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megamenu.cardinals.Other 69 項德行

Accountability

Taking responsibility for one's actions; answerability; willingness to be transparent

Appreciation of Beauty

Appreciation for beauty, excellence, and transcendence; aesthetic sensitivity and awe

Bravery

Courageous facing of fear and danger; willingness to stand for what is right despite opposition

Charity (Fruit of the Spirit)

As a fruit of the Holy Spirit, charity is the supernatural love that flows from union with God, manifesting as compassion, tender mercy, and selfless giving to others — the sign that the Spirit is alive within.

Charity (Love)

Charity is the theological virtue by which we love God above all things for His own sake, and our neighbor as ourselves for the love of God. It is the form of all the virtues, animating and inspiring them.

Charity (vs. Envy)

As the antidote to envy, charity transforms sorrow at another's good into genuine rejoicing — replacing comparison and resentment with gratitude and shared celebration.

Chastity (vs. Lust)

As the antidote to lust, chastity restores the integration of sexuality, healing the disordered concupiscence of the flesh and ordering desire toward authentic self-gift and communion.

Civic Responsibility

Active participation in civic life; responsibility to society; commitment to common good

Compassion

Deep empathy and sympathetic concern for the suffering of others; responsive care

Contentment

Satisfaction with what one has; freedom from envy and discontent; peaceful acceptance

Counsel

Counsel is the gift of the Holy Spirit that perfects the virtue of prudence, enabling the person to judge promptly and rightly what must be done in difficult circumstances, guided by an interior light.

Creativity

Ability to think creatively; originality and innovation; expressing one's talents in new ways

Curiosity

Interest in the world and ideas; openness to learning and exploration; intellectual engagement

Diligence (vs. Sloth)

Diligence as the antidote to sloth (acedia) is the zealous, persistent effort in the spiritual life and daily duties — overcoming the torpor and sadness about spiritual good that characterizes acedia.

Discernment

Ability to discern spiritual truth; discrimination between good and evil; spiritual perception

Endurance Under Persecution

Steadfast endurance and courage in face of persecution or suffering for faith; resilience

Evangelism

Sharing one's faith with others; witnessing to the Gospel; missionary commitment

Fairness

Equitable treatment of all; impartiality; giving each person their due

Faith

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).

39 個項目

Faithfulness

Faithfulness as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the steadfast, reliable commitment to God, to others, and to one's vocation — reflecting God's own covenant fidelity.

Fear of the Lord

Reverent awe and respect for God; holy fear that leads to wisdom and obedience

Fear of the Lord

Fear of the Lord is the gift of the Holy Spirit that fills the soul with a sovereign respect for God and makes one dread above all things to offend Him. It is not servile fear but a loving awe before the holy.

Forgiveness

Willingness to pardon offenses; freedom from resentment; capacity for reconciliation

Fortitude (Gift of the Spirit)

Fortitude as a gift of the Holy Spirit goes beyond the cardinal virtue, infusing supernatural courage to bear suffering, resist temptation, and persist in the spiritual life beyond what natural strength allows.

Gentleness

Gentleness as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is strength under control — the grace to respond to others with tenderness, calm, and compassion rather than harshness or force.

Goodness

Goodness as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the moral excellence that flows from a heart aligned with God's will — doing what is right and true not from obligation but from interior transformation.

Grace

God's unmerited favor; divine assistance enabling virtuous life; gift rather than achievement

Gratitude/Kindness (vs. Greed)

As the antidote to greed, gratitude and kindness transform the concupiscence of the eyes into generous stewardship — replacing accumulation with contentment and self-gift.

Honesty

Truthfulness and authenticity; speaking truth; freedom from deception and pretense

Hope

Hope is the theological virtue by which we desire the kingdom of heaven and eternal life as our happiness, placing our trust in Christ's promises and relying on the help of the Holy Spirit's grace.

35 個項目

Hospitality

Generous welcome and care for guests; hospitality as spiritual practice

Humor

Ability to perceive humor and use it appropriately; playfulness; laughter and mirth

Hunger for Righteousness

Deep yearning for justice and right living; passionate desire to do what is right; holy longing

Individual Conscience

Respect for moral conscience; honoring one's moral intuition; responsibility for personal conviction

Integrity

Consistency between beliefs and actions; wholeness and coherence; moral integration

Joy

Joy as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is a deep, abiding gladness that comes from union with God — not dependent on external circumstances but rooted in the knowledge that we are loved and redeemed.

Judgment

Critical thinking and analysis; careful examination of evidence; sound reasoning

Kindness

Kindness as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the gentle, generous disposition that extends warmth, helpfulness, and care to others — reflecting God's own kindness toward us.

Knowledge

Knowledge as a gift of the Holy Spirit enables the person to judge created things rightly in relation to God, discerning what leads toward Him and what leads away.

Leadership

Ability to guide and inspire others toward common goals; servant leadership; delegating and coordinating

Love of Learning

Love of learning and intellectual growth; passion for knowledge and understanding

Mercy

Compassionate response to suffering; tender-heartedness toward those in distress

Modesty

Modesty as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the virtue that protects the intimate center of the person, guiding how one presents oneself to others in dress, speech, and behavior with dignity and authenticity.

Mourning

Godly sorrow for sin and suffering; spiritual mourning; compassionate grief for the world's pain

Patience (vs. Wrath)

As the antidote to wrath, patience transforms destructive anger into constructive endurance — distinguishing righteous indignation from sinful rage and choosing mercy over retaliation.

Peace

Peace as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the tranquility of order within the soul — an inner calm that comes from right relationship with God, self, and others. It surpasses human understanding.

Peacemaking

Active promotion of peace and reconciliation; conflict resolution; bridge building between opposing groups

Perspective

Ability to see larger context and meaning; wise counsel based on broader understanding

Piety

Piety is the gift of the Holy Spirit that inclines the heart to a filial affection for God as Father and to a loving reverence for all things related to Him, including devotion to prayer and worship.

Poverty of Spirit

Recognition of spiritual need; humble dependence on God; freedom from pride and self-sufficiency

Purity of Heart

Undivided heart and mind focused on God; cleanness in thought and intention; spiritual innocence

Repentance

Turning away from sin; profound change of mind and direction; turning toward God

Reverence

Respectful awe and veneration for God and sacred things; reverent attitude toward the holy

Sanctification

Being set apart for God's purposes; progressive spiritual growth and increasing holiness

Self-Control

Self-control as a fruit of the Holy Spirit is the grace-assisted mastery over one's impulses, desires, and reactions — the freedom that comes from interior discipline ordered by love.

Simplicity

Living simply; avoiding unnecessary complexity; freedom from pretense and artifice

Sincerity

Genuine and authentic expression; freedom from deceit or double-mindedness

Social Intelligence

Awareness of and understanding of emotions, motivations, and intentions in self and others

Spirituality

Spiritual practice and commitment; connection to meaning and transcendence; coherent spiritual worldview

Steadfastness

Firm and unwavering commitment; steadiness; stability in conviction and action

Stewardship

Responsible management of resources and talents entrusted by God; careful stewardship

Teamwork

Ability to work cooperatively with others; loyalty to group; collaborative contribution

Temperance (vs. Gluttony)

As the antidote to gluttony, temperance restores right relationship with food, drink, and physical pleasures — finding freedom through moderation and mindful consumption.

Thrift

Prudent and economical use of resources; avoiding waste; wise stewardship of money

Trust in Providence

Confidence that God providentially guides all things; trust in divine providence; surrender to God's will

Understanding

Understanding is the gift of the Holy Spirit that helps the mind penetrate the meaning of truths of faith, not to know them all but to grasp what faith teaches with deeper clarity and spiritual insight.

Vocation

Recognition and fulfillment of one's calling; sense of divine purpose in work and life

Wisdom

Wisdom is the gift of the Holy Spirit that enables the soul to judge all things according to their true value, seeing reality from God's perspective. It gives a contemplative knowledge that grasps the deepest truths.

Zest

Enthusiasm and vitality; approaching life with energy and wholehearted engagement

最新

The Brothers Karamazov

The Brothers Karamazov

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

SECTION ONE Fyodor Dostoevsky finished The Brothers Karamazov in 1880, one year before his death, and the novel reads as a life's final reckoning. The story centers on the Karamazov family — the dissolute patriarch Fyodor Pavlovich and his three sons, Dmitri, Ivan, and Alyosha — whose rivalry over an inheritance and a woman culminates in patricide and a criminal trial. But the murder plot is a frame. The real subject is the question Ivan poses directly: if God permits the suffering of innocent children, can any theological justification redeem that fact? Dostoevsky does not answer through Ivan. He answers through Alyosha, the youngest brother and a novice monk, whose patient, concrete love for the people around him constitutes the novel's theological argument. The Word on Fire edition makes this argument accessible to readers who want not only the story but a serious encounter with the ideas driving it. This is the novel to give someone who has been told that Christianity cannot survive honest intellectual scrutiny. SECTION TWO - **Created**: Dostoevsky locates human dignity not in abstraction but in the face of each person encountered. Father Zosima's teaching — that every person is responsible to every other person, and that this responsibility flows from each soul's direct relation to God — is the novel's anthropological foundation. This is original goodness understood as relational, not merely individual. - **Fallen**: Ivan Karamazov is the novel's most precise portrait of concupiscence operating at the intellectual level. His rebellion is not ignorance but disordered will: he acknowledges God's existence and refuses him anyway, on moral grounds. Dostoevsky understood, ahead of most psychologists, that the deepest human disorder is not weakness of mind but the refusal of love — what Aquinas calls aversio a Deo enacted in rational argument. - **Fallen**: Dmitri's arc traces the disorder of the passions with equal precision. His jealousy, financial recklessness, and violence are not explained away as illness or circumstance — they are presented as free choices that compound into a character, and they cost him everything. The novel refuses the modern consolation of determinism. - **Redeemed**: The transformation Dostoevsky dramatizes is specifically purgative. Dmitri's false conviction and his decision to accept suffering rather than escape it constitutes the novel's most direct treatment of how suffering, freely accepted, becomes a site of grace. This maps onto what John of the Cross calls the passive purifications of the will: not self-chosen mortification, but the suffering that arrives unbidden and is either received or refused. - **Justice (sacrifice)**: Alyosha's practice of accompaniment throughout the novel — with the dying Ilyusha, with the humiliated Snegiryov, with Ivan in his spiritual crisis — is the novel's enacted answer to Ivan's rebellion. It demonstrates justice not as abstract fairness but as presence with the suffering other at personal cost. SECTION THREE Peterson[^1] cites The Brothers Karamazov directly in Maps of Meaning alongside Notes from Underground and Crime and Punishment as primary literary sources for his account of how myth and narrative carry moral meaning that propositional argument cannot — a reading that complements the novel's method, in which Dostoevsky defeats Ivan's intellectual rebellion not by out-arguing him but by showing Alyosha's love at work. Pierce[^2] similarly draws on Dostoevsky's fiction as a case study in personality structure and the relationship between the shadow and the moral will, placing the Karamazov brothers in dialogue with Jungian typology. Both connections illuminate how the novel functions: its theological anthropology is carried by character and story, not by doctrine, which is precisely what makes it so effective in formation contexts alongside more systematic Catholic sources. ## References 1. Peterson, Jordan B. (1999). *Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief*. Bibliography. — 'Dostoevsky, F. (1981). The brothers Karamazov (A.H. MacAndrew, Trans.). New York: Bantam Books.' 2. Pierce, Michael. *Motes and Beams: A Neo-Jungian Theory of Personality*. Works Cited. — 'The Brothers Karamazov, trans. Constance Garnett, Barnes & Noble Classics (2004)'

justice: 88Mission · 1

金錢星球

金錢星球

你,那雙憂傷的眼睛

你,那雙憂傷的眼睛

未來是和平

未來是和平

毒藤名校

毒藤名校

陌生人

陌生人

THROUGH MOM'S EYES

THROUGH MOM'S EYES

by Sheinelle Jones

**About the Book** Television host Sheinelle Jones created this heartwarming collection with a deeply personal mission: to gather wisdom from celebrity mothers that could help her raise her own three children. Through her Today show segment "Through Mom's Eyes," Jones interviewed dozens of remarkable women about their parenting journeys, asking Lin-Manuel Miranda's mom about balancing career and presence, Lady Gaga's mom about recognizing bullying, and Steph Curry's mom about maintaining household expectations even for future NBA stars. The book combines these candid conversations with Jones's own experiences navigating modern motherhood. Her goal is to help readers "make it through the hard parts of motherhood and still tap into the joys of it with empathy, generosity, and solidarity." This celebration of maternal wisdom offers practical guidance for parents while honoring the women who serve as guiding lights for their families. **CCMMP Analysis** - **Created**: The book celebrates the inherent dignity and wisdom of mothers, recognizing their unique capacity to nurture, guide, and shape human lives with profound love and insight. - **Fallen**: Jones acknowledges the real struggles of parenthood—the "hard parts of motherhood"—including challenges like bullying, work-life balance, and maintaining family values in a complex world. - **Redeemed**: The collective wisdom shared between mothers represents a form of grace, where experiences of struggle are transformed into sources of strength and guidance for future generations. - **Prudence-teachability**: The entire premise demonstrates docility—Jones's openness to learning from other mothers' experiences and her willingness to seek wisdom beyond her own understanding. - **Justice-gratitude**: The book embodies gratitude by honoring and celebrating the often-unrecognized wisdom and sacrifices of mothers who raised successful individuals.

Mission · 0

莫羅

莫羅

請舉心向上

請舉心向上

The Ave Catholic Notetaking Bible (Hardcover)

The Ave Catholic Notetaking Bible (Hardcover)

by Ave Maria Press

**About the Book** The Ave Catholic Notetaking Bible represents a thoughtfully designed approach to Scripture study that combines the trusted Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition with practical tools for deeper engagement. Ave Maria Press has created this resource specifically to help readers develop a more intimate relationship with God's Word through journaling, reflection, and study. The Bible features generous margins for personal notes, exclusive cross-references to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and contributions from respected Catholic scholars including John Bergsma, Sarah Christmyer, and Mark Hart. With its single-column format, high-quality paper, and lay-flat binding, this Bible serves individuals seeking personal spiritual growth, small groups exploring Scripture together, and educational settings from high school through adult faith formation. The publishers aim to make Scripture more accessible while deepening readers' understanding of how biblical passages connect to Catholic teaching and practice. **CCMMP Analysis** - **Created**: The Bible affirms human dignity by providing tools that honor our intellectual capacity and spiritual hunger—generous space for reflection, scholarly insights, and systematic connections between Scripture and Church teaching recognize that we are made for relationship with God through His Word. - **Fallen**: The inclusion of study guides, cross-references to the Catechism, and expert commentary acknowledges our need for guidance and formation in understanding Scripture, recognizing that we don't naturally grasp spiritual truths without help and community support. - **Redeemed**: The design facilitates ongoing transformation through Scripture study, offering practical tools for prayer, reflection, and growth that support the lifelong process of spiritual formation and deeper union with God. - **Prudence (Studiousness)**: The comprehensive study features, cross-references, and scholarly contributions cultivate disciplined pursuit of scriptural knowledge and wisdom. - **Justice (Gratitude)**: The journaling space and reflection tools encourage readers to recognize and respond to God's gifts revealed in Scripture.

Mission · 0

天門:關於天主之母瑪利亞的省思

天門:關於天主之母瑪利亞的省思

聖女小德蘭的思想

聖女小德蘭的思想