• The simple truth: streamline to the One Thing that matters
    The simple truth: streamline to the One Thing that matters
    February 1, 2022
    by Douglas M. Beaumont
    One of the most eye-opening statements I have ever read was Peter Kreeft’s discussion of stuff.
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  • Called to illuminate the darkness of right now
    Called to illuminate the darkness of right now
    January 1, 2022
    by Bishop Donald Hying
    When we actually start acting the Gospel out in the lived reality of economics, politics, and culture, we start getting into trouble.
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  • Life has but one meaning
    Life has but one meaning
    November 1, 2021
    by Peter Kreeft, Ph.D.
    A French Catholic writer of a century ago, Léon Bloy, frequently wrote this sentence. It is one of the most profound sentences I have ever read: “There is only one tragedy, in the end: not to have been a saint.”
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  • Openness to life, openness to God
    Openness to life, openness to God
    October 1, 2021
    by Brandon McGinley
    ...Seeing family size as proportional to sanctity is gravely unjust to those with medical or other hardships that place large families – or having children at all – out of reach.
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  • Critical thinking vs. critical theory – the crucial difference
    Critical thinking vs. critical theory – the crucial difference
    September 1, 2021
    by Noelle Mering
    The rejection of reason and nature has taken root … through the replacement of critical thinking with critical theory. The latter has been the engine of academic thought for decades, and its methods pervade every discipline and subject.
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  • Answering the burning question of what to do now
    Answering the burning question of what to do now
    August 1, 2021
    by Austin Ruse
    Do not give in to political correctness. It is a kind of terrorism.
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  • Recalling the Sheen of Catholicism’s heyday
    Recalling the Sheen of Catholicism’s heyday
    July 1, 2021
    by Fr. Charles Connor
    Another sign of the strength of American Catholicism in the 1950s was the number of converts who were received into the Church.
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  • Unexpected signs of faith – that don’t require it
    Unexpected signs of faith – that don’t require it
    June 1, 2021
    by Fr. John Riccardo
    I once read a story about an atheist who came to faith through the witness of Christians who were living radically altered lives. This man went to work amongst the poorest of the poor in violent, crime-ridden areas.
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  • The big lie: changing human nature
    The big lie: changing human nature
    May 1, 2021
    by Carrie Gress, Ph.D.
    In 1917, during one of Our Lady’s apparitions at Fatima, the three shepherd children were given a vision of hell. Our Lady warned that if people didn’t stop offending God, then another war would come.
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  • When envy is disguised as equality
    When envy is disguised as equality
    April 1, 2021
    by Peter Kreeft, Ph.D.
    I've never figured out why Americans can be so enthusiastic about equality. It’s necessary in many areas, of course – in math equations, in human rights, and in voting – but it’s dull. If values had color, courage would be red, joy yellow, hope green, peace blue, comfort tan, creativity purple, and equality gray.
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  • Appealing to God amid an unjust sentencing
    Appealing to God amid an unjust sentencing
    March 1, 2021
    by George Cardinal Pell
    Another Sunday without the Eucharist. I pray my other prayers with some extra zeal to mark the Lord’s day.
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  • Nihilism likely stepping stone to endemic depression
    Nihilism likely stepping stone to endemic depression
    February 1, 2021
    by Father Wade L. J. Menezes, C.P.M.
    [We must abide by] our faithfulness to daily duty, whether as a doctor, a farmer, a lawyer, a homeschooling mother of eight, a divorced dad of three striving to live a chaste life, a religious-order priest, a diocesan priest, a cloistered nun within a monastery enclosure, an active religious sister teaching in the classroom, a retired grandparent, a working grandparent, a recently widowed grandparent, a middle school or high school student, a college student, or whatever else we might be called to as part of our vocation and state in life.
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  • The strong will can get in its own way
    The strong will can get in its own way
    January 4, 2021
    by Tom Peterson & Ryan Hanning, Ph.D.
    The strong will, as we are using the term here, is not to be confused with the will that seeks greatness. The will that seeks greatness courageously discerns and chooses the good and directs the appetite toward it. The strong will, on the other hand, is dominated by taking action and often asserts independently of the intellect or the consideration of anyone else.
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  • The greatest gift of our lives
    The greatest gift of our lives
    December 1, 2020
    by Tyler Rowley & Bishop Joseph Strickland
    My parents had their share of struggles in their marriage and in raising a family of six children. One son died in infancy, and then they lost another when he was just eighteen. I suppose one of the strongest lessons I learned from both my parents was that whatever we were facing, we could always turn to our Catholic faith for strength and support.
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  • Re-engage the lost world of local politics
    Re-engage the lost world of local politics
    November 1, 2020
    by David L. Bahnsen
    Most damage is done at the local level of politics. I confess to this being a case of the pot calling the kettle black, having been a federal politics junkie for my entire adult life and most of my childhood, as well.
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  • Strong spiritual leaders at work - noble emulators of Christ
    Strong spiritual leaders at work - noble emulators of Christ
    October 1, 2020
    by Jim Graves
    A holy life is the fruit of a vibrant spiritual life, to which every Catholic is called. The observant Catholic leader, however, might be confused regarding steps to take for growing deeper in his relationship with the Lord, and how to Become an effective spiritual model in the workplace. Legatus Magazine spoke to four guides who devote their lives to helping others grow spiritually, on what these steps should be.
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  • Cultivating activists, not balanced American citizens
    Cultivating activists, not balanced American citizens
    October 1, 2020
    by Mary Rice Hasson, J.D., & Theresa Farnan, Ph.D.
    What do classicism, racism, xenophobia, sexism, and transgenderism have in common? These are the themes dominating the “Social Justice Book List,” the books recommended by the National Network of State Teachers of the Year for children in [public] preschool through sixth grade.
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  • What Catholics must know about Black Lives Matter
    What Catholics must know about Black Lives Matter
    September 1, 2020
    by Dave Durand
    What does it mean when a CEO says, “we support Black Lives Matter?” On the surface, it appears the company affirms the dignity and equality of Black people. If it were that simple, all Catholics would be obligated to support such a movement. However, the motives and beliefs of BLM are not that simple. In fact, BLM is an overtly anti-American, pro Marxist, anti-family, pro-LGBTQ anarchist movement, aimed at deconstructing the United States. Therefore, when a company expresses formal support of the Black Lives Matter movement, they are, at a minimum, passively endorsing all those motives.
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  • When one must resist, firm in the Faith
    When one must resist, firm in the Faith
    August 1, 2020
    by Dr. Anthony Esolen
    It is July 25, 1934. The scene is the chancellery of Austria. A man whom historians have not done justice lay on the floor, bleeding to death, while his Nazi executioners looked on in cold delight. He asked for a doctor. They refused.
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  • Nod to pandemic advances modern Christian persecution
    July 1, 2020
    by Bishop Athanasius Schneider
    On May 8, 2020, a document titled Appeal for the Church and the World: to Catholics and all people of good will was published [which this author signed]. Its initial signatories included, among others, three cardinals, nine bishops, 11 doctors, 22 journalists, and 13 lawyers.
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