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Question 1: Contrition, Seven deadly sins and Byzantine Empire are all:
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| Question 2: The ________ insists that true contrition includes the firm will never to sin again, so that no matter what evil may come, such evil must be preferred to sin. | |||
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| Question 3: ________, Luther und Luthertum in der ersten Entwicklung (Mainz, 1906), I, 229 sqq., II, 454, 517, 618 sq. | |||
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| Question 4: The Council of Trent, however, went further, and defined perfect contrition (which one repents for the love of God) and imperfect contrition (or attrition, in which one repents out of reasons other than the love of God, such as the fear of ________). | |||
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| Question 5: This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the ________. | |||
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| Question 6: iv de Contritione): "a sorrow of soul and a hatred of sin committed, with a firm purpose of not sinning in the future" or also "sorrow of the soul and detestation for the sin committed, together with the resolution not to sin again" (________:1451). | |||
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| Question 7: This article incorporates text from the public-domain ________ of 1913. newadvent.org | |||
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| Question 8: The ________ defined that real contrition includes "a firm purpose of not sinning in the future"; consequently he who repents must resolve to avoid all sin. | |||
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| Question 9: 751 (635)) condemned the following Lutheran position: "By no means believe that you are forgiven on account of your contrition, but because of ________'s words, 'Whatsoever thou shalt loose', etc. | |||
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| Question 10: The ________ sounded the note of preparation for the coming of the Messiah: "Make straight his paths"; and, as a consequence "they went out to him and were baptized confessing their sins". | |||
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