Even in the fallen state, man cannot, by his natural intellectual power, know religious and moral truths
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God, our Creator and Lord, can be known with certainty, by the natural light of reason from created things 2 0 3God’s existence is not merely an object of natural rational knowledge, but also an object of supernatural faith 1 0 2The immediate vision of God transcends the natural power of cognition of the human soul, and is therefore supernatural 1 0 2In the state of original sin, man is deprived of sanctifying grace and all that this implies, as well as of the preternatural gifts of integrity 1 0 2Even in the fallen state, man can, by his natural intellectual power, know religious and moral truths 1 0 2In the state of fallen nature, it is morally impossible for man without supernatural revelation, to know easily, with absolute certainty and without admixture of error, all religious and moral truths of the natural order 1 0 2Without special divine revelation, no one can know with the certainty of faith if he be in the state of grace 1 0 2Man cannot seek God, unless God himself teaches him; nor find him, unless he reveals himself 1 0 2The human soul has the most potency among intellectual substances 1 0 2God can be known with certainty by the natural light of reason through the creative world 1 0 2