Pew Survey, Father Pfleger and the USCCB
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life has just released its new findings on Americans and their attitudes toward religion, God and doctrine.
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life has just released its new findings on Americans and their attitudes toward religion, God and doctrine.
Some of the most curious things in our topsy turvy world have to do with man’s inability to comprehend the reality of evil and how it twists everything, including the words we use in our daily speech.
Those who make their living by taking the lives of preborn babies and generally deceiving or otherwise victimizing the mothers of those babies are individuals who, at least in my opinion, already have a credibility problem.
My goodness, I said to myself, it is about time that I actually blogged about something totally and in every respect POSITIVE! I know you will agree, and so I want to introduce you to one of the most powerful pro-life apostolates in the entire world: the Sisters of Life.
Lately, there have been a few headlines that have stunned and grieved me. It is when these things come to my attention that I must muster certain level of optimism before I can begin to write about them or comment on the effect such tragic situations have on the culture and our pro-life work.
I found a study from the University of Michigan that detected a problem with misoprostol to be a bit curious.
Although each individual has a right to be respected in his own journey in search of the truth, there exists a prior moral obligation, and a grave one at that, to seek the truth and to adhere to it once it is known.
Over the last week, ever since The Chicago Tribune broke the news that the infamous pastor of St. Sabina’s in Chicago, Father Michael Pfleger, would be restored as pastor of that church, my e-mail has been flooded with messages from people who are terribly distressed.
The good news out of Australia this week is that stem cells harvested from the noses of Parkinson’s patients developed into dopamine-producing brain cells when transplanted into the brain of a lab rat.
I am sorry that our Protest the Pill Day: The Pill Kills Babies project is officially at an end. As we focused attention on the devastating Griswold v. Connecticut Supreme Court decision of June 7, 1965
I suppose there are many ways to interpret the remarkable story of Macie Hope McCartney. This precious baby girl is alive today because a team of fetal surgeons was able to operate on her at six months of gestation
Communications researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have just announced a rather interesting finding.