Q.1
For heterosexual married couples experiencing difficulty starting a family, which of the following methods is/are acceptable to the Catholic church?
  • In-vitro fertilisation (IVF) &/or embryo transfer
  • The use of donor gametes (egg/s &/or sperm), and/or artificial insemination (AI)
  • Cloning
  • (None of the above techniques is regarded as morally acceptable)
Q.2
Which of the following forms of euthanasia is NOT deemed immoral by the Catholic Church?
  • Direct passive euthanasia, i.e. the pausing or withdrawal of medication that would keep the patient alive
  • Active euthanasia, i.e. the giving of a substance to speed the occurrence of death (rather than palliation and comfort while awaiting it)
  • Indirect passive euthanasia, i.e. withholding medicine or treatment for one condition, once the dying process from another separate condition has irreversibly begun (e.g. progressive multiple organ failure in a patient who already had cancer)
  • 'Mercy-killing', whereby a sufferer is 'put out of their misery' and/or indignity
Q.3
Which of the following probably comes closest to the Catholic position on the purpose of life?
  • God's purpose is that we should live blameless and helpful lives for Him amidst the circumstances to which He calls us
  • All true Catholics should, as a regular and willing habit, unite with and within God's family at Mass in order to receive HIs grace and to be able to channel it to His will in the wider world
  • The purposes of God require adoration and confession on the part of all who profess themselves to be His through the Church
  • Every good Catholic should make it their priority never to break God's Commandments (nor the rules and customs of the Church), for its greater good and glory as His agency in the world
Q.4
In which (if any) of the following circumstances does Catholic teaching allow for the taking of a human life?
  • During a just war (as established through the teachings of SS Augustine and Thomas Aquinas)
  • Any state (country) may retain the extreme right to execute a citizen, but only if the criminal cannot be stopped using any lesser than deadly force
  • (Choose this answer if you believe Catholic teaching accepts EACH of the above)
  • (Choose this answer if you believe Catholic teaching accepts NEITHER of the above)
Q.5
Many humans seem glad to believe their life exists for some higher overall purpose (than merely to work, earn a wage and perhaps raise children). What would most Catholics regard as the pinnacle of their life's calling?
  • To serve others in God's name
  • To live and thrive within the fellowship of God's family on earth, i.e. the Church
  • To say their prayers and attend Mass without fail whenever they are supposed to
  • To achieve forgiveness and a clear spiritual pathway to God through regular attendance at Confession
Q.6
Which of these does NOT correctly interpret the Catholic view on alcohol?
  • Drinking moderate amounts, most usually in social contexts (where people can keep a benevolent eye on the state of each other) and as a 'pleasurable lubricant', is acceptable
  • Since Jesus miraculously generated wine from water in His first public miracle, presumably endorsed such occasional social drinking, and built wine into His own commemoration at the Last Supper (re-celebrated at each Mass, on His command) ... we may fairly conclude that wine ~ and by extension, other forms of alcoholic drink ~ should be welcomed and accepted by His followers down the centuries
  • The drinking of alcoholic beverages is a mortal sin because it abrogates a person's responsibility, allows 'demons' in or out of the mind, and makes the drinker a danger to their own wellbeing and potentially that of others
  • The sensible, lucid and responsible management of one's own conduct around alcohol, as with many of life's other pleasures, is a matter of temperance
Q.7
Why ~ if it's widely believed to be so enjoyable ~ is adultery* a sin, in the eyes of the Church as a whole and Catholics in particular? (* = the pursuit, and having, of sexual relations with anyone to whom you are not married: i.e., before or outside a marriage)
  • (Opt for this Answer if you believe all the others are more or less equally important spiritually, and inextricable)
  • If the active adulterer truly respects the person they're 'after', they shouldn't wish to impose their own selfish desires ~ while also enmeshing that person in complicit sin
  • Sex between people who aren't married to each other could result in the birth of a child (whose parents could then not offer the 'model couple' upbringing context) ~ unless either or each were using contraception, which in turn would be defined as sinfully trying to prevent or subvert God's will to bring a child into the world
  • Adultery has been forbidden since the Ten Commandments, and most people in their right mind (out of the heat of the moment, so to put it) recognise it usually creates more problems than it might appear to solve
Q.8
Which of these statements is NOT in accord with Catholic doctrine on the 'demographics' of life?
  • The traditional ('nuclear') human family is the best earthly model for divine fellowship, within which all children given by God should be nurtured
  • Where an individual has a vocation to the single calling of the Priesthood, or as a nun ('sister'), and this has been duly tested and consecrated ~ through vows, including one of chastity ~ this must be their right calling under God, rather than to live a family life
  • Anything otherwise resembling a marriage (i.e. a formally pledged, exclusive lifelong union), except between one previously single man and one previously single woman, cannot be recognised as a true marriage in the deepest sense
  • Nobody can be validly married to more than one eligible member of the complementary sex at the same time
Q.9
Which of these most correctly describes the Catholic view on what happens at the time of death?
  • The soul of a holy and virtuous person goes to heaven, and of an evil person (&/or who dies in unforgiven mortal sin) to hell forever
  • Jesus will come again to judge that person and take them with Him to heaven, unless the person refuses forgiveness
  • The person's soul will go to hell for eternity, unless they have said all the right prayers while they were dying
  • The soul of a holy and virtuous person goes to heaven, and of an evil person (&/or who dies in unforgiven mortal sin) to hell forever; but some people only reach heaven via purgatory, awaiting private judgement
Q.10
So far as Catholics are concerned, at what point does a human life begin?
  • In the mind of God at the Creation
  • At the moment of conception
  • At the moment of birth
  • Upon the sacrament of Baptism
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