A habitual and firm disposition to do the good; a "moral muscle."
Virtue
The type of friendship based on a shared task (teammate, study partner)
Utility
She refused to leave Naomi, saying "Your God shall be my God."
Ruth
The Horses in the chariot analogy represent these wild, emotional impulses.
The Passions
"Iron sharpens _____, and one man sharpens another."
Iron
The constant and firm will to give God and neighbor their due.
Justice
The type of friendship based on fun or gaming; usually fades when the activity stops.
Pleasure
He put two small copper coins into the treasury—everything she had to live on. (No Specific Name)
The Poor Widow
The Driver holding the reins represents this human faculty (the ability to choose).
The Will
"The wages of sin is _____, but the free gift of God is eternal life."
Death
Wisdom in action; doing the right thing, at the right time, in the right manner.
Prudence
The highest form of friendship; based on wanting the best for the other.
Virtue (True Brotherhood)
He is the "Charioteer of the Virtues" because he stored grain for the famine in Genesis 41.
Joseph
This human faculty is known as the coach who knows the map and the truth
The Intellect
"I have fought the good fight, I have finished the _____, I have kept the faith."
The moral virtue that ensures firmness in difficulties and constancy in the pursuit of the good.
Fortitude
According to Sirach 6, this is the main difference between a "friend" and a "brother."
Faithfulness
St. Lawrence is an example of this type of person—someone who dies for their faith.
A Martyr
If the horses run wild and the driver loses control, you are living according to the _____.
flesh
"If we say we have fellowship with him while we walk in _____, we lie and do not practice the truth."
Darkness
This virtue is not a root, but a fruit; it sits at the end of the list in Galatians 5.
Temperance
"Calling a brother higher" means telling him this—something he needs to hear, not just what he wants to hear.
The Truth
This Apostle described his sufferings as "light and momentary" compared to eternal glory.
St. Paul
This specific virtue is the "Driver" of the chariot; without it, courage becomes recklessness.
Prudence
"Apart from Me you can do _____." (John 15:5)
Nothing