Foundations
Conscience, Law, Freedom
Sin and Forgiveness
1st 4 Commandments
Pot Luck
100

Who we ought to be and how we ought to live

Morality

100

A function of the intellect that helps us to determine the moral quality of an act

Conscience

100

A failure in genuine love for God cause by perverse attachment to created goods

Sin
100

"10 Words"

Decalogue

100

Respect for one's parents

Filial Piety

200

This includes the Beatitudes

The New Law

200

An ordinance of reason established by an authority for the common good

Law

200
Sin that leads to death

Mortal Sin

200

Divinizing what is not God

Idolatry

200

Trusting in God is this virtue

Hope

300

The teaching authority of the Church

The Magisterium

300

A deep sense of the basic good

Natural Law

300

The three sacraments of forgiveness

Baptism, Eucharist, Confession

300

Practical Atheism

Agnosticism 

300

This virtue helps us to control our passions

Temperance

400

Type of subjective morality that states that what is right and wrong is up to individual interpretation and belief

Moral Relativism

400

Type of ignorance for which one is morally responsible for

Vincible Ignorance

400
3 criteria for a mortal sin

Grave Matter

Full Knowledge

Deliberate Consent

400

Buying or selling of spiritual goods

Simony

400

The 3 criteria of a moral act

Object, Intention, Circumstance 

500

These are feelings or emotions that move one to act

Passions

500

A moment of the sensitive appetites contrary to human reason; OR the human tendency to sin

Concupiscence 

500

These two things are lost when one commits a mortal sin

Sanctifying Grace and Charity

500

Spiritual sloth

Acedia

500

The criteria for this is used when an act will produce both good and bad effects

The Principle of Double Effect