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UNIT ONE What is morality?. HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE The Moral Life Take your notes as an outline using the format shown on this presentation. A.St. Augustine.

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Presentation on theme: "UNIT ONE What is morality?. HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE The Moral Life Take your notes as an outline using the format shown on this presentation. A.St. Augustine."— Presentation transcript:

1 UNIT ONE What is morality?

2 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE The Moral Life Take your notes as an outline using the format shown on this presentation. A.St. Augustine 1.“O God you have made u for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you. From the confessions. 2.We are made for a relationship with God. This is all that makes us happy Nothing us satisfies us.

3 I. The Moral Life

4 St. Augustine 1. “you have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you” I. The Moral Life A.

5 St. Augustine 2. We are created for a relationship with God, and this is all that will make us truly happy. I. The Moral Life A.

6 What is morality? 1. Morality- the study of the values that make us good and happy in our lives. What is right, good, and beautiful? I. The Moral Life B.

7 What is morality? 2. Morality studies what makes us the person God created us to be. I. The Moral Life B.

8 What is morality? 3. The choices you make determine the person you are. I. The Moral Life B.

9 II. The Beatitudes

10 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE The Beatitudes Take your notes a bullet-point list, with bullet points within bullet points. Blessed are the poor in spirit for the kingdom of heaven is theirs Poor in spirit- to be completely dependent on God Poverty of spirit is hard! It’s like saying that you are nothing without god! Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the land Meek- means to be humble and simple- not easily angered.

11 What they are 1. Beatitudes- Jesus’ most famous moral teachings on happiness. Begin the sermon on the Mount. II. The Beatitudes A.

12 The Beatitudes 1. Blessed are the poor in spirit, for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs. Poor in spirit- complete dependence on God. II. The Beatitudes B.

13 The Beatitudes 2. Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. God will help the sad. II. The Beatitudes B.

14 The Beatitudes 3. Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the land. Be humble. You are not more important than anyone else! II. The Beatitudes B.

15 The Beatitudes 4. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be satisfied. Stand up for social justice. II. The Beatitudes B.

16 The Beatitudes 5. Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy. Forgive, and God forgives you. II. The Beatitudes B.

17 The Beatitudes 6. Blessed are the pure of heart, for they will see God. Keep all evil away from your thoughts. II. The Beatitudes B.

18 The Beatitudes 7. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. Let peace begin with you! II. The Beatitudes B.

19 The Beatitudes 8. Blessed are those who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs. If people hate you for your faith, you are doing great things! II. The Beatitudes B.

20 III. Sin

21 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE Sin Take your notes in a table, with 7 rows and 3 columns. SinDefinitionExample Sin Venial Sin Mortal Sin Social Sin Sin of Omission Capital Sin

22 Sin and choice 1. Sin- anything you choose to say or do that breaks God’s law. You must choose! No accidents. III. Sin A.

23 Sin and choice 2. Sin is determined by: What the action was The intention of the person The circumstances III. Sin A.

24 Types of sin 1. Venial sin- Minor sins that hurt your relationship with God. III. Sin B.

25 Types of sin 2. Mortal sin- serious sins that turn you away from God. Must reconcile before receiving Eucharist. III. Sin B.

26 Types of sin 3. To have a mortal sin: Must be serious matter You must know it’s really wrong You are aware, and you freely choose to do it anyway. III. Sin B.

27 Types of sin 4. Social Sin- injustices committed by whole societies. Ex: Racism, abortion III. Sin B.

28 Types of sin 5. Sin of omission- Sin in which you don’t do something you should have done. III. Sin B.

29 Types of sin 6. The 7 Capital sins- The anti- virtues that all sins fall into. III. Sin B.

30 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE Capital Sins Take your notes in a table, with 8 rows and 3 columns. SinDefinitionExample Pride Avarice Envy Wrath Lust Gluttony Sloth

31 The 7 Capital Sins 1. Pride- thinking you are better than others. III. Sin C.

32 The 7 Capital Sins 2. Avarice- greed with money and possessions. III. Sin C.

33 The 7 Capital Sins 3. Envy- jealousy of others or others’ things. III. Sin C.

34 The 7 Capital Sins 4. Wrath- extreme anger or hatred towards others. III. Sin C.

35 The 7 Capital Sins 5. Lust- disordered desire for wrongful sexual pleasures. III. Sin C.

36 The 7 Capital Sins 6. Gluttony- overindulging in food, drink, or other good things. III. Sin C.

37 The 7 Capital Sins 7. Sloth- Laziness and apathy about the world. III. Sin C.

38 IV. Ten Commandments

39 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE 10 Commandments Take your notes as a numbered list, keeping them in order. 1.I am the Lord your God, you shall have no strange gods before me. Must cultures around the Israelites were polytheistic 2.You shall not say the Lord’s name in vain. In Mr. Rickbeil’s room, it costs you a quarter. You could be put to death for blasphemy in Jesus’ time.

40 What are they? 1. 10 Commandments- summary of God’s moral law Where most Christian moral teaching comes from. IV. Ten Commandments A.

41 What are they? 2. Given to ancient Israelites on their way to the promised land. Their covenant to follow with God. IV. Ten Commandments A.

42 The first Three 1. I am the Lord, your God. You shall not have strange gods before me. IV. Ten Commandments B.

43 The first three 2. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain. IV. Ten Commandments B.

44 The first three 3. Remember to keep holy the Lord’s day. IV. Ten Commandments B.

45 The last seven 4. Honor your father and your mother IV. Ten Commandments C.

46 The last seven 5. You shall not kill IV. Ten Commandments C.

47 The last seven 6. You shall not commit adultery IV. Ten Commandments C.

48 The last seven 7. You shall not steal IV. Ten Commandments C.

49 The last seven 8. You shall not bear false witness (lie) against your neighbor IV. Ten Commandments C.

50 The last seven 9. You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife. IV. Ten Commandments C.

51 The last seven 10. You shall not covet your neighbor’s possessions. IV. Ten Commandments C.

52 V. Virtues

53 HINTS FOR USING ONENOTE 10 Commandments Take your notes however you will best remember them. Your choice! My job is done. You don’t need any more advice on how to best take notes with the onenote project!

54 What are virtues? 1. Virtues- good habits that help you act out of reason and faith. “Virtue” means power! IV. Virtues A.

55 What are virtues? 2. Cardinal virtues- the four virtues that all other virtues come back to. IV. Virtues A.

56 What are virtues? 3. Theological virtues- virtues that help our faith that come from God. IV. Virtues A.

57 Cardinal Virtues 1. Prudence- Helps you know the right thing and choose it. Look where you’re going IV. Virtues B.

58 Cardinal Virtues 2. Justice- give everyone what they deserve out of love. Key word: out of love. IV. Virtues B.

59 Cardinal Virtues 3. Fortitude- do what is right, even when it’s tough. AKA: Courage IV. Virtues B.

60 Cardinal Virtues 4. Temperance- not too little, not too much. Everything in balance. IV. Virtues B.

61 Theological Virtues 1. Faith- Believe in God and trust what God reveals to us. More than just believing in God! IV. Virtues C.

62 Theological Virtues 2. Hope- we desire heaven and the Kingdom of God. Trust, and don’t give up. IV. Virtues C.

63 Theological Virtues 3. Love- we love God for God’s own sake. It also causes us to love our neighbor as ourselves. AKA: Charity IV. Virtues C.


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