Why a 50-Year Mortgage Fails the Financial Test—and What Catholic Social Teaching Requires
Before signing on the dotted line, every Catholic should understand the long-term financial and moral consequences of the 50-year mortgage.
Before signing on the dotted line, every Catholic should understand the long-term financial and moral consequences of the 50-year mortgage.
In the dire civilization-ending circumstances we are in, it’s tempting to grasp onto anything or anyone that would promise a way out, but Catholics should remember: Christ is the only way.
The blatant idolization of unfettered global “free” trade aggressively clung to by the Wall Street Journal has them lashing out at anyone who would dare support Trump’s tariffs.
For many conservative Catholics, Viktor Orbán’s Hungary has stood out as the last bastion of Christian Europe, but their voting record at the UN tells a different story.
Amid so much toxicity, we find ourselves in desperate need of an antidote. Today, on this Feast of Mary, Mother of God, I submit that it is she, our Queen, who is the antidote.
Our Bishop didn’t just close and sell our church, he swindled parishioners into paying for what turned out to be capital improvements to make the sale more lucrative.
Assisted suicide encourages a global participation in rejecting Jesus as the Messiah in its denial of redemptive suffering.
Most Gen Z converts weren’t compelled to conversion by liturgical lace and incense, they were escaping the desert of safe spaces that said they were okay, when it was clear they definitely were not.
Those who want social standards of dress raised above t-shirts and sweatpants will fail to influence more than a small handful through moralistic arguments.
If we are disquieted by the state of the Church and the world, recall that the Christ child chose to enter into it, in bitter cold and darkness.
The sentiment often expressed as, “who am I to judge,” is so commonplace in our culture that it hardly raises even a Catholic eyebrow when spoken in the context of Christian morality.
While scientific inquiry and advances have changed the world we live in, it does not have the power to penetrate even a centimeter into the primary question of God.
The poverty and humility of Christ is best understood not simply by contemplating his life after the incarnation, but by understanding what He gave up to suffer and die for us.
Christmas, for Christians, is primarily about our only true home, which is to be found in Heaven, the gates of which were opened by the coming of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
What often passes for conversation is something else entirely: the pursuit of validation.
Our bishops continue to offer stones to the faithful who are simply asking for bread.
Learned ignorance of the truth may just be that impenetrable final state of the reprobate mind spoken of in Scripture.
After fifty long years of feminism, women are finally more independent, more educated, more career oriented…and more miserable than ever.