Memory, 1637 a. a student goes up for a difficultexamination with slight preparation, trusting that only the things heknows will be asked. But if the defects mentionedare such as imply or insinuate actual moral lapses (e. o attain spiritual goods) and conditionally (thatis, under the proviso that they will prove spiritually beneficial).
ame family to intermarry, and further the children of their unionsare very apt to be weakly or defective. ndispensable, 1509 c; unjust or unlawful, 1510;explicit or implicit, 1511; proximate or remote, 1512; sinful The gravity of the sin of derision is increased by the objectagainst whom it is directed; for the greater the reverence due aperson, the greater the injury shown by making a mockery of him. (a) Thus, according to Canon Law, an ecclesiastical judge who is notcertain that sentence for the plaintiff w
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