Unity, Truth, and Catholic Social Thought
by Robert P. GeorgeWe should first be focused on the question, “What is true?” Continue Reading »
We should first be focused on the question, “What is true?” Continue Reading »
For Augustine, love is the most basic appetite of the soul. Continue Reading »
People are changed by and through relationships of love—with God and with each other. Continue Reading »
The history of literary theory sheds some light on the blasphemous behavior of Professor Liew at College of the Holy Cross. Continue Reading »
Does our eternal salvation depend on the concrete acceptance of the truths of faith? Continue Reading »
Those embracing Amoris Laetitia should remember the difference between a real development of doctrine and what Cardinal Newman calls a corruption. Continue Reading »
Germain Gabriel Grisez, a man of the Church and one of the greatest thinkers of our age, passed away on February 1. Continue Reading »
With his “cultural-linguistic” approach to Christianity, George Lindbeck hoped to find a way for ecclesial theology to reenter the university. Continue Reading »
Why has “It’s a religion” replaced “It’s bad form” as a rhetorical disparagement? Continue Reading »
If “theology” means “faith seeking understanding,” and “faith” is not being used subjectively, then there is no theology outside Christianity. Continue Reading »