Catholic Conscience Betrayed
Ever since Pope Paul VI issued his encyclical, Humanae Vitae, Catholic dissidents have tried their hardest to misrepresent the teaching.
Ever since Pope Paul VI issued his encyclical, Humanae Vitae, Catholic dissidents have tried their hardest to misrepresent the teaching.
More than 500 Catholic men recently walked a mile in the rain in Peoria, Illinois.
It is no secret that the 2010 federal healthcare “reform” law, commonly known as Obamacare, strangles the conscience rights of healthcare purchasers, providers, and payers.
The rhetorical fever pitch over Obama’s latest healthcare fiasco is still swirling, but what I am finding in the dust particles is far worse than what is being publicly decried.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services refused on Jan. 20 to broaden the exception to its mandate that nearly all Catholic employers must cover contraception, abortifacients, and sterilization in their healthcare plans.
It has always been a bit curious to me that government officials, as well as high-placed, influential members of the media elite, cannot ignore the temptation to criticize or demean people of faith.
For those whose lives are not affected by facts, Planned Parenthood’s new campaign may seem appealing.
The fundamental principle of justice—in law, in governing, in treating all peoples with equity—is the cornerstone of a humane society.
Twisted values have always been a Planned Parenthood hallmark whether discussing the human rights of the preborn or a believer’s right to love God.
The Planned Parenthood clinic at 5636 Southmost Road closed this month, causing its patients and their files to be transferred to the remaining clinic on Old Port Isabel Road.
Catholic scholars are up in arms about the latest interim rule issued by the Department of Health and Human Services, which is alleged to provide First Amendment protections to religious entities involved in health care, health insurance, and other programs impacted by the mandated distribution of contraception.
The administration’s decision results from an Institute of Medicine recommendation less than a month ago that argued that the use of birth control would curtail the number of unwanted pregnancies and thus reduce the abortion rate.