Vocab 1
Vocab 2
Religious/Important Figures
Feast Days/Liturgical Calendar
Church History
100

Sharing the Gospel and spreading the message of Christ.

Evangelization

100

Christians who die for their faith are called these.

Martyrs

100

She is the “mother of the members of Christ.

Mary

100

The feast celebrating Mary being taken body and soul into Heaven.

The Assumption of Mary

100

Who was considered the first Christian martyr?

St. Stephen

200

A sacred agreement or promise between God and His people.

Covenant

200

The word ___ derives from an ancient Greek term that means “work for the people”

Liturgy

200

A Belgian diocesan priest who formulated a theory of the universe’s origins (Big Bang Theory) 

Georges Lemaitre

200

The liturgical season of preparation for the birth of Jesus Christ.

Advent

200

A movement of the late modern period that began in the late 18th century to the 20th century that attempted to reduce or limit Church teaching to modern advances in history, science, and biblical research.

Modernity

300

A less serious sin that weakens one’s relationship with God.

Venial Sin
300

The unique, true presence of Christ in the Eucharist under the species or appearances of bread and wine

Real Presence

300

Who wrote the 13 epistles?

St. Paul

300

This day means "fiftieth" (50th). The day that the Holy Spirit descended upon the Apostles.

Pentecost

300

A term that promotes human dignity and recognizes and defends the fundamental human right to be free from coercion in religious matters. Freedom to accept Jesus Christ and his Church.

Religious Freedom

400

Meaning “five books” in Greek. The first 5 books of the Old Testament.

Pentateuch

400

Reported appearances of the Virgin Mary to individuals.

Marian Apparitions

400

This person shared his conversion with others by writing a book known as his Confessions.

St. Augustine/St. Augustine of Hippo

400

The Sunday that commemorates Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem.

Palm Sunday

400

An intellectual movement in the 17th and 18th centuries that pitted reason and science over faith and superstition

The Enlightenment

500

The official declaration by the Church that a person is a saint.

Canonization

500

One, holy, catholic, and apostolic are known as these of the Church.

4 marks of the Church

500

This Enlightenment figure questioned whether Christianity was a beneficial influence on humanity.

Voltaire

500

The season of the Church year focused on the life and teachings of Jesus outside major feast seasons.

Ordinary Time

500

This event began in the spirit of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" but took a dark and radical turn as it began to violently attack  the Catholic Church.

French Revolution