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Faith

theological

Definition

"Faith is the theological virtue by which we believe in God and all that He has said and revealed to us, because He is Truth itself. By faith, the person freely commits their entire self to God, offering 'the full submission of intellect and will' (Dei Verbum 5)."

Classification

Category

theological

Clinical Applications

  • Existential crises
  • Loss of meaning
  • Spiritual dryness
  • Doubt and anxiety

CCMMP Integration

Created: Openness to transcendence as fundamental human capacity; trust in God as ground of being

News for this Virtue

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Worth Staying For: What It Takes to Provide Palliative Care for Children

At the Child Jesus Children's Hospital in Madrid, nurse Carmen Molina accompanies dying children and their families through the most unrepeatable moments of human life. Her testimony illuminates what clinical training alone cannot produce: the capacity to remain present when there is no cure to offer.

Jun 22, 2026

Pope Leo XIV: Care for Creation Is Not Optional — It Is a Requirement of Faith

Pope Leo XIV addressed the 10th Austrian World Summit with a clear theological claim: those who believe God created the world bear a greater responsibility to protect it. His message reframes ecological concern not as political preference but as a dimension of lived faith. The implications for Catholic mental health, resilience, and purpose-driven living are significant.

Jun 17, 2026

When Faith Meets Suppression: What the Cristero War Teaches Us About Religious Identity and Resilience

A landmark exhibition in Puebla, Mexico, is bringing the largely silenced history of the Cristero War into public view for the first time in a generation. The conflict raises questions that extend well beyond history — about what sustains human dignity under systemic oppression, and why faith communities demonstrate patterns of resilience that secular frameworks struggle to fully explain.

Jun 26, 2026

Why Mary's Fiat Is the Most Radical Act of Human Agency in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Pope Leo's encyclical Magnifica Humanitas places the Marian 'yes' at the center of Catholic reflection on artificial intelligence. Professor Mark Miravalle argues that no figure in human history more completely embodies authentic personhood than Our Lady. This convergence of Marian theology and AI ethics opens a compelling new frontier for Catholic mental health and human flourishing.

Jun 17, 2026

Virtue Overview

Category

theological

Therapeutic Tags

anxietypurposegrief
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