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Articles in 'The Pope'
The Samaritan [Unorthodox] Woman at the Well as Prophecy of NEW Testament Unorthodoxy
By Scott Pauline
Last weekend at Mass, the priest said the Samaritans were unorthodox from the beginning. After the 40 years of wandering in the desert, they did not settle down with the true People of God, the Jews.
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Pope Saint Felix III
By Debra Booton McCoy
Saint Felix can be said to be the first pope of the Dark Ages. The Western Roman Empire had fallen when the barbarians, under leadership of Odoacer of the Herouli tribe, had overcome the weak Roman emperor. So, starting in 476, the previously highly civilized, organized Italian peninsula was run by the relatively unschooled Germanic barbarians.
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Deacon Roger & Helena Cartier--A Catholic Love Story for Us All to Honor
By Larry Peterson
St. John Paul II said, “Marriage is an act of will that signifies and involves a mutual gift, which unites the spouses and binds them to their eventual souls, with whom they make up a sole family - a domestic church.”
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The Face of Mercy to Those in Misery Part #2
By Deacon Mike Knuth
Love, forgiveness, and becoming instruments of mercy have been foundational themes that have highlighted our Holy Father’s messages on mercy this past year. They also form the foundation of his new Apostolic Letter, “Mercy and Misery” promulgated November 20th.
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Do you believe?
By George Calleja
Recently I was reading the passage from the Bible from John 19:35-37, and a particular passage made me think a lot. The passage is about the death of Jesus…
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Amoris Laetitia: Circumventing Church Teaching on the Indissolubility of Marriage
By Jason Izolt, M.Ed., M.A.T.
Anyone who pays even a little bit of attention to Catholic news, is well aware of the controversy that continues to grow out of the promulgation of Pope Francis’ Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia. For those who have been living under a rock (or do not pay attention to Catholic news), Amoris Laetitia is Pope Francis’ response to the Synod on the Family.
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The Face of Mercy to Those in Misery
By Deacon Mike Knuth
At a recent retreat my wife and I were conducting, I placed a large box before the group and told participants that we had been storing up all kinds of graces and merits from the Jubilee Year of Mercy and saving them in the box for them. They could store the box anywhere.
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Pope Francis: A Corrupt Creation, Christian Hope, and Rebirth
By Melanie Jean Juneau
On February 22, Pope Francis continued his catechesis on the importance of Christian hope in the face sin during his weekly General Audience. Although his reflections focused on the corruption of creation, they are not the opinions of a left-leaning environmentalist but the profound insights of a man of God.
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Are Some Of Our Church Leaders Actually Protestants?
By Arnold Scott
It sounds crazy to ask, but are some shepherds within the Catholic Church actually Protestants?
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Pope St. Simplicius
By Debra Booton McCoy
Pope St. Simplicius was the last pope to be elected without the intercession of Arian barbarians. He was elected March 3, 468 by the clergy and citizens of Rome without much agitation. Like many popes of this era, Simplicius was the son of a Roman citizen named Castinus, and was born in Tivoli, a town 30 kilometers from Rome.
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"Unassailable Reasons" - Marriage Between Only Man and Woman
By Greg Schlueter
First of all, we respect everyone’s right to choose their own profession of faith. We hope all would rigorously pursue truth and humbly avail to its findings!
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Question: Why So Many Divisions in Christianity?
By Charlie Johnston
Let's take a look at the divisions that have appeared in the Body of Christ over the centuries. This is by no means an exhaustive list, but more of just a background to our current tens of thousands of Christian denominations.
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Pope Saint Hilarius
By Debra Booton McCoy
Pope Hilarius is one of the first popes of whom we hear stories before his consecration.
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Catholicism: The Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End
By Dan Goddu
Religious pluralism, that is the principle of allowing a peoples with different religious beliefs, without penalty or favoritism from its government, to coexist in a civil society, is a principle that honors each and everyone's will to their own religious beliefs. However, theologically, there is no such thing as religious pluralism.
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The Church and the Lodge--Freemasonry and Catholics
By Rob Agnelli
With all of the tenacity of Sherman’s March to the Sea, all traces of the Confederacy in the United States are being wiped out. Flags are being removed from state capitol buildings, statues are being torn down and there has even been a call to rename the Dixie Classic Fair. There is however one confederate monument that will survive the scorched earth policy.
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A Short History of the Bible
By Ken Litchfield
The Bible is the collection of books that the Catholic Church decided could be read at Mass. It is a collection of books written by different authors with different writing styles over thousands of years for different audiences. It is not a manual on how to run a religion or build a church. Those things already existed before the Bible was assembled
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The Ego-Project God: How relativism encourages people to shape God into a reflection of their own ego
By Deacon Frederick Bartels
In his homily on April 18, 2005, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger defined moral relativism as letting oneself be tossed around by “every wind of doctrine” (see Eph. 4:14), and noted that modern man is constructing a “dictatorship of relativism that does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one’s own ego and desires.”
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