Thursday, June 28, 2012

God: Dr. Peter Kreeft




Dr Peter Kreeft

Atheists deny God's existence; mystics experience God directly; saints are called friends of God. How can we finite human beings really know Him, the Infinite God? Based on the Catechism of the Catholic Church and Holy Scripture, this is taken from the Luke E. Hart Series "Basic Elements of the Catholic Faith" and provided by the Knights of Columbus Catholic Information Service.


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Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/god
 
 

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Making Sense Out of Suffering




Lighthouse CD audio talk by Dr. Scott Hahn




We all experience suffering at some time in our lives. Our tribulations range from small disappointments to serious tragedies. Listen as scripture scholar and lay theologian, Dr. Scott Hahn, makes sense out of suffering by drawing from the wisdom and insight of God's Word. He helps us find the meaning of our suffering by showing us how to unite it to the suffering of Christ on the Cross.

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Taken from: http://www.thecatholicgiftstore.com/music-and-audio-talks/lighthouse-cds/making-sense-out-of-suffering/prod_2475.html










Children the victims in minefield of same-sex marriage breakdowns




Gary Johns From: The Australian June 21, 2012 12:00AM


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HOMOSEXUALS can love and they can be monogamous. They are in all respects, save one, like anyone else. Of course, the respect in which they are different is that they cannot conceive children through sexual intercourse. Without children there is no life. True, some heterosexual couples cannot conceive, but that is by exception.

The chairman, Graham Perrett, and some members of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs have supported the Marriage Equality Amendment Bill 2012 and the Marriage Amendment Bill 2012; each proposes to change the Marriage Act to recognise homosexual marriage.



Perrett suggests that "marriage is still the best way to protect committed monogamous relationships". And further: "The love between same-sex couples is no different to that of opposite-sex couples, and deserves no less the public recognition which marriage bestows."



He fails to mention children. If it is only about love and recognition of a monogamous relationship, then there is no debate: do what you like to marriage. But if it is about children and the best institutional means of securing their future, then there is a debate.



...For the supporters of homosexual marriage, marriage is not about reproduction; it is about delivering equality. Their claim ignores the fact two men or two women cannot as a matter of course, indeed, as a matter of intercourse, conceive children. Barring extraordinary intervention, there is no next generation.



The evidence seems clear: the best conditions for the creation and upbringing of children is a loving, long-term relationship. Whether these conditions are emulated in a homosexual relationship, however loving and stable, is the case in point. Homosexual couples may contrive to have children, but if they do so, a third and sometimes a fourth person enters the relationship.



I take a practical view on the matter, as prescribed by Murphy's law. If something can go wrong, it will go wrong.



In considering changes to the Marriage Act, the more people are involved, the likelier is the breakdown of the marriage. Moreover, should breakdown occur, it would be more difficult than it otherwise would be to manage the future of the children.



Placing to one side the ideal -- natural conception within wedlock -- homosexual marriage may work for children.



Heterosexual as well as homosexual marriage where IVF or surrogacy is used, however, carries the potential for donor claims during the marriage, or at its dissolution.



My argument is that, while homosexual marriage may not carry an extra risk per se, if there is an intention to have children, it always starts with a third person, a sleeper in the relationship. This is not true as a matter of course in heterosexual marriage.



Start with the simple case of a failed marriage: one man, one woman and one healthy child. The relationship breaks down. So long as one or both parents are not incompetent, parenting can be shared through the length of the child's life. Even still, there is a great deal of litigation at the Family Law Courts over these matters.



Consider a complex and, incidentally, true case: two women in a relationship conceive babies by artificial means to two men in a relationship. Both relationships break down. Potentially, each child has four people claiming a relationship with the children.



The Family Law Courts and many talented practitioners in Australia work mightily to settle what two parents and more cannot: the continuing shared parenting of children after the dissolution of the marriage. Adding more claimants makes it much more difficult.



Marriage as an institution for child-rearing is not foolproof. Adding complexity to an already increasingly complex world for marriage intensifies as a matter of course, not as a matter of exception, for homosexuals.



In the 1980s, Australian state and territory governments began amending legislation to provide de facto couples with similar rights to married couples, and from the end of the 90s they began to extend these rights to same-sex de facto couples to remove discrimination based on sexual orientation in relationships.



But that is as far as it goes.



The Australian Human Rights Commission has been at its unhelpful best in its submissions to the parliamentary committee, arguing that "the principle of equality requires that any formal relationship recognition available under federal law to opposite-sex couples should also be available to same-sex couples".



Homosexual marriage begins with a vastly different assumption to heterosexual marriage. The assertion of equality cannot overcome this assumption.



The commission also states, "We do hold a very genuine concern that anything that publicly legitimises discrimination of any kind does play to a feeling that these relationships can be treated with less respect." The respect is for the institution of marriage, not a contrived equality.



gary.johns@acu.edu.au


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Taken from: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/children-the-victims-in-minefield-of-same-sex-marriage-breakdowns/story-fn8v83qk-1226403491438

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Overcoming the New Age Movement




Matthew Arnold

Listen as a former new ager and Catholic convert Matthew Arnold shares his incredible journey from darkness into the light. Learn how this magic consultant and performer in the entertainment industry came to the truth that set him free from the powers of the occult as he talks about new age practices and their incompatibility with the timeless teachings of Christ and His Church.


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Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/overcoming-the-new-age-movement






Feminism Misunderstood: One Woman's Journey to Peace





Jane Brennan

Jane Brennan, a former member of NOW and former Planned Parenthood volunteer, shares her heart-wrenching story of abortion and subsequent years of depression to her final conversion to the Catholic Church.

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Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/feminism-misunderstood-one-woman-s-journey-to-peace


Monday, June 18, 2012

Contraception: Cracking the Myths




Janet Smith

In this new revised edition of Professor Janet Smith's groundbreaking expose on the effects of the pill on modern society, she presents a God-centered view of sexuality that can bring married couples a joy that they could have never imagined. Backed by statistics and armed with decades of research, Prof. Smith shows the crippling effect of the contraceptive culture on our relationship with God, our romantic relationships and marriages, the culture at large and our physical and mental health.

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Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/contraception-cracking-the-myths

Cardinal Ouellet says society has lost sense of marriage, family


Written by Sarah MacDonald Catholic News Service


Thursday, 07 June 2012 15:25




MAYNOOTH, Ireland - The Vatican official who will act as papal legate for the International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin defended marriage based on the church's traditional teaching and urged Catholics to use the resource of the family to confront the challenges of secularized societies.




Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, head of the Congregation for Bishops, made his comment in his keynote address to open the International Theology Symposium at St. Patrick's College June 6.



The symposium is part of the International Eucharistic Congress celebrations taking place in Ireland and precedes the full program of events scheduled to begin in Dublin June 10.



Cardinal Ouellet told delegates -- including Irish Cardinal Sean Brady, as well as international bishops and theologians -- that the church must promote the family in this time of "unprecedented anthropological crisis ... characterized by the loss of a sense of marriage and the family."



In an address described by Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin as a "masterly synthesis" of the pastoral challenges faced by the church in terms of evangelization, Cardinal Ouellet explored the integration of the theology of communion with the theology of marriage, the development of the sacraments of initiation, the priesthood and the relationship between baptism and the ordained ministry and their significance in the life of the church.



The cardinal said one of the important tasks for theology in relation to pastoral practice was to integrate and reattach the manifestations of eucharistic piety such as adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, eucharistic processions and private Masses.



Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament must not be "belittled as a pious but now outdated custom," he said and added that the dialogue among theologians, pastors and the faithful "must be carried out in a climate of openness and respect for spiritual traditions."



Before his address the cardinal, who as archbishop of Quebec hosted the 49th International Eucharistic Congress in 2008, rang the congress bell "as a symbol that gathers us together." More than half a million people, including Pope Benedict XVI, have rung the bell.



The challenges to marriage were highlighted earlier in the day by Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa, Honduras.



Cardinal Rodriguez defended the church's discipline on clerical celibacy to reporters and rejected the suggestion that celibacy was to blame for the shortage of priests in the church.



"It is not celibacy that is the problem. The problem is a life commitment. You see the same issue in marriage. Many people do not want to be married because they have a difficulty in committing for ever," he said.



Cardinal Rodriguez, president of Caritas Internationalis, the church's umbrella organization for charities, said the Eucharist was at the heart of the church's charitable action.



"Without the Eucharist, Caritas Internationalis could not be present as it is now in 164 countries of the world," he said.



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Taken from: http://www.catholicregister.org/contact/item/14662-cardinal-ouellet-says-society-has-lost-sense-of-marriage-family



Thursday, June 7, 2012

Catholics defend Spanish bishop over gay lifestyle criticism





Madrid, Spain, Apr 18, 2012 / 04:04 pm (CNA).- An international group of Catholic doctors voiced support for a Spanish bishop who has come under media fire for criticizing destructive behaviors within the local gay community. “Catholic doctors profoundly respect persons with homosexual traits,” but “do not support the practice of homosexuality,” said the International Federation of Catholic Doctors Associations in an April 17 statement siding with the bishop. Bishop Juan Antonio Reig Pla of Alcala de Henares has faced intense criticism after remarks given in a Good Friday sermon in which he condemned sexual practices he believes to be harmful. As part of a larger cultural critique of sexual behavior in modern society, he lamented how some with same-sex attraction “corrupt and prostitute themselves or go to gay night clubs” in order to “validate” their struggle. “I assure you what they encounter is pure hell,” he said on April 6. Despite outcry from local politicians and some within Spain's gay community over the bishop's homily, the Catholic federation supported his remarks as a valid insight. They pointed out the broader issues Bishop Reig Pla brought up such as the scourge of sex trafficking in Europe and controversial sex-ed programs aimed at young children. “Catholic doctors profoundly lament the failure of modern states and of public international institution to combat 'sexual tourism,' involving adults or children,” the association said in its statement. They also joined the bishop in denouncing “the contents of some textbooks,” especially those used in Spain's recently axed Education for the Citizenry course, which encouraged children “to 'explore' all areas of sexuality.” “We are right in every way to consider these lessons perverse,” the doctors said, “And Bishop Reig is right in every way to condemn these and other abuses of the human being.”
 
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Taken from: