; Apostolic Exhortation Paterna
88 4, 20(168)| Mysterium Fidei: AAS 57 (1965) 553-574.~
89 4, 20(168)| Fidei: AAS 57 (1965) 553-574.~
90 3, 16(103)| 23, 1968: RRS 60 (1968) 619-623; Speech to the General
91 3, 16(103)| 1968: RRS 60 (1968) 619-623; Speech to the General Assembly
92 3, 16(103)| 24, 1968: AAS 60 (1968) 639-649; Speech to the Conference
93 3, 16(103)| 1968: AAS 60 (1968) 639-649; Speech to the Conference
94 3, 17(111)| Redemptoris: AAS 29 (1937) 65-106; Encyclical Mit brennender
95 1, 4(12) | Ecclesiam Suam: AAS 56 (1964) 650ff.~
96 1, 4(14) | Caelibatus: AAS 59 (1967) 657-697; Solemn Profession of
97 4, 22(192)| Cf. Chapter VIII, 52-69; AAS 57 (1965) 58-67.~
98 1, 4(14) | Caelibatus: AAS 59 (1967) 657-697; Solemn Profession of Faith:
99 4, 20(179)| Visit, April 20, 1978: AAS 70 (1978) 328-332; Pope John
100 4, 19(151)| Totius, 15: AAS 58 (1966) 722.~
101 3, 16(100)| Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 74, 78: AAS 58 (1966) 1095-
102 2, 12(73) | Aetate, 1-2: AAS 58 (1966) 740-741.~
103 2, 11(68) | 3-4: AAS 58 (1966) 741-743.~
104 3, 16(100)| World Gaudium et Spes, 74, 78: AAS 58 (1966) 1095-1096,
105 4, 19(150)| St. Augustine: Sermo 43, 79: PL 38, 257-258.~
106 4, 19(144)| Religiose, Bologna 1973 3, p. 807.~
107 2, 11(67) | Patristicum, II, Bonn 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129, 133; Clement
108 4, 19(143)| 10, 21: AAS 58 ( 1966) 819, 822, 827-828.~
109 4, 19(143)| 21: AAS 58 ( 1966) 819, 822, 827-828.~
110 4, 19(143)| AAS 58 ( 1966) 819, 822, 827-828.~
111 4, 19(143)| 58 ( 1966) 819, 822, 827-828.~
112 3, 16(103)| 16, 1970: AAS 62 (1970) 830-838; Apostolic Letter Octogesima
113 3, 16(103)| 1970: AAS 62 (1970) 830-838; Apostolic Letter Octogesima
114 3, 16(103)| October 4, 1965: AAS 57 (1965) 877-885; Encyclical Populorum
115 3, 16(103)| 1965: AAS 57 (1965) 877-885; Encyclical Populorum Progressio:
116 3, 16(103)| in mundo: AAS 63 (1971) 923-941.~
117 2, 12(81) | Cf. AAS 58 (1966) 936-938.~
118 2, 12(81) | Cf. AAS 58 (1966) 936-938.~
119 2, 11(67) | Stromata, I, 19, 91 and 94: Sources Chrétiennes, 30,
120 2, 11(67) | Gentes, 11: AAS 58 (1966) 960; Dogmatic Constitution on
121 1, 4(14) | Iam Anni: AAS 63 (1971) 97-106; Apostolic Exhortation
122 1, 4 | critical attitudes attacking ab intra, internally, the Church,
123 3, 14 | to man~The Church cannot abandon man, for his "destiny",
124 2, 7 | depth of his suffering and abandonment. The Church never ceases
125 4, 18 | through whom we call God "Abba, Father"129, is also a powerful
126 3, 17(111)| 1931) 213; Encyclical Non Abbiamo Bisogno: AAS 23 (1931) 285-
127 2, 11 | whose faith also looks to Abraham68.~The opening made by the
128 1, 4 | which is at times spread abroad in too thoughtless a manner.~
129 3, 13 | spite of all his apparent absences, in spite of all the limitations
130 4, 20(179)| Normae Pastorales circa Absolutionem Sacramentalem Generali Modo
131 2, 8 | that is was assumed, not absorbed, in him, has been raised
132 3, 16 | being offered, sometimes in abundance, modern weapons and means
133 4, 22 | should have life and have it abundantly188. This fullness of life
134 3, 16 | himself, dilapidating at an accelerated pace material and energy
135 3, 16 | areas of misery spread, accompanied by anguish, frustration
136 3, 17 | social awareness and the accompanying need for the citizens to
137 1, 6 | Christ, we would fail to accomplish his testament. Have we the
138 2, 10 | reason, the Redemption was accomplished in the paschal mystery,
139 3, 15 | the future for technology accord with man's moral and spiritual
140 3, 16 | will perhaps provoke new accusations against the Church. The
141 2, 12 | their full communion is achieved. This is apostolic and missionary
142 2, 11 | and through Christ man has acquired full awareness of his dignity,
143 2, 8 | thought with a human mind. He acted with a human will, and with
144 3, 15 | are dedicating themselves actively to development and progress
145 1, 1 | and, as a man, became an actor in that history, one of
146 4, 20 | actuated and continually actuates among us by means of the
147 3, 17 | for an elementary right. Actuation of this right is one of
148 1, 3 | witness of such an extremely acute consciousness of the Church.
149 4, 18 | that the recent Council so acutely emphasized at the point
150 4, 20 | teaching is sustained by the acuteness of theologians, by men of
151 3, 15 | we shall try once more to adapt it to the "signs of the
152 3, 16 | the cause of various ills. Add to this the fever of inflation
153 4, 18 | mankind?"135. This invocation addressed to the Spirit to obtain
154 2, 11 | Church's self-awareness by so adequately and competently presenting
155 4, 19 | the faith, that she should adhere strictly to divine truth143,
156 4, 20 | becoming "children of God"160, adopted sons161, we also become
157 2, 10 | bears fruit not only of adoration of God but also of deep
158 3, 16 | What is in question is the advancement of persons, not just the
159 4, 18 | This "divine destiny" is advancing, in spite of all the enigmas,
160 2, 12 | continuous spokesman and advocate for the person who lives "
161 4, 18 | this temporariness that affect man's life and the life
162 1, 4 | internal weaknesses that affected her in the postconciliar
163 3, 15 | subject contains not only affirmations and certainties but also
164 4, 20 | Penance, the Church expressly affirms her faith in the mystery
165 2, 11 | about without effective work aimed at getting to know each
166 4, 19 | of the memorial of Saint Albert, Doctor of the Church. This
167 2, 11(67) | 125, 129, 133; Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, I, 19, 91 and
168 3, 15 | man's natural environment, alienate him in his relations with
169 3, 15 | is not only subjected to "alienation", in the sense that it is
170 3, 15 | Accordingly, while keeping alive in our memory the picture
171 3, 16 | healthy competition must be allowed to lead the way, or on the
172 4, 20 | offered to the Father on the altar of the Cross, a Sacrifice
173 1, 3 | at hand. I was constantly amazed at his profound wisdom and
174 4, 20 | sorrow and the intention to amend and make satisfaction-the
175 4, 20(179)| from the United States of America on their "ad limina" Visit,
176 3, 16 | difficult to mention more analytically here. However, one thing
177 1, 6 | understanding every person, analyzing every system and recognizing
178 3, 16 | misery spread, accompanied by anguish, frustration and bitterness106.~
179 3, 15 | questions and points of anguished disquiet. The latter are
180 1, 4(14) | Exhortation Quinque Iam Anni: AAS 63 (1971) 97-106; Apostolic
181 3, 17 | undermining and often almost annihilating the effectiveness of the
182 3, 16(103)| Message on the Fiftieth Anniversary of Leo XIII's Encyclical "
183 3, 17(111)| Encyclical Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931) 213; Encyclical
184 1, 2 | I. Indeed, as soon as he announced to the Sacred College on
185 4, 22 | is from the moment of the Annunciation. Accordingly, we who form
186 3, 13 | present, in spite of all his apparent absences, in spite of all
187 2, 12 | himself that has made an appearance at the side of people judged
188 2, 12 | When Jesus Christ himself appeared as a prisoner before Pilate'
189 4, 21 | too and every Bishop must apply this principle to himself.
190 3, 17 | standards. Nevertheless, without applying these comparisons, one still
191 4, 19 | very reality, because they approached this truth with veneration
192 4, 20(179)| their "ad limina" Visit, April 20, 1978: AAS 70 (1978)
193 3, 17 | profound concern to the area of social justice and is
194 2, 12 | instance, his address in the Areopagus at Athens74. The missionary
195 3, 17 | Indeed, well founded fears arise that very often we are still
196 3, 16 | gigantic investments for armaments at the service of war and
197 1, 5 | this work have still to be arranged and enunciated by the Apostolic
198 4, 19 | letters, doctors, jurists, artists and technicians, teachers
199 3, 15 | which is marked by the ascendancy of technology, demand a
200 4, 20 | faith and prayer, and by ascetics and mystics, in complete
201 1, 6 | Body-can make Christians ashamed at being often themselves
202 4, 19 | ordinary aspect, helps to assemble the People of God around
203 2, 10 | he must "appropriate" and assimilate the whole of the reality
204 2, 8 | the very fact that is was assumed, not absorbed, in him, has
205 4, 18 | Guide the steps that go astray"133.~This appeal to the
206 2, 11 | children of this world are more astute... than are the children
207 2, 12 | address in the Areopagus at Athens74. The missionary attitude
208 3, 13(87) | V atican Council II: Pastoral Constitution
209 2, 8 | destruction through the use of atomic, hydrogen, neutron and similar
210 2, 12 | reason the Church in our time attaches great importance to all
211 4, 22 | way. We do so with all our attachment to our ancient tradition
212 3, 17 | experience but it is above all an attack on man's very dignity, independently
213 1, 4 | various critical attitudes attacking ab intra, internally, the
214 4, 21 | gained for us, we are able to attain to "being kings", that is
215 3, 15 | future. Do all the conquests attained until now and those projected
216 1, 6 | steps on the road to the attainment of that unity. Have we gone
217 3, 16 | progress must be followed attentively. Each stage of that progress
218 4, 20 | Blood of the Lord, as is attested by the very words used at
219 2, 11 | seeds of the Word"67, attesting that, though the routes
220 3, 14 | life. Pulled by manifold attractions, he is constantly forced
221 3, 15 | progress, which has man for its author and promoter, make human
222 3, 15 | was so perspicaciously and authoritatively traced by the Second Vatican
223 4, 18 | life, the flesh is of no avail"124. In spite of appearances,
224 1, 6 | openness, drawing closer, availability for dialogue, and a shared
225 1, 6 | ecumenism. Pope Paul VI, availing himself of the activities
226 2, 12 | freedom, and the warning to avoid every kind of illusory freedom,
227 2, 11 | of the opposition, more awaited than ever. Here we touch
228 3, 16 | the new States and nations awakening to independent life are
229 3, 13 | by that truth. Against a background of the ever increasing historical
230 4, 20 | calls to the Eucharistic banquet is always the same Christ
231 3, 16 | in the Bible of the rich banqueter and the poor man Lazarus105.
232 4, 20 | beginning with the mystery of Baptism, in which we are buried
233 4, 21 | men" in the sense that, by basing ourselves on Christ's example186
234 2, 9 | in the Firstborn Son to bé children of God54 and called
235 3, 14 | returning to their proper bearings and thus revealing themselves.
236 4, 18 | this creative restlessness beats and pulsates what is most
237 3, 16 | each side of the two and to beg everybody in the name of
238 2, 12 | missionary attitude always begins with a feeling of deep esteem
239 2, 12 | that the conversion that is begun by the mission is a work
240 | behind
241 4, 18 | the stains of guilt away; Bend the stubborn heart and will;
242 1, 4(14) | Exhortation Paterna cum Benevolentia: AAS 67 (1975) 5-23; Apostolic
243 4, 21 | Christ teaches us that the best use of freedom is charity,
244 3, 16 | development of the parable in the Bible of the rich banqueter and
245 3, 17(111)| Encyclical Non Abbiamo Bisogno: AAS 23 (1931) 285-312;
246 3, 16 | anguish, frustration and bitterness106.~We have before us here
247 4, 20 | of the human conscience. "Blessed are those who hunger and
248 2, 11 | and removing the obstacles blocking the way to perfect unity.
249 2, 12 | him by the Spirit, which "blows where it wills"76. The mission
250 3, 17 | in the life of political bodies.~These rights are rightly
251 4, 20 | life, which involves the bodily glorification of the crucified
252 3, 16 | many others.~If we make bold to describe man's situation
253 3, 14 | of his through numerous bonds, contacts, situations, and
254 2, 11(67) | Florilegium Patristicum, II, Bonn 1911 2, pp. 81, 125, 129,
255 4, 19 | Son", who lives "in the bosom of the Father"142, when
256 4, 20 | us, so that we have been "bought with a price"159. The "price"
257 3, 14 | he feels himself to be boundless in his desires and summoned
258 4, 18 | enables him to go beyond the bounds of temporariness and at
259 1, 1 | granted it also with the bounty that enables us, in considering
260 2, 7 | to the truth, his all-em bracing love. Furthermore, his death
261 2, 12 | diminishes and as it were breaks off this freedom at its
262 4, 18 | receives within himself that breath of life that comes from
263 3, 17(111)| 65-106; Encyclical Mit brennender Sorge: AAS 29 (1937) 145-
264 2, 7 | turned again, strengthen your brethren"23.~To this question, dear
265 4, 18 | Christ~This necessarily brief look at man's situation
266 3, 17 | of citizenship.~Even if briefly, this subject must also
267 4, 18 | resurrection dawned... the bright promise of immortality"123,
268 4, 19 | Church. These received most brightly the authentic light that
269 2, 7 | continually seeks ways of bringing this mystery of her Master
270 3, 16 | remaining societies-at least broad sectors of them-are suffering
271 4, 19 | which is continually being broadened and yet differentiated,
272 3, 15 | day human existence in its broadest and universal dimension.
273 2, 8 | Son"41. As this link was broken in the man Adam, so in the
274 4, 21 | which their lives must be built by married people, parents,
275 3, 17 | state of things, which is burdensome for the societies concerned,
276 4, 20 | Baptism, in which we are buried into the death of Christ,
277 1, 4(14) | Encyclical Sacerdotalis Caelibatus: AAS 59 (1967) 657-697;
278 3, 17 | been a century of great calamities for man, of great devastations,
279 2, 9 | called to love. The Cross on Calvary, through which Jesus Christ-
280 4, 21 | Church knowingly and freely cammit ourselves to live in celibacy,
281 3, 17 | before us concentration camps, violence, torture, terrorism,
282 4, 20(179)| II: Address to a Group of Canadian Bishops on their "ad limina"
283 1, 2 | last year, when, after the canonical election, I was asked: "
284 1, 6(20) | Constitution Dei Filius, Cap. III De fide, can. 6: Conciliorum
285 3, 15 | compared with which all the cataclysms and catastrophes of history
286 3, 17 | known, led to the horrible catastrophe of war, the Church clearly
287 3, 15 | which all the cataclysms and catastrophes of history known to us seem
288 4, 19 | dedicating themselves to catechetical activity for love of the
289 4, 22 | only the need but even a categorical imperative for great, intense
290 4, 19(144)| Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith Dei Filius, Chap.
291 4, 20 | ministry in the Church un ceasingly celebrate the Eucharist.~
292 4, 18 | of the divine adoption re ceived by man in Christ through
293 4, 20 | the Church un ceasingly celebrate the Eucharist.~The Church
294 2, 7 | that the Church unceasingly celebrates the Eucharist, finding in
295 4, 20 | faithful in the penitential celebration is a great help for the
296 4, 21 | cammit ourselves to live in celibacy, and each one of us must
297 1, 5 | character. Referring also to the centuriesold tradition of the Church,
298 3, 15 | not only affirmations and certainties but also questions and points
299 1, 1 | service connected with the Chair of Saint Peter in Rome,
300 3, 16 | dealing with the urgent challenges and ethical demands of the
301 3, 16 | and destruction had been changed into investments for food
302 4, 19(144)| Catholic Faith Dei Filius, Chap. 3: Conciliorum Oecumenicorum
303 4, 22 | of a mother. The special characteristic of the motherly love that
304 4, 21 | highlighted, among other characteristics of the Christian vocation,
305 3, 16 | These words become charged with even stronger warning,
306 4, 19 | one in which her prophetic charism is manifested: witnessing
307 3, 16 | sovereignty but rather a form of chauvinism, imperialism, and neocolonialism
308 3, 13 | activity.~Jesus Christ is the chief way for the Church. He himself
309 1, 5 | Bishops-which displayed, chiefly through the Synod, its union
310 4, 18 | Melt the frozen, warm the chill; Guide the steps that go
311 3, 14 | is constantly forced to choose among them and to renounce
312 1, 2 | venerable Predecessor in choosing them, I wish like him to
313 1, 2 | specific duty in his See.~I chose the same names that were
314 2, 11(67) | 19, 91 and 94: Sources Chrétiennes, 30, pp. 117-118; 119-120;
315 1, 4(14) | Investigabiles Divitias Christi: AAS 57 (1965) 298-301;
316 1, 1 | the corrections imposed by chronological exactitude, will recall
317 4, 20(179)| Faith: Normae Pastorales circa Absolutionem Sacramentalem
318 1, 4 | with precision the various circles within which it was to be
319 4, 20 | regard and the different circumstances of the lives of the people
320 3, 14 | perhaps still only that of his clan or tribe), and in the sphere
321 3, 17 | or are treated as second-class citizens or are even-and
322 3, 16 | of the privileged social classes and of the rich countries,
323 1, 2 | the Papacy-I saw in it a clear presage of grace for the
324 2, 11 | importance-for us is still clearer in the light of the reality
325 2, 11(67) | pp. 81, 125, 129, 133; Clement of Alexandria, Stromata,
326 4, 20 | develop spiritually in the climate of the Eucharist. With all
327 4, 22 | expression in its exceptional closeness to man and all that happens
328 4, 22(193)| Pope Paul VI: Closing Address at the Third Session
329 3, 16 | naked and you did not clothe me... in prison and you
330 1, 5 | than the symptoms of doubt, collapse and crisis.~
331 4, 19 | theology as it were a simple collection of his own personal ideas,
332 3, 16 | instinct for individual or collective interest or with the instinct
333 3, 16(103)| Address to the Campesinos of Colombia, August 23, 1968: RRS 60 (
334 3, 16 | whatever be the ideological colours with which they are covered.
335 3, 15 | lips and appears in the columns of all the newspapers and
336 3, 16 | or with the instinct for combat and domination, whatever
337 4, 19 | in order to help them to combine with each other, as we read
338 4, 20 | Sacrifice of Christ, since it commemorates his death on the Cross167,
339 3, 16 | monetary, production and commercial mechanisms that, resting
340 4, 19 | service of the apostolic commitments of the whole of the People
341 3, 15 | Creator's will that man should communicate with nature as an intelligent
342 4, 18 | with each man, continually communicates to us the Spirit who places
343 3, 16 | from the means of social communication. Man cannot relinquish himself
344 3, 16(100)| II: Decree on the Social Communications Media Inter Mirifica, 6:
345 3, 15 | unimaginable self-destruction, compared with which all the cataclysms
346 2, 11 | awareness by so adequately and competently presenting to us a view
347 3, 16 | where the laws of healthy competition must be allowed to lead
348 4, 20 | which our new being is most completely expressed and in which Christ
349 3, 17 | because it too enters into the complex of man's situations in the
350 3, 17 | that the society and people composing it are master and sovereign
351 3, 16 | and energy resources, and compromising the geophysical environment,
352 3, 17 | ideologies concerning the way of conceiving the world.~If, in spite
353 3, 17 | practice we see before us concentration camps, violence, torture,
354 3, 14 | from the moment of his conception and birth. Man in the full
355 1, 6 | Vatican Council responded concisely to this requirement with
356 1, 3 | which was later successfully concluded and perseveringly put into
357 3, 16 | materialistic in outline condemns man to such slavery, even
358 3, 17 | Organization, an effort conducive to the definition and establishment
359 1, 5 | consolidation of National Episcopal Conferences throughout the Church and
360 1, 2 | mission and ministry that confers on Peter's See an altogether
361 1, 6 | the Church has constantly confessed and taught. To all who,
362 4, 18(125)| Confessio, I, 1: CSEL 33, p. 1.~
363 4, 20 | the practice of individual confession .with a personal act of
364 3, 17 | no need for the Church to confirm how closely this problem
365 2, 12 | conscience. What a stupendous confirmation of this has been given and
366 2, 12 | moment he was once more confirming what he had said earlier: "
367 3, 17 | programmes are made up of conflicting ideologies concerning the
368 3, 13 | life in "the world should conform more to man's surpassing
369 4, 20 | the Church's practice-in conformity with the most ancient tradition
370 3, 17 | case we are undoubtedly confronted with a radical injustice
371 1, 6 | the Church, are causing confusion of ideas in questions of
372 4, 20(179)| Cf. Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the
373 4, 21 | undertaken by the Orders and Congregations both ancient and recent,
374 3, 17 | justice and peace, at this conquest, the Church, aware that
375 2, 10 | sphere of human hearts, consciences and events.~
376 1, 6 | difficulties or because they consider that the first ecumenical
377 2, 10 | meaning that was lost to a considerable extent because of sin. And
378 2, 7 | consciousness, which the Council considerably developed, through all levels
379 3, 17 | The Second Vatican Council considered especially necessary the
380 3, 15 | eschatological faith, the Church considers an essential, unbreakably
381 1, 6 | worked with perseverance and consistency, and the representatives
382 4, 20 | seems to strengthen and consolidate in an altogether special
383 1, 5 | least of the process of consolidation of National Episcopal Conferences
384 1, 3 | courage and also by his constancy and patience in the difficult
385 4, 20 | moment in the soul's life constituted by the moment of conversion
386 4, 19 | same fidelity must be a constitutive quality of the Church's
387 2, 12 | in situations of external constraint!~When Jesus Christ himself
388 1, 4 | Otherwise it ceases to be constructive and does not reveal truth,
389 3, 15 | serves for immediate use and consumption. Yet it was the Creator'
390 2, 8 | consciousness and by making contact with the inward mystery
391 2, 12 | you free"82. These words contain both a fundamental requirement
392 2, 10 | and mankind. Unceasingly contemplating the whole of Christ's mystery,
393 3, 14 | society and very diverse contexts, in the sphere of his own
394 1, 1 | people, nation, country and continent, in spite of the efforts
395 1, 5 | structures of an international or continental character. Referring also
396 2, 12 | he ever cease to be the continuous spokesman and advocate for
397 1, 5 | at their head, and he is continuously renewing it in the College
398 3, 17 | history of man on those contributing to its establishment.~The
399 3, 16 | redistribution of riches and of control over them, in order that
400 1, 3 | Council, which John XXIII convened and opened and which was
401 2, 11 | this dialogue becomes a conversation, attention must be directed
402 2, 10 | amazement, which is also a conviction and a certitude-at its deepest
403 4, 21(182)| XII: Encyclical Mystici Corporis: AAS 35 (1943) 193-248.~
404 3, 16(102)| VI: Address to Diplomatic Corps, January 7, 1965: AAS 57 (
405 1, 1 | without prejudice to all the corrections imposed by chronological
406 4, 19 | intellegas,150 and it functions correctly when they seek to serve
407 3, 14 | every element of this life correspond to man's true dignity-in
408 2, 12 | has not always been full correspondence with this high ideal. And
409 2, 7 | obedience in faith the call corresponding to the command that Christ
410 1, 4 | extra, externally, the true coun- tenance of the Church,
411 4, 21 | People-the Second Vatican Counci] highlighted, among other
412 4, 21 | accordance with the evangelical counsels. This is the ideal of the
413 3, 15 | rise to disquiet on many counts. The first reason for disquiet
414 1, 3 | profound wisdom and his courage and also by his constancy
415 1, 6 | perseveringly, humbly and also courageously the ways of drawing closer
416 2, 9 | rejected by breaking the first Covenant51 and the later covenants
417 2, 9 | Covenant51 and the later covenants that God "again and again
418 3, 16 | colours with which they are covered. Obviously these instincts
419 3, 17 | last world war but also to create the basis for continual
420 4, 19 | God, to be able to share creatively and fruitfully in Christ'
421 4, 19 | expression: intellege, utcredas-crede, ut intellegas,150 and it
422 3, 17 | constitute the essential criterion for all programmes, systems
423 1, 4 | the various thoughtless criticisms, more resistent with respect
424 4, 18(125)| Confessio, I, 1: CSEL 33, p. 1.~
425 3, 16(103)| Address to the Indians at Cuilipan, January 29, 1979: 1. c.,
426 2, 12 | enables us to approach all cultures, all ideological concepts,
427 1, 4(14) | Apostolic Exhortation Paterna cum Benevolentia: AAS 67 (1975)
428 4, 20 | the bread and drink of the cup"171.~This call by the Apostle
429 3, 17 | process been decisively curbed? In any case, we cannot
430 2, 12 | truth, frees man from what curtails, diminishes and as it were
431 3, 16 | is paying the price in damage and injury is always man.
432 3, 16 | already a real perceptible danger that, while man's dominion
433 3, 16 | situation and therefore requires daring creative resolves in keeping
434 4, 22 | form, coming forth from darkness198. Later, all the generations
435 1, 1 | already approaching that date, which, without prejudice
436 4, 18 | our hope of resurrection dawned... the bright promise of
437 4, 22 | need of a Mother. We owe a debt of special gratitude to
438 3, 16 | deepest powers in man, which decide the true culture of peoples.
439 4, 20 | reflection, and many more decisions must be made about it in
440 2, 12 | before the judge at the decisive moment he was once more
441 3, 17 | themselves. Has this process been decisively curbed? In any case, we
442 1, 2 | will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are
443 4, 19 | servants of divine truth, dedicate their studies and labours
444 4, 21 | Vatican Council did not deduce this picture merely from
445 4, 21 | which, in spite of all the deficiencies of its community life-in
446 4, 19 | has besides been clearly defined by the First Vatican Council147
447 3, 17 | effort conducive to the definition and establishment of man'
448 3, 15 | he regressing and being degraded in his humanity? In men
449 4, 19 | the mature results of its deliberations, experiences and suggestions
450 4, 21 | to their vocation, as is demanded by the indissoluble nature
451 1, 4 | she should always be very demanding on herself, nevertheless
452 1, 6 | were to do so, we would deny the truth concerning ourselves
453 3, 17 | rights of the citizens, denying them recognition precisely
454 4, 19 | the work cannot however depart from the fundamental unity
455 3, 17 | had as its aim not only to departfrom the horrible experiences
456 1, 6 | of whole societies, with deplorable consequences besides.~
457 3, 17 | already happened- entirely deprived of the rights of citizenship.~
458 4, 18 | by the Redeemer and whose descent, which was revealed on the
459 3, 16 | others.~If we make bold to describe man's situation in the modern
460 3, 17 | programme could renounce this description? We are firmly convinced
461 1, 1 | which God in his hidden design has entrusted to me, after
462 4, 22 | soul and every heart by designating, when he was raised on the
463 4, 19 | is permissible and even desirable that the enormous work to
464 4, 20 | around the Eucharist and desiring that the authentic Eucharistic
465 4, 18 | Holy Spirit137 and of his destination to grace and glory138. By
466 3, 13 | from eternity and called, destined for grace and glory-this
467 3, 16 | of even worse misery and destitution.~This pattern, which is
468 3, 15 | heedless "exploiter" and "destroyer".~The development of technology
469 2, 7 | devotion she reconstructs every detail of his life. These words
470 3, 17 | refrain from entering into details in this field in which we
471 2, 10 | Christianity. This amazement determines the Church's mission in
472 4, 19 | the fundamental demands determining man's vocation in the community
473 3, 17 | calamities for man, of great devastations, not only material ones
474 4, 21 | The Second Vatican Council devoted very special attention to
475 2, 7 | continually. With the greatest devotion she reconstructs every detail
476 4, 18 | On our dryness pour your dew; Wash the stains of guilt
477 4, 20(166)| September 15, 1965: Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, III (1965) 1036.~
478 3, 15 | former. They fit in with the dialectical nature of human knowledge
479 4, 18 | believes in me... shall never die"122. In Jesus Christ, who
480 3, 15 | progress, in which it is diffiicult not to see also authentic
481 3, 16 | tensions created by himself, dilapidating at an accelerated pace material
482 2, 12 | man from what curtails, diminishes and as it were breaks off
483 1, 6 | giving up or in any way diminishing the treasures of divine
484 1, 5 | mention each individual diocese-should pulsate in full awareness
485 1, 5 | Councils in the parishes and dioceses.~I must keep all this in
486 3, 16(102)| Pope Paul VI: Address to Diplomatic Corps, January 7, 1965:
487 4, 18 | sentiments of the Son and directs us towards the Father136.
488 4, 18 | a new life that does not disappear and pass away but lasts
489 1, 4 | mature in her spirit of discerning, better able to bring out
490 2, 12 | the esteem, respect and discernment that since the time of the
491 4, 22 | on the Cross, his beloved disciple as her son197. The Holy
492 2, 11 | tradition, structures and discipline of the individual Christian
493 4, 19 | specialists in the various disciplines, those who represent the
494 3, 14 | flow so many and such great discords in society"95.~This man
495 1, 6 | seek unity without being discouraged at the difficulties that
496 1, 4 | which there was frequent discussion during the Council. While
497 2, 8 | likeness to God which had been disfigured ever since the first sin.
498 3, 16 | further symptoms of the moral disorder that is being noticed in
499 3, 16 | which has no weapons at her disposal apart from those of the
500 1, 6 | being often themselves so disposed to doubt concerning the