Posts Tagged ‘ Catholic Church ’

Professor Fired for Teaching Catholic Belief in a Catholic Class

July 20, 2010
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Professor Fired for Teaching Catholic Belief in a Catholic Class

By Daniel Crandall Here’s yet another case of reality intruding where only the satirical newspaper, The Onion, once trod. An adjunct professor at the University of Illinois was fired for explaining Catholic beliefs concerning Natural Law to students enrolled in a class about Catholicism. Howell, who taught Introduction to Catholicism and Modern Catholic Thought, says he was fired at the end of the spring semester after sending an e-mail explaining some Catholic beliefs to his students preparing for an exam. What bit of pedagogy was so verboten that the University of Illinois could no longer abide Prof. Howell’s presence on campus? That would be nothing less than the Church’s teaching concerning homosexual behavior: “Natural Moral Law says that Morality must be a response to REALITY…. In other words, sexual acts are only appropriate for people who are complementary, not the same.” This bit of Catholic doctrine so offended one student that it resulted in an anonymous message being sent to religion department head Robert McKim complaining of, you guessed it, “hate speech.” The complaining student, however, isn’t even in Prof. Howell’s class: An unidentified . . . student claimed to be a friend of the offended student. The

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Barbara Nicolosi Challenges Hollywood Bound Christians

April 12, 2010
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Barbara Nicolosi Challenges Hollywood Bound Christians

In a compelling interview with Patheos.com, a website designed “to engage in the global dialogue about religion and spirituality,” Barbara Nicolosi-Harrington shares opinions that Christians who want to affect the cultural influence professions should take very seriously. Barbara is a screenwriter, author, professor at Pepperdine University, and the founder of Act One, “an organization that seeks to nurture the next generation of Christian artists and media pioneers.” Concerning breaking into the cultural influence professions, Barbara notes that Hollywood is “the major league.” If you want to compete, her advice is simple: You shouldn’t seek to be the exception to the rule, if you’re going to make a profession out of something. You should do what everyone tells you to do. Work hard. Find the best education and training you can. This is a field like any other. The misperception is that because we make entertainment, people think it should be entertaining along the way. It isn’t. It’s grueling.  But it is cool. Very cool. If you think Christian networks like EWTN or CBN will evangelize the culture, she advises you to think a second time. Dostoevsky said that man, in the end, will be saved by beauty — or nothing. 

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‘Angels and Demons’ Opens Well at U.S. Box Office, but Far Short of Predecessor

May 18, 2009
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‘Angels and Demons’ Opens Well at U.S. Box Office, but Far Short of Predecessor

      On the heels of a public relations juggernaut with the inspiring message that it’s "not as anti-Catholic as The Da Vinci Code!", the cinematic conspiracy thriller Angels and Demons finished first at the U.S. box office during the past weekend, providing some useful evidence about the effects of church boycotts. S. T. Karnick examines the facts.

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Catholics Revive Indulgences

February 20, 2009
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Catholics Revive Indulgences

      Dismayed by what conservative church members see as a loss of understanding of a central Christian doctrine, the concept of sin, the Catholic Church has been reviving the practice of indulgences. The church’s controversial return to a doctrine that fell out of favor in recent years has important social and cultural consequences that will by no means be limited to the Catholic Church but will in fact affect us all.

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Multiculturalism Gone Mad: “Christian Ramadan”

February 12, 2008
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For those who have yet to understand that multiculturalism is nothing of the sort and is merely cover for the continual denigration of Western Christian civilization in the ongoing internal effort toward its eventual overthrow, the latest news from Europe ought to do a good deal of convincing.

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The Brilliance of “Going My Way”

December 16, 2006
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The Brilliance of “Going My Way”

TV stations tend to show the great 1944 film Going My Way, directed by Leo McCarey and starring Bing Crosby and Barry Fitzgerald, more often around Christmas, even though only a couple of scenes are set during Advent. The film, however, always repays watching. In particular, it illustrates the superiority of moral suasion over coercion in the creation of civil order — a lesson always worth remembering. Although Going My Way won several Academy Awards, including Best Picture, the film’s reputation rapidly declined beginning in the 1960s, and critical consensus has long dismissed as trite, sentimental, and unsophisticated. This is an entirely erroneous and indeed dimwitted interpretation of the film, and one that cries out for redress. The story is familiar: easygoing, likeable Father O’Malley (Bing Crosby) is assigned by the local Catholic bishop to help bring St. Dominic’s Church, a faltering urban congregation led by Father Fitzgibbon (Barry Fitzgerald), back to its feet and in particular to overcome its financial problems. Crosby’s O’Malley represents the liberal side of the church — as it was then manifested, it is important to remember — and Fitzgibbon the conservative aspect. The key element here is that Crosby’s liberalism is entirely limited to

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"Culture is the expression of the guiding philosophy of the day."—Murray Rothbard

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