Those Catholic Women Who Use Contraception
By Jennifer Fulwiler
When I was giving a talk early last year, two women in the front row caught my eye.
By Jennifer Fulwiler
When I was giving a talk early last year, two women in the front row caught my eye.
There have been some remarkable occurrences in the Catholic Church in recent days.
The Catholic bishop of Sioux Falls, South Dakota has taken action against Catholic insurance agency Avera Health Plans because the company chose to cover contraception so that it would be in compliance with Obamacare.
By Chelsea Zimmerman
We’re all well aware of the fact that the “adult entertainment” industry rakes in major profits by exploiting women and their bodies, but they aren’t the only ones.
By Mary Kellett
When I was 19 weeks pregnant, an ultrasound of my baby revealed markers for a condition called trisomy 18.
By Fr. Gerald Goodrum, S.T.L.
Perhaps the most notorious and oft-quoted example of Senator Kennedy’s miscomprehension of a well-formed conscience and the proper disposition of a person of faith from his “Ministerial Association Speech” is the following statement
By Fr. Gerald Goodrum, S.T.L
Germane to a discussion on conscience is John F. Kennedy, who, as a politician, ironically promoted an arguably anti-Catholic mentality in several of his views on the moral conscience and the role of religion in the public square.
Judie Brown, president of American Life League and three-time appointee to the Pontifical Academy for Life
There are many legitimate, professional news reports these days that are exposing heroism among Catholic bishops versus the creeping crud of secularism within the Church.
Most people do not follow the so-called “personhood” political scene, but if they did it might be helpful if one could see that words can be used to complicate even the most basic fact.
By Rob Gasper
It is difficult to wrap our heads around abortion and what it means on a societal level.
Now that Pope Benedict XVI has officially departed from the papacy, the news headlines are going mad, or at least suspiciously American, in the quest to raise the specter of a possible American pope.