Well\endashHe stirred uneasily. (b) One should prefer one'sown bodily welfare to that of another, all other things being equal,for it has more of a claim on one. You tell the old man that I know him, if he's who he claims he is. We are obliged always to follow a safe course, that is, not toexpose ourselves to the danger of formal sin (see 249, 258); butTutiorism errs when i
ecial sin of presumption that is opposed to the moral virtueof magnanimity or greatness of soul, which attempts great things forwhich it is suited. } Charles Borromeo a big nose, the sin of irreverence would be onlyslight. ing, tothe Second; the commandment to honor the aged, to the Fourth; theprohibition against detraction, to the Eighth.
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