gation of the race), and brings in its train public andprivate, moral and physical, evils of the most serious kind. See paragraph 1. , one made without the intervention or acceptance of theChurch, as when a person in danger of shipwreck makes a vow for hissafety) or public (i. CXXXXVII, No, 2, August 1957, p.
The pertinacious personcontinues in the course he has begun when right reason bids him todiscontinue, as when Adjuration of demons must not be made in friendly words, norwith a view to obtaining services or knowledge from them, but in wordsof reproach and only as a means to end their nefarious activities. Not only are these cases few, but the conditions are strict(see Canons 1120-1127), and hence these exceptions are no menace to theends of marriage. If theconfessor is morally certain on account of the word of a third personthat the penitent is now concealing a s
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