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Morality: A Call to Catholic Living

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Demonstrate an understanding of the foundations of morality given by Jesus ... Stout Finch & Tom. Mrs. Bergemier. Inquiring murderer. Antique collector garage sale ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Morality: A Call to Catholic Living


1
Morality A Call to Catholic Living
  • Created by Michael Cheney

2
Course Objectives
  • Students will be able to
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the foundations
    of morality given by Jesus
  • Identify and explain key concepts of Catholic
    morality
  • Morality
  • Conscience
  • Natural law
  • Demonstrate awareness of the three prong approach
    to making moral decision making
  • Explain implications of values and principles of
    the Churchs teachings applicable today

3
Opening Prayer
  • Let us pray (p. 1)

4
Formative Outcomes
  • Open to Growth
  • Intellectually Competent
  • Religious
  • Loving
  • Committed to Doing Justice
  • Curiosity (distrust what everybody else knows)
  • Humility (be humble before the evidence)
  • Reason (think critically and honestly)
  • Care (be vulnerable enough to care for those
    around you)
  • Courage (stand up and make a difference)

5
Important Attitudes/Behaviors
  • Feel comfortable sharing information about
    themselves and their ideas
  • Actively listen to the ideas of others in an
    atmosphere of mutual respect.

6
Setting the Context Before we begin
  • Think/Pair/Share
  • Describe 3 situations that call for moral
    decision making.
  • Why is it important to consider the moral
    implications of our actions?

7
Morality?
  • Brainstorming Write the 3 first words that come
    to mind when you think about the concept of
    morality
  • Morality the goodness or sinfulness of human
    acts
  • Practical issues about how we live our lives
  • Decision making
  • Positive negative effects of our actions on
    others and ourselves

8
Choosing Good and Evil
  • What helps us decide whether an act is moral or
    immoral?
  • (Three prong approach)

9
Three Prong Approach
  • Act Object chosen
  • Intention end in view
  • Circumstances of the action

10
Nature of Acts
  • Acts (objects chosen) can be
  • Good
  • Indifferent (pre-moral evil/less than ideal)
  • Evil
  • Some acts are always inherently evil
  • Indifferent acts require sufficient reason

11
Three Prong Approach
  • Act Object chosen
  • Intention end in view
  • Circumstances of the action

12
Cases
  • Stout Finch Tom
  • Mrs. Bergemier
  • Inquiring murderer
  • Antique collector garage sale
  • Abduction
  • Atomic bomb

13
Principles of Double Effect
  • The act must be good or indifferent, not morally
    evil.
  • The intention must be the good effect of the act
  • The evil effect cannot be the means to the good
    effect.
  • There must be a proportionately serious reason
    for tolerating the evil effect.

14
The Discerning Approach
  • Case of Amputation If we watched a surgeon
    amputating a leg, how would we be able to
    determine whether the act was moral or not?
  • Act Amputating a leg
  • Intent the value of saving ones life.
  • Circumstance gangrene and all medications have
    failed.
  • A reason is sufficient when the act supports the
    value in question and does not contradict or
    undermine it.

15
Lie Falsehood
  • When is a falsehood considered a lie?
  • When is killing considered murder?
  • When is an action disproportionate and therefore
    immoral?

16
Example 1 Falsehood vs. Telling a Lie
  • A falsehood is considered a lie when there is no
    sufficient reason, when the falsehood undermines
    the meaning and purpose of human speech.
  • If an enraged person breaks in my home demanding
    the whereabouts of my parent to kill him, then I
    have sufficient reason for not telling the truth.
  • Value I actually protect the fundamental
    significance of communication by telling a
    falsehood.

17
Example 2 Framing an Innocent Person
  • The discerning methodology would point out
  • Theres no inherent connection between framing
    the innocent person and changing the minds of the
    mob
  • The mob is free to change their minds without
    framing the innocent person.
  • The framing will not necessarily change any minds
  • Therefore, framing only seems to protect life.
  • Yet, the manner of protecting the good (by the
    framing of the innocent person) actually
    undermines a related good (freedom) by supposing
    that the mobs choice is necessarily dependent on
    the sheriffs action.
  • Clearly, the possibility of preventing the riot
    does not justify the framing of an innocent
    person.

18
Mrs. Bergmeier
  • Does she seek out someone to impregnate her so
    that she can return to her family or would that
    action contradict and undermine her commitment to
    her family?
  • She asks What ought I to do?

19
Making a moral decision
  • Looks at the realities involved
  • Husband and their three children
  • Ponders the meaning of sexual intercourse and
    marriage
  • Thinks about the child-to-be
  • Considers the guard as the childs father
  • Reflects on her religious traditions and recalls
    passages from Scripture
  • Talks to other women about their moral judgments.

20
Morality and the Challenge of Decision Making
  • What does your conscience tell you about the
    scenarios? (p. 3)
  • What would you choose to do in these situations
    based upon Gods voice within you?

21
Scenarios
Freeze!
What a Loser!
Where is it?
Spare change?
I love you
Separate or not?
Help!
Brother with beer
toys
22
Group Talk
  • Think of 5 acts that require a moral decision.
  • What are the intentions that might affect these 5
    acts.
  • How would you arrive at a good decision?
  • Give an example of an act that you believe is
    inherently evil?
  • Apply the Three Prong Approach to the scenarios
    on p. 3 how are your responses similar or
    different?

23
Decision Making Day by Day
  • How is decision making both a comfort and a
    challenge?
  • Why does being moral require a sense of
    responsibility?
  • Explain Morality is an everyday occurrence
  • New freedoms as a sophomore
  • Drivers license
  • Increasing independence
  • Gift of sexuality
  • Academic and peer pressures

24
Scenarios
  • Morality is not simply the study of capital
    punishment, abortion, war, poverty, etc.
  • Everyday choices also involve morality.
  • Everyday choices also give us a chance to live as
    Jesus taught us

25
Activity (p. 6)
  • Are these 12 situation moral?
  • Rank according to the following scale
  • Compare and discuss your reasoning for your
    ranking
  • 1 not particularly wrong 10 seriously wrong
  • Reflection Question
  • What does your ranking say about you?

26
Homework
  • Read pp. 7 19.
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