Sin and Virtue
Make Good Choices
Respect my (Church) Authorita
Yeah, Rights!
100

This type of sin does not destroy divine life in the soul but weakens it.

Venial Sin

100

In moral decision-making, this term refers to the "nature" of the act itself.

Objects

100

This is the teaching authority of the Church, held by the Pope and Bishops.

Magisterium

100

Rawls argues that this alone is not enough to make a contract just because of power imbalances.

Consent

200

These four virtues are developed by human effort

Cardinal Virtues

200

This refers to the "why" or the intention behind an action.

Intention

200

This term refers to the body of beliefs (Scripture and Tradition) handed down by the Church.

Deposit of Faith

200

According to Locke, our natural rights are endowed to us by this.

God

300

A sin involving grave matter, full consent, and full knowledge.

Mortal Sin

300

The persons involved and where and action occurs are examples of this.

Circumstances

300

Both Sacred Tradition and Scripture have their origins with this group.

Apostles

300

This mental exercise involves choosing principles of justice without knowing your own social standing or talents

Veil of Ignorance

400

Faith is one of these.

Theological Virtues
400

For an action to be considered "good" in Catholic morality, these TWO things must both be good.

Object and Ends

400

The Deposit of Faith is considered this, meaning it cannot fail in teaching.

Infallible

400

These are what Locke called "natural rights"

Life, Liberty, and Property

500

This type of sin refers to structures or institutions that cause harm rather than a single individual act.

Social Sin

500

According to this principle, a bad outcome is permissible if the object and ends are good or neutral

Double Effect

500

Sacred Tradition is unlike Scripture because it doesn't have this.

A definitive written form.

500

Locke argues natural rights are rooted in how humans would act in this state.

State of Nature

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