Fri, 10 November 2006
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 12:12 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 8 November 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:08 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 5 November 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:43 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 November 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:48 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 1 November 2006 What is the policy at US Hospitals?
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:46 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 5 October 2006
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Wed, 4 October 2006
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Tue, 3 October 2006 China's Catholic church announced the opening of the country's largest seminary in Beijing on Thursday. "Under the joint leadership of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and the Chinese Catholic Bishops' Conference, the National Seminary of the Catholic Church in China aims to train priests with a sound Catholic theology to commit themselves wholly to the Holy Catholic Church and dedicate themselves to their ministry," said Liu Bainian, vice president of the association. The government has provided 73.71 million yuan (9.2 million U.S. dollars) to help with the construction of the seminary. "The seminary is the heart of Chinese Catholic church, the top advisory body in theological affairs of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and the Chinese Catholic Bishops Conference, and the base for the construction of China's theological thought," said Liu. Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:17 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 2 October 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:34 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 1 October 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:29 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 30 September 2006
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Fri, 29 September 2006
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Thu, 28 September 2006
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Thu, 28 September 2006
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Wed, 27 September 2006
What a crock.... ...
NBC hasn't decided yet? If that is becuase this is such a "tough call", there is something really wrong here. Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:40 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 26 September 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:45 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 25 September 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:43 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 24 September 2006 You might want to reference this earlier post......
Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:40 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 23 September 2006 Huh? What is this about? I think that if one looks at the histtory carefully, Franco's dictatorship was not "Church-Backed".....
Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:23 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 23 September 2006 I would love see some comments on this article.....
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:37 AM Comments[1] |
Fri, 22 September 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:36 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 22 September 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:59 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 21 September 2006
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Wed, 20 September 2006
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Tue, 19 September 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:36 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 17 September 2006
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Sat, 16 September 2006
Click Here to see this article in it's natural habitat
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:38 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 13 September 2006 I bet this will be very interesting!
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:46 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 12 September 2006
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Wed, 23 August 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:41 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 23 August 2006
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Tue, 22 August 2006 This is a nice little article about the History of EWTN.
Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:29 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 22 August 2006 397 year old Catholic Classic Back in Print!
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:32 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 21 August 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:27 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 20 August 2006 Catholics perplexed by actions of San Francisco Catholic Charities
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:26 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 19 August 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:23 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 18 August 2006
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Thu, 17 August 2006 This is a great headline: Local Woman Becomes a Catholic Priest. Is this a result of media bias or ignornance?
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:19 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 6 August 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:22 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 5 August 2006 Catholic Charities San Francisco has followed the example of Catholic Charities Boston - no more adoptions (???).
... Click here, here, or here to see some articles on this. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:19 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 4 August 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:18 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 3 August 2006 No mention in the headline that it is invalid...
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:14 AM Comments[1] |
Mon, 31 July 2006 September 15th will be our next podcast with original content. Universal Call is a great project and we are constantly gratified by the support and kind words we receive from our listeners. We have decided to commit to 100 programs. However, the next program will have to wait until September 15th! Yes, Jim, your host (a.k.a. me), is moving his family of (7) across the country from beautiful sunny beachside Orange County to Murrysville, Pennsylvania! Our usual high quality content (if I do say so myself), simply cannot be maintained whilst between buying and selling houses and between changing careers and between goodbyes and hellos, etc… However, I will put together a "Clip"cast highlighting some of our better moments between now and the September 15th program, so withdrawal symptoms shouldn't be too severe. Besides, this would be a great time to listen to some of our excellent, yet overlooked, programs:
I will keep the website updated, be checking our emails and voicemails, and be lining up interviews all through this period so that we should be able to enter into the fall with momentum and continue to Answer the Call. Category: What's Next -- posted at: 7:16 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 31 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:10 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 29 July 2006 ![]()
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:36 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 26 July 2006 This week's Catholic Carnival is up at Alabama Improper. (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:11 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 19 July 2006 Here is a letter we received after our interview with Dr. Nicolosi. Living the Universal Call to Holiness is fraught with some pretty difficult obstacles.
Category: Feedback -- posted at: 10:37 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 17 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:07 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 15 July 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Vince Michinock on the "Role of the Laity" Since the Universal Call podcast is all about how to live the Universal Call to Holiness, we decided to interview a lay catholic of modest repute. While it has been very exciting and informative interviewing luminaries like Father Fessio and Scott Hahn, we wanted to interview a working stiff like the rest of us. How do you live the Call to Holiness when being a good Catholic is not part of your job description like it is for a parish priest, or a published theologian? Vince is very well educated in the faith and has a lot of insight for us. He lives in Orange County, California with his wife and 6 children.
Direct download: Vince_Michinock_on_the_Role_of_the_Laity.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 14 July 2006 Catholic counselors attend Billy Graham festival
Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:51 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 14 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:21 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 13 July 2006 With muddled thinking like this, how is anybody supposed to be able to grow closer to God?
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:37 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 13 July 2006 Here is some Catholic reading for anybody who is interested in this kind of stuff. (And remmber, if you order from the Amazon search box on this page ,(here), Universal Call will recieve additional financial support.) Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:16 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 11 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:13 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 11 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:11 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 10 July 2006
Click here to see the article in its natural habitat. Any product order fron the Universal Call website helps support our mission: Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:02 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 7 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:26 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 6 July 2006 Some interesting statistics on people's belief in the historical accuracy of the Da Vinci Code: Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:24 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 5 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:22 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 3 July 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:56 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 30 June 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Dr. Joseph Nicolosi on Homosexuality and the Church. He holds a Ph.D. From the California School of Professional Psychology and, as a clinical psychologist, is the founder and director of the Thomas Aquinas Clinic, in Encino, California, and the President of the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH). For the last 15 years, his professional focus has been reparative therapy, a controversial therapy that considers homosexuality a disorder that can be cured. He has written 3 books: Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality : A New Clinical Approach; Healing Homosexuality: Case Stories of Reparative Therapy and most recently, A Parent's Guide to Preventing Homosexuality, co-written with his wife Linda Ames Nicolosi. He and his wife have two sons.
Direct download: Dr_Joseph_Nicolosi_on_Homosexuality_and_the_Church.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[1] |
Thu, 29 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:01 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 28 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:18 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 27 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:08 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 25 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:26 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 23 June 2006 This is kinda long, but it is a pretty thorough analysis of the birth rates of various parts of the world. He uses a multi-disciplinary approach (from the economic to the anthropological) that explains why children are a blessing, way beyond the simple biblical injunction.
Click here to see this remarkably thorough essay in its natural habitat. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:45 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 22 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:04 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 21 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:01 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 20 June 2006 Here is a great example a diocese promoting vocations:
Thanks to A Penitent Blogger for the link. Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:56 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 15 June 2006 Rev. Thomas Reese's track record is clear on one thing: he's for anything that makes Mass less reverent.
All of a sudden, Bishop's who have wanted to change the church, are now arguing against changing the liturgy...
Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:02 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 15 June 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Father Steve Sallot on “All you wanted to know about being a pastor but were afraid to ask�. Father Sallot is one of four children raised in the Santa Ana/Tustin area (north Orange county) where his family still resides. Ordained a diocesan priest in 1980, he has ministered in several great parishes in Orange County, including Our Lady Queen of Angels in Newport Beach, St. Angela Merici in Brea, and Santiago de Compostela in Lake Forest. In 1992, he returned to his high school alma mater, Mater Dei High School. (Which by the way is the only high school to have produced two Heisman trophy winners, Matt Leinhart 2004 and Jon Huerte in 1964) He spent ten years there as Rector. In 2002, he became the pastor of St. Edward the Confessor in Dana Point, a parish of approximately 5000 families.
Direct download: Father_Sallot_on_All_you_ever_wanted_to_know.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 14 June 2006 This week's Catholic Carnival is up at CowPi Journal. (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 12:31 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 12 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:31 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 9 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:04 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 8 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:18 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 7 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:41 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 5 June 2006 If a theme emerges from these various entries, it has got to be that Christians can live extraordinary lives in the midst of the world. From the Maximilian Kolbe and the Nazi's to Religious freedom and Kneeling in Orange County, all that we are trying to do is live our faith. Note: These links will all open up in their own browser window and this page will remain open in the background. Religious Freedom at Home and Abroad is discussed at Roft Raft. US Legislation and Muslim beliefs are among many of the parts of an essential, but sometimes forgotten, element of Christianity. Is anybody in the The Ongoing Drama at St. Mary's by the Sea acting in Christian Charity? (from Kicking Over My Traces). The The Economics of Life are discussed by the Part Time Pundit. The fight against the valuation of human life is the next big Pro-Life challenge. Because when you start applying values to life, some people will inevitably come up short. Our friends at Living Catholicism comments on Quality of Life & The Age of Materialism. Do we really know what "quality of life" is? DeoOmnisGloria.com investigates and clarifies the background for the Mormon beliefs in regards to polygamy in Mormons and Polygamy: Do the Latter Day Saints believe in Plural Marriage? Peter got it, Judas didn't. Take a look at The Heart of Forgiveness (from Our Word and Welcome to It) to hear a perspective on Pentecost, Peter and forgiveness. The Perfect Work of A Single Note is discussed. How do we pray, what is our motivation? Does the perfect prayer require a perfect soul? The Diary of a City Parishioner asks about freedom. Is it what we are free from? Or what we are free to do? What do I do when "I feel something within me that compels me to burn Rome"?A trinity of three word, titles: Unity, Forgiveness, and the Holy Spirit; ONE SPIRIT, ONE LORD, ONE GOD; from Heart, Mind and Strength. Adoro Te Devote is just sick and tired of others who feel compelled to talk about what should only be happening to between and husband and wife in their marital bed. Because, after all, Sex and Marriage are Sacred. The Secrets of Self-improvement are revealed by our Penitent Blogger. Lastly, we can thank Toward Contemplation for providing the Pope's thoughts while visiting the Auschwitz-Birkenau camps during is recent visit to Germany in The valley of the shadow of death. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 5:58 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 5 June 2006 Very entertaining....
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:28 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 4 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:52 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 4 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:50 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 3 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:48 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 2 June 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:14 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 1 June 2006 Here is an interesting take on the whole Kneeling/Mortal Sin controversy in Orange County, CA
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 6:00 AM Comments[1] |
Wed, 31 May 2006 This week's Catholic Carnival is up at Living Catholicism. (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 12:38 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 30 May 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Holly Pierlot on "Motherhood as a Vocation". Holly Pierlot is a popular speaker at marriage and catechetics programs and home schooling conferences. She lives on Prince Edward Island, Canada, with her husband, Phillip and her five children. She is the author of the popular book, A Mother's Rule of Life: How to Bring Order to Your Home and Peace to Your Soul
Direct download: Holly_Pierlot_on_Motherhood_as_a_Vocation.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 27 May 2006 Australia seems to generally be more disciplined than the US about Catholic stuff:
Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:03 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 26 May 2006 I think I will ask Dr. Paddy Jim Baggot, to comment on this. Stay Posted.
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:26 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 26 May 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:16 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 23 May 2006 This weeks Catholic Carnival is up at Musings from a Catholic Bookstore (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:14 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 22 May 2006 An article in the National Review from former Universal Call podcast guest, Father John Wauck:
Brown is clearly a good sport who knows perfectly well what he’s up to, and he can’t resist tipping his hand to let us in on the joke. So hats off to an author who’s not ashamed of coming across as a "pop schlockmeister looking for a quick buck" and, as we now know, finding it with a vengeance… literally. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:10 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 22 May 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:05 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 22 May 2006 I wonder what Cardinal Arnize would think about mass at my parish?
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:44 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 20 May 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:49 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 18 May 2006 Here are some quotes from some Da Vinci code reviews. "You know a movie's a dud when even its self-flagellating albino killer monk isn't any fun. " "A jumbled, joyless affair that neither entertains nor enlightens." "As for the film's entertainment virtues, forget it. This is one of the most talky and pretentious major films in memory." "Retarded, ridiculous and crushingly dull." "The movie is woefully plotted and just flat-out, eye-crossingly dull." "...overblown so-so suspense flick..." "Part conspiracy thriller, part religious epic, part family melodrama, but not satisfying on any level, this vastly disappointing film will frustrate viewers who know the book and will bore those who don't due to the rambling and confusing storytelling." "A jumble of historical myth, religious symbology and international thriller-action makes for an unwieldy, bloated melodrama." "... it's not very good -- long (2hr.32min.) and mostly inert." "Ron Howard and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman struggle mightily to cram as much as possible of Dan Brown's labyrinthine thriller into a 2-hour-28-minute running time, resulting in a movie both overstuffed and underwhelming." Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:51 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 16 May 2006 This article describes how Opus Dei is handling the Da Vinci Code furor.
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:13 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 16 May 2006 This week's Catholic Carnival is up at A Penitent Blogger. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:58 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 15 May 2006 Another reason to think the Tony Blair will convert (ref. our earliar post here): Click Here to see the article in its natural habitat. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:43 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 15 May 2006 ![]() Helen Hull Hitchcock is the editor of the Adoremus Bulletin (1995-present), a monthly publication of Adoremus - Society for the Renewal of the Sacred Liturgy, of which she is a co-founder and member of the executive committee. She is also founding director of Women for Faith & Family and editor of Voices. She has published many articles and essays in a wide range of Catholic journals. She is a contributing editor to the ecumenical journal, Touchstone, and was a columnist for the National Catholic Register and Crisis magazine, and staff artist for the New Oxford Review). She is the author/editor of The Politics of Prayer: Feminist language and the worship of God Mrs. Hitchcock serves on the Board of Directors of Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN). She has served on the boards of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars, Women Affirming Life, the Ecumenical Commission on Women in Society, and other advisory boards. She has appeared frequently on radio and television programs, including: Catholic Answers Live, Nightline, Larry King Live, MacNeill Lehrer Report, Donahue, and Mother Angelica Live. She lectures widely in the US and abroad, representing Catholic teaching on issues affecting Catholic women, families, and Catholic faith and worship. Mrs Hitchcock discusses:
Direct download: Helen_Hitchcock_on_liturgy_and_Everyday_life.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 14 May 2006 Father Fessio is the reason I keep posting on the China bishop situation. During our interview, he identified China as the wildcard nation in the fight to keep Western Civilization alive. (The Muslim influence in Europe is very significant, and Muslims are not "western" in their ways. The US is closing in on a post-post Christian worldview.)
Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:10 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 14 May 2006
Here are (2) more entries in the Pro-Abortion Blog, abortionclinicdays. So is this what pro-abortions believers are thinking, or is what they want people to think they're thinking?
Click Here to see the article in it's natural habitat
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 6:17 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 14 May 2006 Perhaps the biggest problem with the Da Vinci Code is that it may act as a catalyst for all those "Catholics" who, by dint of improper formation like to denegate the Church. I think the following article is a great example: Click Here to see the article in it's natural habitat Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:57 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 11 May 2006 Whose fault is this? Is it the school's for employing a teacher for the parish's children that doesn't even know church teaching or the teacher for not taking a more aggressive role in understanding her own faith? Or perhaps both the school and the teacher for not ensuring the contract was better understood? This teacher and her husband have decided to leave the church over this. No matter whose fault this is, it is tragic. Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:17 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 10 May 2006 Attention kids: Don't read this entry because it is about an adult issue. Adults Only: Young college men are suffering from Erectile Dysfunction (Impotence) in record numbers. It seems that the college environment with its surplus of "sex, drugs, and alcohol" is bad for people. This may not be new information, but the manifestation of it may be.
Click here to open the web page with the complete text of the article. This is from the Washington Post and they may require you to register (for free) with them to access the article. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:59 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 10 May 2006
Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:00 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 10 May 2006 Yeah, I know this isn't (explicitly) about the Universal Call to Holiness, but this insightful article about the looming was in Iraq entitled "The Noise Before the Storm" is something that everybody should read. Click Here to Open the Web Page that has the the complete text of the article. Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:50 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 9 May 2006 This is a short "mini-cast" to promote some of the things that we never seem to find time to talk about before our regular interviews:
Comments[0] |
Tue, 9 May 2006
Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:22 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 9 May 2006 The Catholic Carnival is now posted over at the "Castle of the Immaculate" Blog. (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Click Here to Open the Catholic Carnival post. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 4:39 PM Comments[1] |
Mon, 8 May 2006 Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:46 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 7 May 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:26 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 7 May 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:33 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 6 May 2006 If the American Bishops had been handling the molestation issues properly, issues like this would never even exist. Don't waste your time trying to figure who is doing the right thing here. We are in a part of the flow chart where there are no more "good" decisions to help us. Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:03 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 5 May 2006 The Vatican Astronomer on "Creationism":
Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:40 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 5 May 2006 Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:34 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 4 May 2006 It appears that the Chinese government is responding to Pope Benedict XVI's recent efforts to support Catholics in that country by ordaining a few of their own priests.
Click Here to Open the Web Page with the Complete Text of the Article Thanks to Father John T. Zuhlsdorf's blog, What the Priest Really Said. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 6:59 PM Comments[1] |
Wed, 3 May 2006 As father of a of a bunch of kids, I do admit to getting frustrated when priest indulge themselves with a 25 minute homily or a 85 minute mass. I mean, is it reasonable to expect a bunch of kids to sit still for that long? This priest (in his blog) tries addresses this issue, albeit tangentially , in the following: You can click here to read the complete blog posting. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 1:12 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 2 May 2006
The subtitle for this article is "The nun who launched the Vatican's Web site is at work on a MySpace for Catholics ", which implies that it could be retreat from the secular world. But what good will Catholics do in their own 'space'? This is the problem: we are always retreating to our own worlds instead of interacting with the world at large. However, The article does say:
This will be interesting to follow. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:25 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 2 May 2006 Check out a list of the best blog entries of the week over at Living Catholicism in the Catholic Carnival. (The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) (BTW, Our interview with Scott Hahn is mentioned!) You can click here to read the Catholic Carnival. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 6:11 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 30 April 2006 ![]() Dr. Scott Hahn discusses what appears to be a simple admonition, but upon further examination, it is an extremely important and largely untaught concept - keeping the Lord's Day Holy. An exceptionally popular speaker and teacher, Dr. Hahn has delivered numerous talks nationally and internationally on a wide variety of topics related to Scripture and the Catholic faith. Over 500 of these talks have been produced on audio and videotapes by St. Joseph Communications. He is currently a Professor of Theology and Scripture at Franciscan University of Steubenville, where he has taught since 1990, and is the founder and director of the Saint Paul Center for Biblical Theology. In 2005, he was appointed as the inaugural Chair of Biblical Theology and Liturgical Proclamation at St. Vincent Seminary in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. Dr. Hahn Speaks on:
A short list of some of Scott Hahn's Books:
Direct download: Scott_Hahn_on_Keeping_the_Lords_Day_Holy.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 27 April 2006 Here is Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragán to clarify what it going on in the Vatican in regards the recent media circus about condoms and Church teaching: (You can check out an earlier post on this subject here.) You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:45 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 25 April 2006 Mercator.net has an interview posted with Ramesh Ponnuru about his latest book, "The Party of Death: The Democrats, the Media, the Courts, and the Disregard for Human Life" (Our thanks to the Curt Jester for turning us onto this link.) Some Highlights:
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 12:42 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 24 April 2006 As many of our listeners/readers have noticed, there have been some articles in the news this weekend about condom use, the spread of Aids, and the Catholic Church. The media seems to savor the "startling reversal of Church Doctrine" with bold proclamations like "shift in strategy", "updating their views", "Church hierarchy", "reversal of church doctrine" and "victory for reform-minded critics"......perhaps because the media thinks of the magisterium like they think of any other governing body. There is no other organization in the world that produces as thoughtful and well reasoned responses to issues as the Vatican. I am not naive enough to believe that there are no politics at the Vatican, but one significant difference between the Vatican and other governing agencies (countries, companies, etc...) is that it is not only politics that inform their decisions. Say what you want about the Church, but upon examination, one can always find caring motives. This is so alien to most of the world, especially the media, that we can almost be guaranteed of slanted, shoddy reporting out of Rome. (Note: While I don't know much more than most about Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, I doubt he heads the "Roman Catholic Church's Liberal Wing." I didn't know that the Roman Catholic Church had a "wing" devoted to the service of liberals. Furthermore, I didn't know that this "wing" had a head.)
"...Can't stop it..."?? I believe that if the quote was complete, we would find that perhaps the Cardinal was referring to the improper application of science, like using human embryos destructively in scientific research. There are quotes out of context and incomplete information. I have read several Vatican articles/quotes/etc... about this. Yes, the Vatican is considering allowing condom use to slow the spread of HIV/AIDS with married couples where one partner has HIV/Aids and the other doesn't. This isn't new; I have been hearing about this for at least a year. In fact I remember reading about this when JPII was pope. How is it that this important distinction isn't making it to the readers? Here is another yellow article irresponsibly headlined: Catholic Church to Ease Ban on Condom Use.
How often has the church based its doctrine on social trends in the past 2000 years? Which social reality is the writer referring to? The epidemic of promiscuity? Or maybe the Church is in line with the social reality that the family unit is the most important social group and that it is disintegrating. And that her doctrines exist to preserve the family. Finally, here is an article that actually says something responsible:
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:21 PM Comments[1] |
Fri, 21 April 2006 Here is a rebuttal to those who are critical of President Jenkins' (of Notre Dame) in regard to the Vagina Monologues and Gay Pride issues: (See our earlier posts here and here.) You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:27 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 21 April 2006 This from Father John Wauck's "the Da Vinci Code and Opus Dei" weblog: You can click here
Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:26 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 20 April 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Father John Wauck on the Da Vinci Code and Opus Dei. I discovered his web site, Opus Dei and the Da Vinci Code, and immediately wanted to interview him on this subject. Father John Wauck is an American priest of Opus Dei. A native of Chicago, he studied Renaissance history and literature at Harvard University and philosophy at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, where he has lived for the last ten years. He teaches a course on literature and Christian faith at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross (in 2005, this course was aired as a 13-part television series, called "A Mirror of the Soul," on EWTN) and organizes an international seminar entitled Poetics and Christianity. He has written for many publications, including The American Scholar, The Christian Science Monitor, and The New Criterion, and appeared frequently as a television commentator on matters dealing with the Catholic Church. Before his priestly ordination, he worked as an editor of The Human Life Review and as a speechwriter for the Attorney General of the United States, William Barr, and for the Democratic Governor of Pennsylvania, Robert P. Casey. Ironically, we never really got to speaking about Da Vinci's Mona Lisa! We did cover several of the more controversial aspects with a slight emphasis on Opus Dei, considering he is a priest of Opus Dei. Father Wauck Comments on...
Direct download: John_Wauck_on_the_Da_VInci_Code_and_Opus_Dei.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:00 AM Comments[3] |
Wed, 19 April 2006 The Observer, an Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's" (according to their masthead), contains an open letter to the university community regarding the statement made by President Jenkins about the Vagina Monologues. In was written by John C. Cavadini, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Theology and the Director for the Institute for Church Life. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:05 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 19 April 2006 Notre Dame President Jenkins was much beloved when he shut down the Vagina Monoloques, but now he has changed his mind and the love is waning:
The Ethics and Public Policy Center has an interesting take on this: You can click here to read the The Indignity of Notre Dame: The university's new president endorses the wrong feminism. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:13 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 18 April 2006 The dynamism of our faith is apparent in these posts: An event 2 millenia ago on a hill in Calvary is informing our thoughts and actions today. Whether it be political (Abu Graib, Moussaoui), personal (Married Lutheran pastor becomes Catholic Priest), Literary (Da Vinci Code and St. Mary Magdelene) or spiritual (Holy Week), the Church Militant has an abundance of thoughtful soldiers. Welcome to the website of Universal Call-the podcast that discusses the Universal call to Holiness. We are proud to host the Catholic Carnival this first week of Easter. The experience of hosting a "Catholic Carnival" has been very satisfying. If you haven't done one before, I highly recommend it. Because our liturgical calendar plays such a significant part of our living faith this last week, I have organized the posts (largely) by their holy day application: Note: These links will all open up in their own browser window and this page will remain open in the background. LentA very real perspective on Lent from Looking back to Lent and forward to Divine Mercy. Once again the wisdom of the Church is displayed by the timeliness of Divine Mercy Sunday (from AdoroTeDevote). Holy WeekOur young pilgrim, on his journey to examine his vocation, shares his holy week with Bishop David Allen Zubik in Holy Week with the Bishop (from To Jesus through Mary.) Holy ThursdayHoly Thursday: the Prayer that We Should have Said discusses the application of our faith, not just at Mass, not just applied to 'Churchy' things, but applied to our day-to-day activities (from Herb Ely). Good Friday"We need not be afraid" says A Penitent Blogger in the post Identified through suffering. An account of a blogger's participation in the "Way of the Cross" through downtown Chicago. Making Christ's Love Visible is a description of the procession (from Integrity). A meaningful Good Friday reflection from personal experience of attending a wake in He really died (from A Plumbline in the Wind).Saturday VigilThis post, Jesus Christ is Risen, Alleluia!, is a celebration of the ongoing conversion of souls that is most clearly displayed at the Easter vigil (from A Catholic Life). The soccer mom supplies an eyewitness and personal account of her husband's confirmation in At the Easter Vigil (from Ramblings of a GOP Soccer Mom). Gerald Augustinus shares Pope Benedict's Easter Vigil Homily. I am continually impressed by the clear, focused and motivating messages from our Church, whether it be an Encyclical, Pastoral Letter or, in this case, a Papal Homily (from The Cafeteria is Closed).EasterMy God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? "With that cry, we can now know there's an Easter dawn that can follow such choking despair". This post-abortion blog draws a parallel between the Death and Resurrection of Christ and the pain of abortion (from After Abortion). We have (2) thought provoking Easter poems in this weeks carnival: CHRISTIANS, TO THE PASCHAL VICTIM and Christus Triumphans (from Heart, Mind and Strength and The Blog from the Core, respectively). Easter Greetings from around the world! is a compelling post that includes the Easter greeting cards from several notables. I found these fascinating. (from Pondering the Word). Jay shares a pithy and moving St. Thomas Aquinas reflection in God has Saved Us (Or, Happy Easter) (from Living Catholicism). The dynamics between humanity and Christ change after the Resurrection. This insightful reflection by Father Stephanos is entitled For Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord. I especially appreciate his post tiles as they manifest the preeminence of the liturgical calendar for this time of year (from One Monk of the Order of Saint Benedict). OK, OK! I am Glad that Jesus died for me. I will not be stuck on the Good Friday side of the Cross! (From CowPi Journal). Easter MondayAnother gem by Father Stephanos, once again using the liturgical calender for his blog entry title: For Easter Monday (from One Monk of the Order of Saint Benedict). "Believe it deeply. Proclaim it boldly. And fear no lie." Persistent lies vs. the Power of Truth (from A Penitent Blogger). Of course, with the movie release looming, we need to have a post on the Da Vinci Code:Father John Wauck shares some thoughts about St. Mary Magdelene in Kneeling Before the Bones of Mary Magdalen, or "Been There, Done That" (BTW, he is the next guest for the Universal Call podcast which will be posted on 4/20.) (From Da Vinci Code and Opus Dei). Lastly, in contrast to the earlier posts about the celebration of the Easter season, we have some posts that deal with the more wordly aspects of living our faith:Any post that starts with "Ecclesial movements (e.g. Communion and Liberation, Focolare) are not essentially something complicated or an extra burden on the Christian life. Instead, for their members and those whom they touch, they are the rediscovery of the power of the Gospel." has got to be good. Christianity as a School in the Mission of Christ (from Deep Furrows). Great information for anybody interested in the Death Penalty Debate: Should Moussaoui Die? (from ProfessorBainbridge.com). Interesting take an the anti-america sentiment in international news. I wonder if they are seeing a lot more Abu Ghraib news overseas than we are in the States? Why is Abu Ghraib a cover story again, but not Darfur? (From the Atlantic Review). Lutheran Minister becomes Catholic Priest - Frustrated with the ever-increasing liberalism in his denomination, he converts to Catholicism. (From DeoOmnisGloria.com). Even through this post is pretty old, I don't remember seeing it on a previous carnival. I read this back when it was first posted and was engrossed with the question raised: Parish vs. Movements? (Why Movements At All?) What about the idea that everything we need to live a good holy life is at our parish? Why do we need more than that? But there is no denying that people can become holier as a result of these movements (from Integrity). I think this entry asks a good question. I look forward to a lively comments section for this post, Another Possible Answer to the Question of Comparative Religions (from Kicking Over My Traces).That's it for this week......thanks for stopping by! Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 8:42 AM Comments[1] |
Sat, 15 April 2006
Just a quick question: Doesn't a decision to provide pain-relieving drugs to the soon-to-be-aborted baby imply that we have crossed over from "abortion" or "Women's Health" or "pro-choice" or "Fetus" to "baby" and, therfore, "murder"? You can click here to read the complete text.Thanks to Doc Shazam for this article. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:49 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 15 April 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:50 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 14 April 2006 This is an interesting interview with the producers of "God and the Girl":
Category: In the News -- posted at: 8:39 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 14 April 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:08 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 13 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:17 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 13 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:13 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 12 April 2006 This Compendium of the Catholic Church takes the Catechism published in the early 90's and expresses many of the principles in a question and answer format. I have heard really good things about it and have ordered mine. If you order one, please use the link below so that Universal Call can benifit from the commission. A short description from the publisher....
Category: Books -- posted at: 7:05 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 12 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:21 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 11 April 2006 This from First Things:
There will be more on the Gnostic Gospels in our podcast due to post on April 20th. Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:29 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 11 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:29 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 11 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:27 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 10 April 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Bud Welch about the "Death Penalty". On April 19, 1995, Bud Welch�s 23-year old daughter, Julie, and 167 others were killed in the bomb blast that destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City. Bud had always opposed the death penalty but Julie's death prompted bouts of anger, pain, hatred and revenge. He longed to see Timothy McVeigh (who was eventually tried and convicted of the bombing and executed) dead. After months of agony Bud began to question his desire for revenge. He realized that nothing positive would arise from McVeigh's execution. "It was hatred and revenge that made me want to see him dead and those two things were the very reason that Julie and 167 others were dead," he says. He also remembered Julie's comments that executions were only teaching children to hate." Topics that Bud Welch speaks on:
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Sat, 8 April 2006 A short "mini-cast" to explain some of the recent changes and information regarding our program, such as larger file size, new voicemail number (206-984-1689), a new website feature (colophon), our "Not for profit Status" status, other great websites, etc.... Comments[0] |
Wed, 5 April 2006 The Catholic Carnival is now posted over at the "CowPi Journal" Blog. The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 2:41 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 5 April 2006 You can click here to view the web page for this text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:22 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 4 April 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:21 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 2 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:39 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 1 April 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:43 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 30 March 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Father John Waiss about Vocations and Dating. Father Waiss is a priest of Opus Dei and an author. He has written "Couples in Love : Straight Talk on Dating, Respect, Commitment, Marriage, and Sexuality Topics that Father John Waiss speaks on:
You can purchase the book that provides the basis for our interview at the following link: Direct download: Father_John_Waiss_on_Dating_and_Vocations.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 6:00 AM Comments[1] |
Wed, 29 March 2006 A growing number of states are considering laws that would require hospitals to provide emergency contraception to rape victims, drawing criticism from supporters of the Roman Catholic Church, which likens the morning-after pill to abortion. ... The laws would include hospitals affiliated with the Catholic Church, which teaches that life begins at conception. Opponents say states are attempting to force those hospitals to go against their beliefs. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:28 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 29 March 2006 You can click here to read the the article: Clinton Makes a Pitch For Catholic Voters . Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:03 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 28 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:14 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 28 March 2006 The Catholic Carnival is now posted over at the "Living Catholicism" Blog. The Catholic Carnival, for those who are not familiar with it, is a collection of the best blog posts from Catholic-centric blogs.) You can click here to read the Catholic Carnival. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 11:32 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 27 March 2006 This is related to an earlier post about this that you can find here. You can click here to read the complete text. Here's another article about this from a different perspective: You can click here to read the complete text of Hundreds of Afghans protest dismissal of case against Christian convert. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:57 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 24 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:05 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 24 March 2006 Our proposed agenda for upcoming podcasts:
Category: What's Next -- posted at: 3:52 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 23 March 2006 This article highlights the pragmatism that underlies the political decision behind the Catholic democrats' statement:
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:09 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 22 March 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:51 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 20 March 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Fr Fessio. Father Fessio is the Founder and Editor of Ignatius Press, founder of the St. Ignatius Institute of the University of San Francisco and Campion College before coming to Ave Maria University as Provost and Professor of Theology. He wrote his dissertation on the ecclesiology of Hans Urs von Balthasar under the direction of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XIV. Topics that Father Fessio speaks on:
Direct download: Father_Fessio_on_Ephesians_5_and_other_misc_stuff.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:00 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 19 March 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:29 PM |
Sun, 19 March 2006
You can click here to read the complete text of an AP article. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:14 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 19 March 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:13 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 17 March 2006 I think this will be the last time I post on this subject. (It's no longer under the radar.) You can click here to read the complete blog entry from the Curt Jester. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 1:10 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 16 March 2006 Article about San Francisco Catholic Charities and whether they will still place adoptive childrent with same-sex parents from ebar.com (serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971), the home of Bay Area Reporter:
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:23 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 15 March 2006
Here is the entire article from Pridesource.com (Michigan's weekly news for Gays, Bisexuals, Transgenders, and Friends since 1991) that vilifies the Church and the Massachusetts Governor:
Headline: Creep of the Week: The Catholic Bishops of Massachusetts Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:39 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 14 March 2006 An Op-ed about the Boston Catholic Charities and Same Sex Parents: Other entries about this subject are Check here, here, here, here and here for our previous posts on this subject. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:02 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 14 March 2006 This from the DeoOmnisGloria blog: You can click here to read the complete blog entry. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:54 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 14 March 2006
Check here, here, here and here for our previous posts on this subject. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:04 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 14 March 2006
You can click here to read an earlier post on the same subject. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:31 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete blog entry. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 9:09 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 March 2006 This blogger (abortinclinicdays) writes that her job in helping women to the abortion table is a helpful and important public service. (Please don't mistake this post as supporting, in any way, a pro-abortion agenda. Hopefully, it goes without saying that Universal Call thinks that abortion is an abomination.) This entry is about the new South Dakota law. Take a look at the comments section for some real passionate perspectives on an issue that we usually only get from fellow pro-lifers. Here is an example of one of the comments: You can click here to read the blog entry. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 3:04 PM Comments[1] |
Mon, 13 March 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:33 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 12 March 2006 I couldn't help but notice that all the "lay ministers" mentioned in this article are women. It seems that men always choose to avoid these roles.
...and...
...and...
Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:05 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 12 March 2006
...and...
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:55 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 11 March 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:57 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 10 March 2006 As many of you know, I have posted several entries about the issue surrounding the Catholic Charities of Boston and the legislation that requires that they place children with adoptive homosexual couples. Does the following mark the end of the controversy?
You can click here to read an article about this from the AP. You can click here to read an article about this from the Catholic World News. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:00 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 10 March 2006 ![]() Today we have a conversation with Dr Paddy Jim Baggot, MD. He is a Catholic Physician board certified Obstetrician/Gynecologist and Geneticist specializing in preconception health and NaProTechnology, which is a new reproductive science for assisting couples to conceive naturally without the use of artificial reproductive techniques. He has studied at the Pope Paul VI Institute, a health science research institution dedicated to following Catholic teaching in all aspects of Human reproduction. Dr Baggot talks about Humanae Vitae, Donum Vitae, Pope Paul VI's call for Doctors and Men of Science to "considerably advance the welfare of marriage and the family and also peace of conscience, if by pooling their efforts they strive to elucidate more thoroughly the conditions favorable to a proper regulation of births", the Church's teaching on artificial contraception, In Vitro Fertilization, new ways to treat infertility, Natural Family Planning, etc....Direct download: Paddy_Jim_Baggot_Obstetrics_and_Gynecology_and_Catholic_Teaching.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:49 AM Comments[3] |
Wed, 8 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:55 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 7 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text of Priest shortage will shift power to Catholic laity. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:46 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 7 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text.
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:45 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 6 March 2006 Real Christianity is scary, but there is a there is always something encouraging about martyrdom: You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:03 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 4 March 2006 Because of the Church's teaching, Catholic agencies may not provide adoptions to same-sex couples. Hence we intend to seek relief from the regulatory requirements of the Commonwealth on this issue. We do this in the hope that we will be able to continue focusing our attention on serving children in need of adoption, and to do so in a way which does not conflict with Catholic teaching and practice. We are asking the Commonwealth to respect the Constitutional guarantee of religious freedom and allow the Catholic Church to continue serving children in need of adoption without violating the tenets of our faith. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:13 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 3 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:49 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 March 2006 Here is the conclusion to a burning hot issue
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:10 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 March 2006 This from Bettnet.com. There is a link in his blog entry to an article in the Boston Globe about this. This has been hot for awhile and it looks to heat up even more... You can click here to read the complete text. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 12:32 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 1 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:13 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 1 March 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:10 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 28 February 2006 ![]() Our Guest today is Father Jim Costigan who talks with us about Eucharisitic Adoration. He is priest with the Fathers of Mercy whose primary Apostolate is to preach parish missions and retreats, with an emphasis on the Sacraments of the Holy Eucharist and Confession. He discusses John 6; what is Eucharistic Adoration; the origins of Adoration; the essense of the Eucharist; the value of Adoration outside of Mass; proper attitudes about Adoration; the place of Adoration in a Catholic's spiritual exercises; how the Eucharist helps us relate to God; the essence of Adoration is not so much about proximity to the Holy Eucharist as much as it is about attitude; how Adoration is complementary to other spiritual exercises, not neccesarily more important; etc... Direct download: Eucharistic_Adoration_with_Father_Jim_Costigan.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:00 AM Comments[1] |
Mon, 27 February 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:04 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 26 February 2006
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Sun, 26 February 2006
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Sun, 26 February 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:56 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 26 February 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:49 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 24 February 2006 Here is the Pope's a Lenten meditation for us: You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:30 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 24 February 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:45 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 23 February 2006 There has been a meeting with top Roman Curia officials that focused on a proposal to reconcile with followers of the late French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
...the article quotes Cardinal Arinze later with a self-evident yet obligatory statement on the matter:
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:35 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 20 February 2006 ![]() This is the conclusion of our previous interview with Renee Bondi. At age 29, Renee Bondi suffered a bizarre accident that shattered her spine and left her quadriplegic. She was engaged to be married and was a succesful musician at the time. She lost not only all use of her hands and legs, but also her singing voice. Renee miraculously recovered her singing voice and today she is one of the top-selling independent Contemporary Christian Artists selling over 150,000 copies of songs as well as being played on radio stations and networks across the country. She discusses the blessings that come with suffering (you find out who you are in Christ); how to come to thanksgiving for calamity; how she learned to look at her wheelchair as a companion and ally; how all suffering is relative; how we aquire our holiness; how is she trying to teach her son how to listen for God's voice; how God wants her to know him as a Father; that following the simple and profound guidelines from scripture would protect our society; etc... Visit www.reneebondi.com for her concert and speaking schedule, to order any of her Cd's, and to learn more about her ministry. (Renee's home page plays music when you visit, so be ready.) The song included in this podcast is "Be Still and Hear My Voice", the ninth song on Renee's album, Let it Rain Direct download: Renee_Bondi_Part_2_on_fortitude_and_suffering.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:44 AM Comments[0] |
Sat, 18 February 2006 At last, some articles about Opus Dei that have nothing to do with Da Vinci Code
You can click here to read the complete text. A new Opus Dei Projects to Benefit Four Nations Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:44 AM Comments[0] |
Fri, 17 February 2006 As a follow-up to an earlier post about the Bible and Bankruptcy, here is a podcast from the same author on the same subject: (Hint, its all about the preservation of the family unit.) You can click here to go to the Debt Podcast "Is bankruptcy immoral?" podcast. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 1:32 PM Comments[1] |
Wed, 15 February 2006 The Holy See is deeply concerned about the appointment of new bishops in China in the coming years because this will determine the course of China's Catholic Church for decades, according to a senior Vatican official. You can click here to read the complete text. ![]() Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:27 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 14 February 2006 Everybody pretty much knows about St. Valentine, but how many people are aware that today is also the feast of Saints Cyril and Methodius? You can click here to read more about Saints Cyril and Methodius. Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:43 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 February 2006 So I guess we have to wait until the Olympics come to my neighborhood before our churches open their doors for adoration... You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:37 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 February 2006 This seems like a good topic for a future podcast. We will try to line something up for the end of March. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 6:20 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 February 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:50 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 13 February 2006 This from Barbara Nicolosi's blog, The Church of the Masses: You can click here to read the complete text. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 10:49 AM Comments[1] |
Fri, 10 February 2006 ![]() At age 29, Renee Bondi was engaged to be married and had a beautiful singing voice, a thriving career as a music teacher, and a loving family. But then one night a bizarre accident shattered her spine and left her quadriplegic. She lost not only all use of her hands and legs, but also her singing voice -- she could barely speak above a whisper. Unwilling to accept that her life was over, she searched her heart and sought God for direction. Renee miraculously recovered her singing voice and today she is one of the top-selling independent Contemporary Christian Artists selling over 150,000 copies of songs as well as being played on radio stations and networks across the country. She discusses her struggles in the days immediately following her accident; her husband and child; the spiritual exercises that help her cope with daily frustrations; etc... more to come in part 2. Visit www.reneebondi.com for her concert and speaking schedule, to order any of her Cd's, and to learn more about her ministry. The song included in this podcast is "Surrender", the third song on Renee's album, Surrender to Your Love Part 2 will be posted on 2/20/06. Direct download: Renee_Bondi_on_fortitude_and_suffering.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:00 AM Comments[1] |
Thu, 9 February 2006 Here's an article at Forbes.com (from the AP) about the dialogue at Catholic Universities surrounding the production of the "Vagina Monologues":
This from Rev. Brian Shanley, Providence College's president:
Regina Bannan, an assistant professor of women studies at Temple University who has researched Catholic women, said the play helps spark important dialogue about women's sexuality. You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:21 PM Comments[1] |
Thu, 9 February 2006 Here's a bit of a follow-up on an earliar post: "We The Muslim Students Association of Australia, The Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students and The Australian Catholic Students Association note the particular affect the availability of this drug will have on tertiary students. Many students have financial difficulties and other particular challenges when faced with pregnancy: taking a pill that may seriously damage the health of the mother is not a message that should be sent out to students, this is not a solution," the Statement said. Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:07 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 8 February 2006 You can click here to read the complete text. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:45 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 7 February 2006
The Compendium consists of 598 questions and answers, echoing to some degree the format of the very popular �Baltimore Catechism� which was a standard text in many Catholic parishes and schools from 1885 to the 1960s. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:53 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 7 February 2006 Here is an interesting post about the biblical perspective on bankruptcy (from the New York Bankruptcy and Consumer Law Blog). You can click here to read the complete text. Thanks to Jay over at the Debt Podcast for recommending this article. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 4:24 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 6 February 2006
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:00 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 6 February 2006 Our proposed agenda for our upcoming programs:
Category: What's Next -- posted at: 1:04 PM Comments[1] |
Mon, 6 February 2006 More on the Priest shot in Turkey from the "Hindu News": Pope Benedict XVI's envoy in Ankara, Monsignor Antonio Lucibello, said he had spoken with a witness - an Italian woman who worked with the priest - who said Santoro had been killed while he was ``kneeling in the first row of the church'' and praying. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:58 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 5 February 2006 "We condemn with hatred the fact that the murder was committed in a house of worship against a man of religion," said Justice Minister Cemil Cicek, the government spokesman. "It is not possible for our government or for the Turkish people to approve of any form of violence." Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:20 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 5 February 2006 "We condemn with hatred the fact that the murder was committed in a house of worship against a man of religion," said Justice Minister Cemil Cicek, the government spokesman. "It is not possible for our government or for the Turkish people to approve of any form of violence." Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:20 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 5 February 2006 From the New York Times: ...But a reorganization of the doctrinal teaching system within the Diocese of Rockville Centre on Long Island, which was announced last week, has raised concerns among some Roman Catholics. They believe it augurs a shift to pre-Vatican II conservatism, a diminished role for women in the church and a new authoritarian stamp on the way 1.4 million church members on Long Island learn what it means to be Catholic and interact with their church. Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:50 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 February 2006 Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 4:21 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 February 2006 As a fan from birth, I am gratified by this profile of the Steelers owner:
Click here for the full text of article Thanks to Open Book for the link. Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:38 PM Comments[3] |
Thu, 2 February 2006 I don't know what "LGBT Catholics" are but I can guess. “I hope it’s not my last preaching,� he laughs. “It’s going to take a certain tact not to say something that would be totally contrary to the Catholic teachings, but challenging still.� Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:05 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 2 February 2006 This from the "Courier-Mail" (Australia): Thanks to the Curt Jester for this link Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:16 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 1 February 2006 Here is some commentary on the that has been made on (2) of the articles that I posted here previously: Click here to read the entire article entitled "An intelligent discourse on intelligent design" ..............and................... Click here to read the entire article entitled "Intelligent Design" Here are some of the earlier posts on the same subject: "Intelligent design" not science: Vatican paper and Science Does Not Need God. Or Does It? A Catholic Scientist Looks at Evolution Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:12 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 1 February 2006 An ecouraging story about a young female Olympic skier who is a devout Catholic. She has a particular devotion to Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati Rebecca Dussault, was born in Denver and is now a resident of Gunnison, Colorado in the Diocese of Pueblo. She is Eight Time U.S. National Cross Country Ski Champion and Top Ranked U.S. Women�s Nordic Skier. She will be representing our Nation at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin (a.k.a. Torino), Italy. She has named Pier Giorgio her �patron on the Journey to the Olympics.� When she competes she will have the name of our friend written on her skis, along with the Sign of the Cross with which she always marks them. Click here to read the complete text of the article Thanks to the Curt Jester for this link. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:12 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 31 January 2006 A majority of women in Britain want the abortion laws to be tightened to make it harder, or impossible, for them to terminate a pregnancy. Click here to read the complete text of the UK Guardian Article Thanks to Open Book for this link. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 7:18 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 31 January 2006 Check out the post at the Cardinal Ratzinger Fan Club where there is a wealth of links to other writings about the Pope's latest encyclical.
Click here to read the complete post which contains many, many links Thanks to Open Book for this link. Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 5:50 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 31 January 2006 I ran accross this aricle last week, but the more I think about the more I wanted to post it:
The Catholic church will Sunday appoint two married laymen as permanent deacons - officials who perform rituals like baptism and marriage, hitherto a bastion of priests and bishops. Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:57 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 31 January 2006
By Father George V. Coyne, SJ The following is the text of the talk to be delivered by Vatican Observatory Director Jesuit Father George V. Coyne, "Science Does Not Need God, or Does It? A Catholic Scientist Looks at Evolution" at Palm Beach Atlantic University in West Palm Beach, Fla., Jan. 31: Abstract:
I would essentially like to share with you two convictions in this presentation: (1) that the Intelligent Design (ID) movement, while evoking a God of power and might, a designer God, actually belittles God, makes her/him too small and paltry; (2) that our scientific understanding of the universe, untainted by religious considerations, provides for those who believe in God a marvelous opportunity to reflect upon their beliefs. Please note carefully that I distinguish, and will continue to do so in this presentation, that science and religion are totally separate human pursuits. Science is completely neutral with respect to theistic or atheistic implications which may be drawn from scientific results. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:42 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 31 January 2006
By Father George V. Coyne, SJ The following is the text of the talk to be delivered by Vatican Observatory Director Jesuit Father George V. Coyne, "Science Does Not Need God, or Does It? A Catholic Scientist Looks at Evolution" at Palm Beach Atlantic University in West Palm Beach, Fla., Jan. 31: Abstract:
I would essentially like to share with you two convictions in this presentation: (1) that the Intelligent Design (ID) movement, while evoking a God of power and might, a designer God, actually belittles God, makes her/him too small and paltry; (2) that our scientific understanding of the universe, untainted by religious considerations, provides for those who believe in God a marvelous opportunity to reflect upon their beliefs. Please note carefully that I distinguish, and will continue to do so in this presentation, that science and religion are totally separate human pursuits. Science is completely neutral with respect to theistic or atheistic implications which may be drawn from scientific results. Category: In the News -- posted at: 9:42 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 30 January 2006 ![]() Mike Sullivan was a married protestant missionary, serving the poor in Mexico, until he read about Mother Teresa. Then he and his family traveled to Calcutta and ultimately to Rome -- both spiritually and geographically. Mike speaks to us about his conversion to the Catholic church and his experience serving the poor. He discusses the spiritual poverty of the heart; the Preferential Option for the Poor; Mother Teresa and the Missionaries of Charity; his family�s trip to Rome; his call to establish a full time mission organization for families; The Imitation of Christ by Thomas � Kempis; etc.... And, yes...I do know that I talked a little too fast at the beginning of the podcast... Direct download: Poverty_Conversion_and_Missions_with_Mike_Sullivan.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:15 AM Comments[3] |
Sun, 29 January 2006 She writes: "I acknowledge my Pro-Life stance and I accept that not everyone in this country agrees with me, but the use of this drug cannot possibly be defended. I would oppose the use of this drug even if I were Pro-Choice (as do others). For crying in a bucket, when the Chairman of the Company that manufactures the drug says: 'RU 486 is not at all easy to use. In fact it is much more complex to use than the technique of vacuum extraction. True, no anaesthetic is required but a woman who wants to end her pregnancy has to 'live' with her abortion for at least a week using this technique. It's an appalling psychological ordeal.' ----Edouard Sakiz, Chairman of Roussel Uclaf (The French Company developed and manufactures the RU486 drug in France) in 1989." Click here to read the whole post
Thanks to the Curt Jester for this link Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 9:45 PM Comments[1] |
Fri, 27 January 2006 By MARTA FALCONI, Associated Press Writer VITERBO, Italy - An Italian judge heard arguments Friday on whether a small-town parish priest should stand trial for asserting that Jesus Christ existed. The priest's atheist accuser, Luigi Cascioli, says the Roman Catholic Church has been deceiving people for 2,000 years with a fable that Christ existed, and that the Rev. Enrico Righi violated two Italian laws by reasserting the claim. Category: In the News -- posted at: 7:07 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 26 January 2006 "Cor Unum" President Sees a Trend Toward Secularization VATICAN CITY, JAN. 25, 2006 (Zenit.org).- Catholic charitable agencies that lack a solid theological basis run the risk of forgetting their relationship with the Church, warns a Vatican official. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:56 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 25 January 2006
by Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, Senior Fellow in Economics
When John Paul II published Centesimus Annus in 1991, the encyclical opened new vistas for the understanding the relationship between markets and morals, between respect for private property and consumer habits tempered by Christian moderation. He called for exploring new ways to combine the operation of the market with the support of the weak. John Paul’s challenge is even more urgent today when people understand that communism is not a viable strategy for achieving either economic growth or solidarity with the poor. Now, the more urgent task is to show that Western European socialism has also failed. Although some aspects of the Western European model originally claimed Christian inspiration and objective, it is now clear that the modern Western European welfare-state is collapsing. And while many modern countries share some of the problems loosely categorized under the “European social model,� it is Europe that most desperately needs a genuinely Catholic alternative. Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:36 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 25 January 2006
25 January, 2006 by Bernardo Cervellera, AsiaNews Benedict XVI's first encyclical is not only the program of his pontificate. It is also the Church's program for the third millennium... Facing a globalization of the economy that creates enormous masses of impoverished people, states that seem like 'bunches of thieves' for their disregard for justice, the 'vanished illusion' of Marxism and a prevailing materialism that has turned man into a 'thing', the Pope invites Christians to be 'fountains of living water in the midst of a thirsting world' (n. 41). In reading these pages teeming with culture, social analysis, faith and prayer, one has the sense of being at the start of a new era, of a new and determined way of looking at the problems of the world and at possible solutions. Here and there, the Pope refers various times to the question of a 'new humanism', of a 'true humanism', of a new 'image of man.' The encyclical is really addressed to man, men and women, seen in their lively reaching out, their eros, their search for happiness and justice. The Pope calls upon this man not to disparage him or to judge him from above with the eye of a puritanical Pharisee, but to appreciate him with tenderness. In eros itself, it his richness and poverty, in his leaps and falls, beyond consumeristic manipulations, the Pope finds all the elements to show that God's eros and agape 'united' fulfill the very expectation of human eros toward fullness and eternity. From now on, thanks to this Pope, it will be possible to once again say 'I love you forever', 'I love you fully' with no need for a smile of irony or conceit. And it will be possible to think of marriage and even of indissolubility not as an 'order' or an external law, but as the fulfillment of a need found in eros itself. Click here to read the complete text of the encyclical or here to read from the same article that I quoted above. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:28 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 25 January 2006
By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
The Pope offered a foretaste of the contents: Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:03 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 23 January 2006 ...From Harper's Magazine... From the transcript of radio communication among Israeli soldiers near Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. The recording was submitted in January in the trial of the company commander, whose name has been withheld due to a military court order. He faces a maximum of three years in prison. Translated from the Hebrew by Nomi Friedman. Originally from Harper's Magazine, May 2005. SENTRY: We spotted an Arab female about 100 meters below our emplacement, near the light armored vehicle gate. HEADQUARTERS: Observation post “Spain,� do you see it? OBSERVATION POST: Affirmative, it’s a young girl. She’s now running east. HQ: What is her position? OP: She’s currently north of the authorized zone. SENTRY: Very inappropriate location. [Gunfire] OP: She’s now behind an embankment, 250 meters from the barracks. She keeps running east. The hits are right on her. HQ: Are you talking about a girl under ten? OP: Approximately a ten-year-old girl. HQ: Roger. OP: OP to HQ. HQ: Receiving, over. OP: She’s behind the embankment, dying of fear, the hits are right on her, a centimeter from her. SENTRY: Our troops are storming toward her now. They are around 70 meters from her. HQ: I understand that the company commander and his squad are out? SENTRY: Affirmative, with a few more soldiers. OP: Receive. Looks like one of the positions dropped her. HQ: What, did you see the hit? Is she down? OP: She’s down. Right now she isn’t moving. COMPANY COMMANDER [to HQ]: Me and another soldier are going in. [To the squad] Forward, to confirm the kill! CC [to HQ]: We fired and killed her. She has . . . wearing pants . . . jeans and a vest, shirt. Also she had a kaffiyeh on her head. I also confirmed the kill. Over. HQ: Roger. CC [on general communications band]: Any motion, anyone who moves in the zone, even if it’s a three-year-old, should be killed. Over. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:14 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 23 January 2006 Anglican Catholics contend that at the Reformation the Apostolic Succession was not lost within Anglican jurisdictions by Fr Matthew Kirby Spero News In the discussion of how to re-unite the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches the greatest stumbling block is the one least addressed. Ecumenically minded theologians on both sides, supported by their respective hierarchies, search for ways to harmonise Eastern and Western understandings of the Trinity, the Papacy, the Intermediate State and so on. And many of them do so in the belief or hope that apparent differences can be reconciled without either Church betraying its principles. But many would say that the most fundamental principle that each Church holds is that it and it alone is the One True Church and that those bodies outside its present communion are thus not so. Why? Because their confidence about their beliefs is founded on a confidence about who they are. And since both sides believe in the Unity and Unicity of the Church, it seems that this in combination with their self-identification as that Church leads logically to a perfectly symmetrical yet utterly irreconcilable understanding of the Church and the goal of ecumenism. If this is true, it means that, whatever theological and doctrinal barriers are broken, the greatest hurdle that will have to be faced is answering the question �Who is coming back to whom?� In other words, who, if anybody, will admit they were wrong about their basic identity and accept that for centuries they have been outside the Una Sancta, the Catholic Church? Catholic ecumenism is a question then, not just of how to forge a common future, but how to interpret a divided past. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:16 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 22 January 2006 ...This was not how I was supposed to become a mother for the first time. I was supposed to be married to a wonderful man who would love to be a father. We were supposed to be a happy family living in a nice house in the burbs. It didn't happen that way. Instead I was a 21 year old, black, college drop-out, with bad credit... ...Planned Parenthood has it wrong because they think that women are getting pregnant because they don't have access to contraception. In the overwhelmingly vast majority of cases this is false... ...Both young men and woman are not being taught morals and values that are needed to govern their sex life. Parents are partly to blame because they think because their kids are getting sex ed in school that the work is being done for them. Teachers are supposed to teach our kids the facts and parents are supposed to teach them what to do with those facts... ...There needs to be a culture that believes that the males role in raising children is just as important as the mothers...I have heard too many women say that they can raise their children alone without any help from anyone as if its a badge of honor...by advocating the idea that children really only need one parent, we are allowing men to abdicate their roles in the raising of children. We haven't empowered ourselves, we have crippled ourselves under an enormous weight that we should not have to bear alone ...The father should be there taking equal responsibility even if he is no longer in the home... Category: From a Blog.... -- posted at: 1:09 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 20 January 2006 Mother Antonia shares her experiences that led her from suburban Los Angeles to La Mesa Prison in Tijuana. She talks about the dream she had that led her to this life; her influences; her order- Servants of the 11th Hour; advice for young women considering their vocation; spiritual exercises to help us see the face of Christ in others; her views on conversion; her Mission of Service; the lack of Christ in each one of us, etc�.Direct download: Mother_Antonia_resident_La_Mesa_prison_in_Tiajuana.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:00 AM Comments[2] |
Thu, 19 January 2006 By Tom Heneghan, Religion Editor PARIS (Reuters) - The Roman Catholic Church has restated its support for evolution with an article praising a U.S. court decision that rejects the "intelligent design" theory as non-scientific. The Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said that teaching intelligent design -- which argues that life is so complex that it needed a supernatural creator -- alongside Darwin's theory of evolution would only cause confusion. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:57 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 19 January 2006 Pope Benedict XVI announces that next Wednesday he will release his new Encyclical, “Deus Caritas Est" ("God Is Love"). …The topic is not directly ecumenical, but the framework and background are ecumenical, as God and our love are the condition for the unity of Christians. They are the condition for peace in the world… Click here to read the complete release from Zenit News Service Category: In the News -- posted at: 1:10 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 19 January 2006 From Boston College to Georgetown University, Minors in Jewish Studies Take Root on Campus
By Jeri Zeder A cross balances atop the spire of Lyons Hall on Boston College's campus. But a hint of a Jewish presence - a small Israeli flag - is visible through one window of the Gothic-influenced building. That's the office of Maxim Shrayer, chair of the Slavic and Eastern languages department which is also the home of Boston College's new Jewish studies program. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:25 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 18 January 2006 By GINA HOLLAND, Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court steered clear of a major ruling on abortion Wednesday, instead giving New Hampshire a chance to save its parental notification law. Justices, in a rare unanimous abortion ruling, agreed that the New Hampshire law could make it too hard for some ill minors to get an abortion, but at the same time they were hesitant about stepping in to fix the statute. They told a lower court to reconsider whether the entire law is unconstitutional. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:50 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 18 January 2006 Race and Catholic Hierarchy Inflame Dispute in D.C. Parish By Robert E. Pierre Washington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, January 18, 2006 The order from the archdiocese had been clear: Stop the accusations, the name-calling, the disobedience to the authority of the Catholic Church. But parishioner Bill Alston, bundled against the cold outside a church, didn't care as he passed out fliers alleging to his fellow Catholics that a leader at his nearby home congregation, Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Anacostia, was "disrespectful, insulting and profane" and that the diocese was sweeping it under the rug. Click here to read the rest of the Article Note: This is a long article, but you should read the whole article before drawing any conclusions. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:12 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 16 January 2006 What has clearly changed are the numbers and status of laity, religious, and clergy in the mystical Body of Christ. Related to this is the altered understanding of their roles in the Church by Father John McCloskey The Catholic Church in the United States is in a state of profound transition. A priest or layman transported through time from 1965 to 2005 would be astonished and most likely disconcerted by the dramatic changes that have taken place in the 40 years following the close of Vatican II. Of course, the hierarchical and sacramental nature of the Church remains unchanged. What, however, has clearly changed are the numbers and status of laity, religious, and clergy in the mystical Body of Christ. Related to this is the altered understanding of their roles in the Church. Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:32 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 16 January 2006 By MARGARET RAMIREZ and MANYA A. BRACHEAR Knight Ridder Tribune “To the degree that justices do their job of applying the Constitution to cases, the religious makeup should make no difference. The real issue is how their faith shapes the way they interpret the Constitution.� DAVID MACHACEK, associate professor of public policy at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn. If Samuel Alito Jr. is elevated to the U.S. Supreme Court after this week’s hearings, he would become the fifth Roman Catholic justice on the bench, marking the first Catholic majority in history at a time of heightened debate on abortion, same-sex marriage and religious liberties. Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:38 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 15 January 2006 ![]() Interview with Tim Hayes, Father of 11. Tim discusses the spiritual dynamics of raising a large family. He discusses Church teaching in regards to openness to Life, Evangelium Vitae (the Gospel of Life) Encyclical by John Paul II, how a large family in today's world requires faith, how he connects with/teaches/listens to his Children, how to listen for God's voice in in the midst of a busy household, time management, etc... I decided to NOT make this a 2-parter like I mentioned in a previous post. (I just couldn't find a good breakpoint.) If you want more of Tim later, drop me a line and we'll see if there is anything else he might want to talk about. Direct download: Marriage_and_Family_life_Tim_Hayes_father_of_11.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:20 AM Comments[2] |
Sat, 14 January 2006 It's exciting to read about the continued development of the Church in largely non-Christian countries
Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:43 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 13 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:16 AM Comments[0] |
Thu, 12 January 2006 I should have Tim Hayes' interview posted by this weekend. It was a great conversation and I am considering providing it to you as a 2-part podcast. I look forward to hearing your comments. Tonight I will be interviewing Mother Antonia. If there are any questions that you suggest I ask, leave them in the comments section for this post. We are hearing that the Church is getting ready to make a statement in regards to "Limbo". If you know of anybody that can speak on this with authority, send me an email. Category: What's Next -- posted at: 2:50 PM Comments[1] |
Wed, 11 January 2006 BOGOTA, Colombia (Reuters) - A western Columbian town has angered the influential Catholic Church with a novel scheme to cut AIDS infections, threatening males over age 14 with fines if they fail to carry a condom. Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:55 PM Comments[0] |
Wed, 11 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:32 AM Comments[0] |
Tue, 10 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:28 PM Comments[1] |
Tue, 10 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 5:39 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 9 January 2006 We have some great programs on the way:
--Tim Hayes, Father of 11 who will discuss the spiritual implications of raising a large family. --At 77, Mother Antonia lives among drug traffickers and other criminals in a jail cell in La Mesa prison in Tijuana, Mexico, dispensing spiritual and material care to prisoners and their families.
NPR interview
--Renee Bondi is a gifted Christian singer beset by an accident that has left her paralyzed. She will be discussing her fortitude and sharing her profound and victorious story. Category: What's Next -- posted at: 11:28 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 9 January 2006 "Senate Democrats who would use Judge Alito's Catholic faith as a weapon against him are advised to read the United States Constitution . . ."
Category: In the News -- posted at: 11:08 AM Comments[1] |
Sun, 8 January 2006 MOST students leave Catholic schools believing the Catholic Church is largely irrelevant and too restrictive.
Category: In the News -- posted at: 12:46 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 3 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:27 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 3 January 2006 Discussion of Terry Barber's journey from working in a garage apartment transferring Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen vinyl LP's to cassettes in the '70's to president of a 50,000 units/month apostolate to distribute Catholic teaching via audio formats to the world with St. Joseph Communications.
Terry speaks about how he started St. Joseph's communications; how the content is vetted for orthodoxy; the current campaign to provide catechesis to parishes, e.g. Lighthouse Catholic Media; the combination of business and personal apostolate, etc... Direct download: Media_Apostolate_with_Terry_Barber_-_Universal_Call.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 1:42 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 2 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 3:56 PM Comments[1] |
Sun, 1 January 2006 Category: In the News -- posted at: 4:47 PM Comments[3] |
Fri, 30 December 2005 Category: In the News -- posted at: 2:26 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 30 December 2005 Category: In the News -- posted at: 10:54 AM Comments[1] |
Tue, 27 December 2005 Guest Aaron Kheriaty talks about St. John the Evangelist; Freud, Jung and Skinner; Addictions (dependencies and abuse); day to day challenges in bringing Christ to his patients. Direct download: Psychiatry_and_Religion-Universal_Call.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 12:30 AM Comments[0] |





















Mother Antonia shares her experiences that led her from suburban Los Angeles to La Mesa Prison in Tijuana. She talks about the dream she had that led her to this life; her influences; her order- Servants of the 11th Hour; advice for young women considering their vocation; spiritual exercises to help us see the face of Christ in others; her views on conversion; her Mission of Service; the lack of Christ in each one of us, etc�.
