Notre Dame: Catholicism’s Crucible
The unending editorials, the activism, the press releases and the jockeying for attention will only escalate as that fateful date, May 17, comes closer at the University of Notre Dame.
The unending editorials, the activism, the press releases and the jockeying for attention will only escalate as that fateful date, May 17, comes closer at the University of Notre Dame.
675 Before Christ’s second coming the Church must pass through a final trial that will shake the faith of many believers.
On May 10, mothers from one end of this nation to the other will be honored by their children, and many will honor their own mothers as well.
Feminists of a certain ilk have a propensity to deny the obvious. They do this consistently when it comes to pregnancy.
My good friend and fellow pro-life leader Debi Vinnedge is, as usual, right on top of an urgent matter that will require you to take action.
Those faithful Catholics who are exposing the debacle at the University of Notre Dame are to be commended, and we are grateful for their courage.
Over the past few days, there has been what seems to me to be a growing alarm among members of the media, and therefore the public at large
the legal recognition of a human being’s full status as a human person that applies to all human beings, irrespective of age, health, function, physical or mental dependency, or method of reproduction, from the beginning of their biological development
There seems to be no end to the mind-boggling contradictions that spew forth from the mouths of public figures who claim to be Catholic, but use their media opportunities to discredit the Catholic Church and her teachings through deception.
A recent article by Detroit Free Press reporter Megha Satyanarayana aroused in me a fundamental disdain for dishonesty that I find very hard to ignore.
“There is an epidemic of dissent among educational institutions that claim to have a Catholic identity while they actively work to undermine Church teaching.
These two definitions, if one is to believe the L. A. Times’ Tim Rutten, set forth a conflict between pro-abortion Democrat Kathleen Sebelius and the Catholic Church, the Church being the entity Rutten accuses of waging a “holy war.”