73 occurrences of therefore etc in this volume.
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cover
The Ordinatio of John Duns Scotus
cover
Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 1 - 7
Book Four. Distinctions 1 - 7
First Distinction. Second Part. On the Proper Idea of a Sacrament and on its Institution
Question Two. Whether for the Period of any Law Given by God Some Sacrament Needed to Have Been Instituted
II. To the Initial Arguments

II. To the Initial Arguments

258. To the first argument [n.218] I say that God was not directly the cause or the occasion of idolatry. For he did not institute those sensible signs as if they were to be believed in or were something of the divine; but he instituted them as signs of the effects of his causing, from which signs the wayfarer could get knowledge and direction for seeking salvation.

259. To the second [n.219] the answer will appear below [n.395].

260. To the third [n.220] I say that no one other than God was the legislator, save as herald announcing the law, and he could thus have been an announcer of the sacraments of this Law but not an institutor.

261. To the fourth [n.221] the answer is plain from the fourth article [nn.256-257], that there were different sacraments instituted for the time of each Law. At least this is plain about the sacrament whereby the main distinction between Law and Law was made. For men of the same Law had to agree among themselves in that sacrament and be distinguished by it from those of the other Law [n.233].