The theological virtue of philanthropy is centered around three important elements (Velde, 2006). These elements are charity, faith, and hope. In order to gain charity, beliefs and hopes should be active at some important level to ensure that there is a way to achieve the goal. Charity is an important aspect of activating elements of faith and hope. However, to some extent these three elements are not separated. Hope and faith are independent. But charity depends on the individual's ability to have confidence and hope.
The important concept that Aquinas tried to define was the theological virtue of charity. With this effort, he wishes to draw out a fundamental understanding of charity virtue from a theological point of view. To understand this concept, Aquinas borrowed much from other sources to help broaden his argument about the theological virtues of charity. Even though he was one of the best theologians of the time, he never thought of it.
Charity is the greatest at the end of three theological virtues, the other two are faith and hope. It is often referred to as general definition of love and confusion in general understanding and the latter word, but charity groups are not only subjective feelings but also objective actions against others' will. Like other theological virtues, charitable organizations are supernatural in the sense that God is its origin and purpose. As a priest, John A. Hutton, SJ. In his "Contemporary Catholic Dictionary", charity is a kind of "supernatural virtue injected, people who worship God for their own benefit and loves others for God". Will action and charity will increase our love for our God and our companions; but charity is a gift from God, so we can not get this virtue at first through our own actions.
Theological virtue of faith, hope, and charity (love) is a virtue directly related to God. These are not gained by human efforts, but are injected into our bodies as gifts from God from the beginning of baptism. They allowed us to live with the Holy Trinity. Faith, hope, and charity influence human virtue by increasing the stability and strength of our lives. Each of the Ten Commandments prohibits certain kinds of evil, but each commandment shows a virtue that can help us avoid these evils. Generosity, mental poverty, kindness, pure soul, temperament, and tenacity overcome the so-called seven deadly or capital crime pride, greed or greed, jealousy, anger, desire, bulimia, laziness or laziness It helps to avoid other evil and evil guilt