front 1 dignity | back 1 the quality of being worthy of honor or respect; possessing great value or worth |
front 2 restorative punishment | back 2 a just punishment that is intended to help individuals recover a sense of their own dignity, to which they have become blinded by sin |
front 3 materialism | back 3 the idea that there is no transcendent origin to the world and that we are only material beings so only material things will fulfill us |
front 4 the state | back 4 a politically organized body of people under a system of government that usually occupies a denied territory |
front 5 domestic church | back 5 a phrase that describes the christian family, the original cell of society where we first learn the faith |
front 6 personal responsibility | back 6 the acceptance of accountability for the consequences of a persons own freely made choices --> everyone has duties to contribute to common good |
front 7 participation | back 7 the voluntary and generous engagement of a person in social interchange and promotion of the common good |
front 8 flourishing | back 8 to develop healthily for the fulfillment of ones nature |
front 9 right | back 9 that which one has a just claim to |
front 10 relativism | back 10 a philosophy that says moral principals are a matter of individual preference based on personal experience |
front 11 preferential option for the poor | back 11 teaches that christians are obligated to care for the poor, assist them in meeting their basic needs |
front 12 material poverty | back 12 lack of means to provide for material needs or comforts |
front 13 poverty of the soul | back 13 describe people who are homeless about life, who may be suffering for physiological illness |
front 14 poverty of addiction | back 14 people who seek things such as possessions, prestiges, beaty, and sex to fulfill a desire for lasting joy and happiness, eventually finding themselves unfulfilled. |
front 15 poverty of the spirit | back 15 connected with the first beatitude and a person dependence fo God for all needs |
front 16 subsidarity | back 16 the organizing principle that matters are best handled by the smallest, lowest, or least centralized authority |
front 17 work | back 17 the duty and right of every person to engage in activity to sustain and improve oneself and his/her family |
front 18 just wage | back 18 compensation for work that guarantees the worker the opportunities to obtain a dignify livelihood for oneself and ones family |
front 19 poverty wage | back 19 a level of pay that puts a full-time worker below the poverty line |
front 20 minimum wage | back 20 the lowest legal pay rate a company can offer its employees |
front 21 living wage | back 21 a rate of pay that affords a household of its basic needs like housing, food, healthcare, and transportation |
front 22 common good | back 22 a firm and preserving determination to commit oneself; reach fulfillment |
front 23 disposible goods | back 23 consumer products designed to be thrown away after single use |
front 24 consumerism | back 24 the belief that fulfillment is to be found in the acquisition of consuming goods |
front 25 integral human development | back 25 the need to focus societally on the development of the whole person --> out body, soul, and cultural growth |