The Christian tradition calls this process of learning how to be free the formation of conscience. 'Conscience is the interior space of our relationship with God, who speaks to our heart and helps us to discern, to understand the path we ought to take, and once the decision is made, to move forward, to remain faithful' (Pope Francis, 2013). Formation of conscience involves learning how to make free and responsible moral decisions based on compassion, sound knowledge and moral reasoning. Pope Francis, in Amoris Laetitia (2016) paragraphs 259-279 writes insightfully and comprehensively about the ethical formation of children.

Sin, as action, means willingly and freely choosing to do something that we know is bad or wrong. Paradoxically, sin commonly involves choosing to do something that we somehow think is good. In his letter to the Romans, St Paul wrote, 'For I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate… . For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing' (Romans 7:15-19). Like St Paul, we too are basically good, created in the image of a loving God who wants us to live wholeheartedly and who invites us to freely return that love in the way we relate to God and others. With the capacities of reason, free choice and love, we are capable of freely returning God's love for us. Yet we are also flawed. We experience our own faults and weaknesses as well as the faults and weaknesses of others. We can find ourselves knowing what is good and right yet struggling to do what is good and right. When we know what is right and good and nonetheless choose to do something other than that, then we sin.

Another way to think about sin is to think about it in terms of our relationship with God. God wants us to flourish, to live whole-heartedly. God has created the world in a way that makes it possible for us to flourish provided we choose to do the morally right thing in line with the way God has intended. Consequently, when we choose to do the morally wrong thing, we are not simply choosing something which is less good for our own flourishing and the flourishing of others, but we are choosing something which is against the good that God wants for us and for everybody else. Consequently, we are choosing against God. As Ronald Rolheiser (1999, p. 202) notes, 'All sin is irreverence.'

With freedom comes responsibility. We are responsible for our moral behaviour because we are made in God's image as rational beings, capable of knowing what the morally right and good thing to do is and as free beings, capable of choosing to do the morally right and good thing. These two capacities, to know and to choose, together form what is called conscience. Loosely translated, conscience means 'with knowledge'. In other words, when we make moral choices, we make them based on what we know about the goals we want to achieve, the ways or means to achieve them, the circumstances in which we need to achieve them and the consequences of both the means we choose and the outcomes we achieve. When we have weighed all these things, we make a judgment based on our knowledge of what the morally right thing to do is. We are then obliged to follow our conscience and do the morally right thing, taking responsibility for our decision.

Sin is not simply about choosing to do something bad or evil. It is always about faulty judgments and subsequent flawed choices about what is good and right; sin is missing the mark. This can happen in two ways. Sometimes it is about choosing to achieve something what we think is good, though in reality when all is considered it is actually bad. Sometimes it is about choosing to achieve something that really is good, but doing so at the expense of things that are really greater goods and therefore should take precedence. For example, the murderer chooses to kill someone. But when he or she kills another person, that action is motivated by some mistaken understanding of a good thing that he or she hopes to achieve through the murder. Or maybe there is some really good thing that he or she hopes to achieve but at the expense of something that is a greater good in this case, the life of an innocent person. Consider the first case. A person might kill another human being in the belief that this achieves justice. But this is a mistaken understanding of justice. Or, as a second example of the first instance, perhaps the murderer is doing it because he or she actually desires to be 'evil', and believes it would be 'good' to be 'evil'. For the murderer, being 'evil' is a 'good' thing, though in reality this, of course, cannot be so. As an example of the second case, perhaps the murderer really does get some pleasure out of killing other people. Pleasure is really a good thing, but it is wrong to choose it over, in this case, the life of another person. Justice, pleasure, relief, and even 'evil' in this sense are all 'good' things in the mind of the murderer, because they are all things that are desired by the person acting, by the murderer in this case. But the murderer's actions remain objectively sinful, and remain morally wrong. They can never be morally right, regardless of the 'goods' that the murderer sees in them, be they real goods like pleasure, or imagined one's like 'being evil'. And this is so because the murderer cannot objectively defend the notion that any of those good or supposedly good things provide sufficient reason for wilfully killing another person. This is especially the case since the murderer's subjective perception of the good thing itself is mistaken or 'disordered' (such as wanting to be evil, or believing that killing someone achieves justice, or believing that one's own pleasure is a greater good than the life of another person). For more information on how the Catholic Church works out what is objectively morally good, see the section on Natural Law.

The severity of the sin, of the wrongdoing, is traditionally divided into two categories, venial sin and mortal sin. Mortal sin is the more serious of the two. Mortal sin is a conscious and freely chosen turning away from goodness, from the ultimate good and from God. It is a free rejection of our capacity to love and of our capacity to seek and find the truth. Mortal sin is a rejection of what we know to be the right thing to do in our conscience. In other words, it is a rejection of our very own dignity as beings created in the image of God. Such sins are called mortal because, in the language of the tradition, mortal sins lead to death and eternal damnation in Hell, unless the person sincerely seeks forgiveness. But one doesn't need to believe in Hell, or damnation, or eternal punishment to realise that the kinds of wrongdoings that are called mortal sin can have very serious and sometimes really deadly consequences for the flourishing of the whole community. For example, in the case of murder, in addition to the death of another person, there is significant trauma associated with suffering, anger, resentment, mistrust, fear, financial burdens and costs, disruption of work, destruction of families, and so on. There are specific conditions that must be met for a sin to be a mortal sin. First, it must be done with full knowledge; second, it must be freely chosen or willed, and third, it must concern grave or serious matter. Grave matter are those things that concern a fundamental good of the human person. Grave matter includes unjustifiably killing or physically harming a person, taking something that does not belong to you, having sexual relations with someone who is not your spouse, and withholding the truth from or deceiving people who have a right to certain information from you. In other words, a sin is only mortal in the strict sense when you freely choose to do it, knowing that it is the wrong thing to do. Of course, we are also very good at deceiving ourselves about what we really know, or finding ways to justify our behaviour to make it look like we didn't know or didn't choose. Being really honest with ourselves about these things is essential if we are going live whole-hearted, morally responsible lives. Whether a sin meets the strict definition of mortal sin or not intentions and actions must be wrong when they break down the kind of just and loving human community that God desires for us and that we really should desire for ourselves. Such actions break down the kind of community that we described in the previous section about Love, being free and being responsible means avoiding doing the wrong thing and trying sincerely to do the right thing for ourselves and for others.

The Church has been called to form consciences not to replace them' (Pope Francis, 2016 Amoris Laetitia 37). The Catholic tradition teaches that a person is obliged to follow his or her conscience. This teaching takes into account the way in which the individual's desire for what is good, and his or her capacity to reason about what is good and right, and choose freely to do what is morally right, are related to the idea of objective moral truth. Though we frequently talk about conscience as if it were a thing, it is really an abstract construct that is used to talk about how we engage morally with the world. Conscience, literally translated from its Latin root, means with knowledge. At its simplest level then, to act in good conscience, or to follow one's conscience, is to act in way that is in accordance with the knowledge that one has about a particular situation.

From a Catholic perspective, only actions that are willed (i.e., consciously and freely chosen), the so-called actus humanus, are able to be evaluated in moral terms. That one freely chooses to act in a certain way is what makes an action a moral action. However, the quality and degree of knowledge on which the choice to act was based is important in the evaluation of the action as morally right or morally wrong and in evaluating the moral culpability (i.e., responsibility which may entail guilt or blame) of the person who chooses to act in a particular way. It is possible, therefore, to do the right thing for the wrong reasons, or to do the wrong thing for the right reasons. To examine one's conscience is to examine one's actions, together with the reasoning that prompted those actions and the personal judgments that one made.

In any given moral situation, there is always a morally right answer; there is always a choice that would be the morally right one. There is, in other words, an objective moral truth, the moral truth. But we have to understand all this very carefully, since it is quite possible that there may be two or more objectively good things that we can choose to do, and since we are free beings, making a choice for either would still be morally right. Given the complexity of most moral situations, the challenge is in knowing what that moral truth is. A large number of variables come into play. Among such variables are the kind of person you want to be, the various competing good things that need to be taken into account, the possible harms, the outcomes desired and the outcomes foreseen though not desired, and of course, the circumstances and the consequences that one cannot foresee. Human beings rely on their individual and collective experience (of which law, tradition and divine revelation forms a part) together with their feelings, and their reasoning ability, to work out what that moral truth is in any given situation. Conscience is the means through which we relate to objective moral truth. The exercise of conscience includes the capacity to perceive which values (goods) and harms (evils) are at stake, the process of reasoning about those values and the ways to achieve them together with judgment about which values and which way to achieve these values is is the morally right one. Conscience understood as the desire for good, the aggregated knowledge of experience and reason about what is good, and the judgments made about what is the good and right thing to do) is the individual's relationship to the objective moral truth. Assuming it was possible for you to have perfect knowledge of any given moral situation, then, provided you always chose to act in accordance with that knowledge, your conscience would be aligned with the truth and would always be perfectly good and perfectly right. To have perfect knowledge would be to know everything about all of the factors involved. Such perfect knowledge includes all the facts (scientific and otherwise) of the matter and all of the circumstances and foreseen and unforeseen consequences. Perfect knowledge also assume that one knew perfectly what all the values (goods) were at stake in a given situation and which were the most important values in that situation (e.g. freedom vs security). Having perfect knowledge would also include the most morally relevant parts of the action (who you want to be by doing this, what you do, and what it achieves), which behaviours are always morally bad because they attack the fundamental good of the human person, and the perfectly correct approach to moral reasoning about all of this. Clearly, such perfection can be attributed only to God. We know, from our own experience, that humans can never have perfect knowledge and hence cannot achieve perfect goodness. But, they can come close to it. That is because they are made in the image of God, and thus have been gifted with the capacities of reason and freedom, and are social beings who can learn from each other. When these capacities and our social awareness are correctly combined, we can acquire proper, if limited, knowledge. We can make moral decisions that we believe to be morally right based on that knowledge. In other words, in moral matters, we can only have 'moral' certainty in our judgments. This means we make the judgment about what we ought to do, or avoid doing, without any well-grounded fear that we are wrong or mistaken in that judgment. In this process, the virtue of prudence, namely, the habit of wise judgment is central. We need also to keep in mind that, through our sharing in the divine life, we are helped by the Holy Spirit in our decisions. The gift of wisdom assists us to see, judge and respond as God would. Thus we are called to collaborate with God in our moral life.

Since conscience is your own relationship to the objective moral truth, you are obliged to follow your conscience. In other words, what one determines to be good and right based on the use of one's reason is like a law that must be obeyed (Gaudium et spes, 16). It is the closest approximation one has to the truly good. It is the way that one participates in God's goodness. It is here that one is 'alone with God, whose voice echoes' in one's depths (GS 16). So, to not obey your conscience, to choose not to do what you know to be the morally right thing to do or to blindly obey others is to abdicate personal responsibility for moral decisions. to act in this way is a sin because it is tantamount to idolatry. If conscience is where we relate most closely at a personal level with the objective truth of God and perfect goodness, then to do other than what we believe to be right and true in our conscience is to do other that what we believe to be God's will, to do other than what we believe to be perfect goodness. That is the essence of what we mean when we talk about sin.

Since conscience is our relationship with the truly good, and so with God who is true goodness, each person should want to form a correct conscience. Of course, it remains possible for a person to act in good conscience, sincerely believing that what he or she is doing is morally right, when in fact the action is morally wrong. The Catholic perspective maintains that sincerity is really important since a truly sincere pursuit of the good and the right can always grow to fuller knowledge of the truth with consequent changes to moral decisions and behaviour. This is especially the case when one makes the wrong decision in good conscience believing it to be the right decision because one did not have the necessary knowledge to make the right decision and could not, given the circumstances, be expected to have the necessary knowledge. The term to describe this situation is 'invincible ignorance'. When full knowledge could not be expected, or was not possible, there is a mitigating effect on the moral culpability of the person who made the decision, because the action cannot be described as being truly voluntary. So, whilst what might have been done may still have been objectively morally bad, we would not say that the person intended it to be so, since he or she could not have been expected to have chosen otherwise based on the knowledge at his or her disposal. 'Vincible ignorance' on the other hand, is when someone who could legitimately be expected to know better nonetheless chooses to remain ignorant, or does not make a reasonable effort to determine what the morally right thing to do would be. For example, a seventeen-year-old is obliged to know, and indeed should want to know, about what is morally right when it comes to the practice of sex and the reasons why the Catholic perspective maintains that the only morally good place for sex is in marriage. Moreover a seventeen year old should also know the personal risks and the risk to others of having unprotected sex with multiple partners. Everyone should want to know how our values and seemingly innocent choices about matters such as what we purchase, what we eat, who we vote for contribute to suffering and injustice in the world. To choose not to know, or to ignore what one does know, are both morally irresponsible actions. That said, the complexity of many of these situations and of simply getting on with living life in today's world, mean that there are always limitations to what we can really know.

Freedom is something magnificent, yet it can also be dissipated and lost. Moral education has to do with cultivating freedom through ideas, incentives, practical applications, stimuli, rewards, examples, models, symbols, reflections, encouragement, dialogue and a constant rethinking of our way of doing things; all these can help develop those stable interior principles that lead us spontaneously to do good. Virtue is a conviction that has become a steadfast inner principle of operation. The virtuous life thus builds, strengthens and shapes freedom, lest we become slaves of dehumanizing and antisocial inclinations. For human dignity itself demands that each of us 'act out of conscious and free choice, as moved and drawn in a personal way from within'293 (Pope Francis, 2016 Amoris Laetitia ). In talking about moral decision making it is important to clarify what is meant by freedom. The Second Vatican Council reminds us that 'freedom is an exceptional sign of the image of God in humanity' (Gaudium et Spes, 17). Our freedom to make choices about moral issues is part of what makes us like God. Moreover, God wants us to make these choices, embrace our moral responsibility and grow and mature in moral wisdom. By acting in this way we are able to live whole-heartedly. In the light of the above it is helpful to note with O'Neil and Black (2003, p.58), that freedom can be understood in two senses: 'freedom from' and 'freedom for'. When we talk about freedom in the sense of 'freedom from', we are referring to freedom from limitations that prevent us from doing what we want. It is the limitless freedom that is often associated with individualistic cultures and the belief that individuals have a right to whatever they want. More positively, however, this 'freedom from' can be understood as freedom from those limitations that prevent us from fulfilling our vocation to live whole-heartedly. For example, if you lived in a society in which you were persecuted for your race or your sex or your religious beliefs, this would limit your freedom. But there is also a richer aspect of freedom in what is termed 'freedom for'. This is not simply about being free to choose to do whatever we like. Rather, it is about being able to make choices that might seem like limits on our freedom in order to direct our lives to what is truly good, towards a destiny centred on God. Think about how a person might choose not to eat ice-cream (and ice-cream is good because it tastes good and makes you feel happy in the short-term) because that person is trying to lose a few kilos so that she can be fitter and healthier. Or the person who pushes through the exhaustion of a physical exercise routine (the rest would be a good thing in the short term because it would provide immediate satisfaction) so that she will be able to perform better at her sport and be able to represent her country.

Now, when we talk about what is truly good and what 'freedom for' means in the Catholic sense, we are referring to the freedom to choose to direct one's actions towards the fostering of one's relationship with God and towards the flourishing of the community as a whole. This outwardly focused, altruistic understanding of freedom does not preclude one's own flourishing. Rather, it affirms that as beings made in the image of God, and hence as social and relational creatures, human beings flourish with others. Our flourishing is intimately tied up with the flourishing of others. When we use our freedom in this way, we respect not only the dignity of all human beings, but come closer to realizing the kind of just, peaceful and joyful community that God wants for humanity. What is truly good, in Catholic terms, is that which God wills. How do we know what God wills? Through revelation and through the use of our human reason to understand the order of the universe the way God has made it so that we can cooperate with God in making judgements and choices. Using these two sources of revelation and reason, we have already seen how we can affirm the good of every human being, their human dignity. We have seen how we can affirm the good of the body and the positive value of human sexuality expressed through procreation and conjugal love. We have seen how we can affirm the good of love, of intimacy, of being free of shame and of living whole-heartedly in a community of love, peace and justice with others. Thus, when it comes to moral reasoning about human sexuality and relationships, being able to answer basic questions about what is truly good means that our consciences are already well-informed about the starting point of our moral reflection. We come to understand such questions have answers both on the authority of God and the evidence of our own critical thought, reflection and feelings. What is said above constitutes the focus for what we should ultimately wish to achieve in all our moral decisions and use our freedom to work towards through our moral-decision making. What is discussed here provides a framework for helping us to think through what the right thing to do is in any given moral situation, especially in the context of human sexuality and relationships.

The Church believes there are objectively right and wrong answers to moral dilemmas. The process of moving from absolute values to general norms to specific case judgments requires the virtue of prudence, the ability to exercise sound judgment in practical matters, in order to arrive at moral certainty in one's judgments' (United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1991).

In the Catholic tradition, some rules apply in every situation. Reflection on these in light of the steps of moral decision making highlighted above should make it clear why these apply: 'One may never do evil so that good may result from it; The Golden Rule (from Jesus' Sermon on the Mount): 'Whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them' Charity always proceeds by way of respect for one's neighbour and his conscience: 'Thus sinning against your brethren and wounding their conscience…you sin against Christ.' Therefore 'it is right not to…do anything that makes your brother stumble'' (Catholic Bishops of Ontario, 2011 p. 325).