Twisting the Truth in Dignitas Personae–Part III
Here is the sentence from Dignitas Personae, which immediately follows why these “grave reasons may be morally proportionate”:
Here is the sentence from Dignitas Personae, which immediately follows why these “grave reasons may be morally proportionate”:
It is a slight nuance, between what May wrote and what Dignitas Personae actually stated, but it’s an important one.
Two articles have emerged in the past month by Senior Fellow William E. May at the Culture of Life Foundation, which seem to be causing confusion and consternation for Catholics, where none existed before.
A recent news report in the National Catholic Reporter has left me saddened and upset.
Gosnell is accused of taking the lives of seven babies born alive and he overdosed a young woman who died at his hands.
Gosnell is accused of taking the lives of seven babies born alive and he overdosed a young woman who died at his hands.
This famous poem by Yeats (1865-1939), a Nobel laureate, was written in the aftermath of World War I and during major upheavals in Russia.
America has death camps. This is the heinous reality liberal elites have been trying to conceal. A Philadelphia abortion doctor, Kermit Gosnell, was arrested Wednesday along with his wife and eight other suspects.
The next two years are critical ones for the pro-life movement if we are to successfully capture and ride the current wave of economic and social conservatism.
There is a certain time of year that seems to bring out the worst among Catholic leaders who foster political agendas.
Catholics celebrate the feast of the Immaculate Conception, commemorating the fact that the Blessed Mother was conceived without sin in her mother Annas womb.
America was inspired the day President Barack Obama spoke at the January 12 memorial honoring the victims of the Arizona madman’s shooting spree.