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Page 1: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit
Page 2: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Slide 1

This is a slide for the first movement

Page 3: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

How are you being true to yourself?

Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

To love others and to love ourselves, as Jesus did.

When we do so we act in the best interest of our ‘true self’ and in the best interest of others.

Page 4: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

How are you being true to yourself?

Three aspects of what it means to be human: We are . . .

Rational beings: with the ability to reason and think

Social beings: created to live in relationship with others

Free beings: with the ability to make choices

Page 5: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Jesus proclaimed that he ‘came into the world to testify to the truth’ (John 18:37)

Throughout history, millions of Christians have given their lives in witness to the truth, who is Jesus Christ.

Martyrdom is the ultimate commitment to living a truthful life in the Lord.

The Eighth Commandment states, ‘You shall not bare false witness against your neighbor’.

Living truthful lives

Page 6: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Lying is a direct offense against the truth.

Lying includes speaking or acting against the truth or deceiving others from knowing the truth.

Lying hurts people by weakening the trust in a relationship.

Living truthful lives

Page 7: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Living truthful lives

Forms of lying:

Perjury is lying under oath

Duplicity is saying or doing one thing and acting the opposite

Dissimulation is concealing the truth with the intention to deceive

Hypocrisy is claiming to have moral standards but living otherwise

Page 8: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Living truthful lives

Silence or discreet language may be the appropriate choice to uphold respect or safety, or for the common good of another.

Keeping secrets and confidences is not the same as lying.

Professional confidences are kept betweenDoctor and patientLawyer and clientPriest and confessor

If someone learns about another’s plan to do harm to his or herself, or to another, they have the obligation out of love to seek help.

Page 9: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Living truthful lives

Gossip is the unnecessary sharing of personal information about another which can cause harm.

•Gossip does violence to another person. •Because of today’s media, gossip can spread very quickly.•We are obliged to not join in on gossip. •It is our obligation to stop the spread of gossip.

Page 10: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Choose life so that you may live

By our very nature we are called by God to be life-givers and not life-takers.

Pope John Paul II taught that a violation of this principle leads to ‘a culture of death’.

The Church models an attitude of reverence for the sacredness of every human life.

Page 11: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Acts which are contrary to the Fifth Commandment:

Abortion: the act of taking the life of the unborn child

The Church offers care, support and financial aid to women who need help in nurturing their unborn child.

We can work against laws that allow ‘legal’ abortion and encourage adoption for an unplanned or unwanted pregnancy.

Choose life so that you may live

Page 12: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Choose life so that you may live

Stem Cell Research: Producing or using stem cells from embryos is against moral law.

The embryo is the baby’s earliest stage of development and must be protected.

Research conducted on adult stem cells does not infringe on the dignity of the human person and therefor is not against moral law.

Page 13: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Choose life so that you may live

Euthanasia: The intentional ending of a human life in order to end the suffering of a person.

Voluntary euthanasia (assisted suicide): A terminally ill person seeks the assistance of a medical professional to end their life.

Suicide: The intentional taking of one’s own life.

Page 14: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Love and respect for all human life—even those who call themselves your enemy

The Catholic Church favors non-violent resolution of differences.

Under very strict conditions, war may be justified.

The key condition for going to war is that it must be the last resort a society has in its self-defense.

Page 15: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Love and respect for all human life—even those who call themselves your enemy

The just war tradition states that the following criteria must be satisfied to override the strong presumption against lethal force.

•Just cause•Comparative Justice•Legitimate Justice•Legitimate Authority•Right Intention•Probability of Success•Proportionality •Last Resort

Page 16: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Love and respect for all human life—even those who call themselves your enemy

The just war tradition imposes the following moral standards for the conduct of armed conflict.

•Noncombatant Immunity: Civilians may not be the object of direct attack•Proportionality: Avoid disproportionate collateral damage to civilian life and property •Right Intention: The aim of political and military leaders must be peace with justice

 

Page 17: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Love and respect for all human life—even those who call themselves your enemy

The Catholic Church upholds the State’s rights to protect its citizens from those who will remain a threat to society.

This purpose can be achieved by sentencing a criminal to life in prison.

The Catholic Church teaches that the State should practice restorative justice which aims at the rehabilitation of the offender.

Page 18: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Sr. Helen Prejean

Sr. Helen Prejean was born in 1939 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

She joined the Sisters of St. Joseph of Medaille (now known as the Congregation of St. Joseph) in 1957.

She began her ministry with the imprisoned in 1981.

Sr. Helen became spiritual advisor to Patrick Sonnier, a convicted killer of two teenagers.

This experience opened Sr. Helen’s eyes to the inhumane practice of capital punishment.

Page 19: Slide 1 This is a slide for the first movement How are you being true to yourself? Our challenge as Christians is to love God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit

Sr. Helen Prejean

Sr. Helen is an advocate for the elimination of the death penalty.

Her book Dead Man Walking is an eye-witness account of the death penalty in the U.S. and its contribution to a culture of death.

As the founder of ‘Survive’, a victim’s advocacy group, she counsels inmates on death row and families of murder victims.