Lost At Sea: Consensus In Catholic Higher Education
Recently, I came across an announcement that truly troubled me, not only as a Catholic, but also as a grandmother whose grandchildren will one day be attending college.
Recently, I came across an announcement that truly troubled me, not only as a Catholic, but also as a grandmother whose grandchildren will one day be attending college.
As the U.S. bishops begin their annual Fall Assembly in Baltimore, Judie Brown made the following statement regarding Archbishop Wilton Gregory’s recent comments on the election of Sen. Barack Obama.
It seems that the annual meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops will not be addressing the enforcement of Canon 915, let alone the failure that resulted in 52 percent of Catholics voting for a totally pro-abortion president!
Over the years, the Cardinal Newman Society has become synonymous with credible information that contradicts common misconceptions about what it means to be Catholic in today’s culture.
As Americans devoted to defending the innocent continue to reel from the election results, there are a few things that bear consideration as we move forward.
Promenade outside the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront Hotel, 700 Aliceanna St., Baltimore, MD, 21202
It should have come as no surprise that Americans voted their pocketbooks and their distaste for war, which is how it came to pass that on November 4, 2008, the nation elected the most rabidly pro-abortion politician in its history.
“In a night overshadowed by pro-abortion victories, one bright light shone for the pro-life movement, and it came from Colorado.
Anita Chandra, a Rand Corporation behavioral scientist, just released a new study that the media is touting as “groundbreaking research.”
Bioedge is giving all of us something to think about that, frankly, has nothing to do with elections, politics or voting.
I just finished reading another commentary on the upcoming elections. It is said that this is a defining moment in our nation’s history, not to mention the history of the pro-life movement.
Several years ago, when American Life League first became involved in opposing the use of fetal tissue for research