The Human Machine?
In modern times, skewing the image of the human being as a child of God, created in His image and likeness, is a process that started the day the first condom was sold in a vending machine early in the 1940s.
In modern times, skewing the image of the human being as a child of God, created in His image and likeness, is a process that started the day the first condom was sold in a vending machine early in the 1940s.
Few may have taken note of the blatant error in President Obama’s recent remarks on the occasion of Martin Luther King’s famous “I have a dream” speech, but the irony in Obama’s rhetoric struck me like a sword to the heart.
A couple of headlines recently caught my attention, both suggesting that Americans are fundamentally out of touch with basic facts.
We’ve all heard the “quality of life” argument applied to everything from an excuse for abortion to the reason posited to justify assisted suicide or some other form of euthanasia.
Over the last few weeks we have witnessed CRS expound gobbledygook in an effort to deflect criticism from its programs.
Recently a comment was made to me that when a pro-life law is passed by a state legislature, it can be a hopeless victory.
President Obama has taken many actions that have left countless Americans bewildered and, in some cases, outraged.
Ever since I was old enough to have childhood memories, I have cherished the times I attended Eucharistic Adoration with my mother and grandmother.
By Ryan Bomberger
Trayvon’s exploited and tragic death is not about race but about bolstering a false ideology and justifying misdirected violent behavior.
If we could count the ways that physicians have become the politicians of their chosen profession, perhaps we would better understand why human lives are like poker chips, popular votes or, even worse, trash.
Catholic Relief Services’ history is not a pretty one, so the most recent news really comes as no surprise.
The United States currency states “In God We Trust.” The United States Treasury explains that this phrase appears on our bills because of the increased religious sentiment that existed during the Civil War.