On the other hand, theologian Karl Becker, S.J., who for many years served as a consultor of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (hereafter CDF) while Ratzinger was its prefect, offered good reasons for taking the term "
subsists in" in Lumen gentium no.
The meaning of subsistit in as explained by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Similarly, man too can only rise and
subsist by taking the hand of God and being connected to Him.
Descent and manifestation
Thirdly, the inspector did not believe that the evidence showed that the public footpaths "
subsist or are reasonably alleged to
subsist" along the order routes.
How owners can play safe with paths
This Church, constituted and organised in this world as a society,
subsists in the Catholic Church, governed by the successor of Peter and the Bishops in communion with him."
3: Document on the Church
Millions of elderly people in this country are forced to live on a state pension on which they can barely
subsist.
Mirror M@ilbox: Vote for justice
Hunger is already a constant reality for most Guatemalans; almost percent of them
subsist on less than $2 a day.
Greetings from Guatemala: Central America begins another deadly season of drought. (margin notes)
Conditions, one might say, appropriate for participants in cut-throat global free trade, where the survivors are those who can
subsist on the smallest bowl of rice and where social provisions are notable only for their absence.
Does Labour believe in free trade?
He reminds aspiring researchers also that neither geographers nor historians can
subsist on theory and methodology alone; they must still fix their attention on hard nuggets of historical evidence.
Land and Society in Edwardian Britain
Many of them don't have the basic necessities needed to survive in the stylistic rat-race--MTV and Details magazine--and
subsist only on a primitive diet of network television and used copies of Time.
21st century agenda
Finally, bringing this stage of the argument to what he takes to be triumphant closure, Holmes cites welfare liberalism's favorite passage from Locke (First Treatise of Government, 42): "We know God hath not left one Man so to the Mercy of another that he may starve him if he please....As Justice gives every Man a Title to the product of his honest Industry, and the fair Acquisitions of his Ancestors descended to him; so Charity gives every man a title to so much of another's Plenty, as will keep him from extream want, where he has no means to
subsist otherwise." Concludes Holmes: "That this passage enunciates a universal entitlement to welfare cannot be denied" (italics in the original).
Passions and Constraint: On the Theory of Liberal Democracy
Adults
subsist mostly on nectar and save the protein-rich pollen as food for immature bees.
Bees that strip carrion also take wasp young
While O'Brien demonstrates that many Natives did not practice English-style agriculture, she does not really tell how they did
subsist. There are hints.
Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachusetts, 1650-1790
It notes that the Second Vatican Council also recognized that outside the Church's structure "many elements can be found of sanctification and truth." But it would be wrong to conclude from this that "the one Church of Christ could
subsist also in non-Catholic Churches."
Dominus Iesus (the Lord Jesus)
But even in the driest dirt, Freckman found surprising numbers of microscopic roundworms, called nematodes, that
subsist on bacteria and yeast in the soils.
The cold facts of life