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In All Things
Tim Reidy
In honor of tomorrow s feast celebrating Our Lady of Lourdes Loyola Productions has kindly sent along this clip from their new video Who Cares About the Saints featuring our own Father Jim Martin talking about Saint Bernadette Subirous
The Good Word
Barbara Green
These readings about leprosy or some skin eruption are particularly challenging since we both think we know about such things and do but also may miss a good deal of what is under discussion in both narratives Both stories assume and maintain the importance of a system which includes skin dise
In All Things
Michael Sean Winters
President Barack Obama rsquo s first prime time press conference was a case study in effective political communication Not only did he get all three major networks to cover the press conference live guaranteeing a huge audience he filled the full hour with thoughtful and thorough answers to the q
In All Things
Michael Sean Winters
Yesterday rsquo s Outlook section of the Washington Post had an article that argued effectively c ontemporary business culture has distorted the spirit of American capitalism by rewarding mediocrity and even failure The article is a must read although it was short on specifics as to how we ca
Howard J.Hubbard
Pope Benedict's challenge to the world
Politics & Society
James T. KeaneJim McDermott
The truth behind Robert C. Hartnett, S.J.'s ongoing battle with McCarthy is that in an era when attacking McCarthy was professional suicide, Hartnett did so repeatedly.
Poetry
Angela Alaimo O'Donnell

“She had a sister called Mary,

Michael J. O’Loughlin
Harold M. Messmer, Jr. holds an AB from Loyola University Chicago and is currently the chief executive officer of Robert Half International, the Menlo Park, California-based professional staffing and consulting firm that operates over 400 locations worldwide. Messmer was featured in a 2002 BusinessW
Books
William A. Barry
Father Joseph Langford co-founder with Mother Teresa of the Missionaries of Charity Fathers in 1983 believes that her spirituality is a gift for all people of our time hence he has undertaken this labor of love to make her spirituality more accessible By and large he succeeds although there are
Dave Nantais

Many people don’t know that Motown founder Berry Gordy Jr. was also a great songwriter. He helped write several tunes for singer Jackie Wilson, including the hit “Lonely Teardrops.” The song “Shop Around” by the Miracles, co-written by Gordy and Smokey Robinson and released in 1961, became Motown’s first national hit and earned the company’s first gold record for selling one million copies.

Thomas A. Shannon

The presidential election of 2008 was no different than many other elections in that a significant amount of rhetoric was employed by all involved, candidates and their surrogates alike. However, this election was also characterized by a notable amount of religious rhetoric, particularly by many in the Catholic hierarchy and others associated with them.

The 2008 election rehashed much of the debate surrounding abortion and Catholic politicians that was so prevalent in 2004, this time with a particular focus on the 2007 USCCB document Faithful Citizenship. I will note two themes.

The first concerns the bishops’ actions prior to the election. Paragraph 36 of Faithful Citizenship states: “When all candidates hold a position in favor of an intrinsic evil, the conscientious voter faces a dilemma. The voter may decide to take the extraordinary step of not voting for any candidate or, after careful deliberation, may decide to vote for the candidate deemed less likely to advance such a morally flawed position and more likely to pursue other authentic human goods.” It is this paragraph and the apparent opening that it provided for including other social justice issues in deciding one’s vote that, in my judgment, prompted sixty bishops to make the case that the single issue of abortion should in fact take priority in the voting booth. They set out to close what they perceived as a dangerous loophole and to keep abortion as the only relevant issue in the election.

The second theme regards the bishops’ statements after the election, which continue to emphasize the primacy of the abortion issue. In his concluding address to the November bishops’ meeting (and after he sent a statement of congratulations to Barack Obama), Cardinal Francis George, the president of the bishops’ conference, gave a presentation on the 2008 election consisting of nine paragraphs. The first paragraph identifies some social justice issues:  immigration, education, health care, religious freedom, and peace at home and abroad. The remaining eight paragraphs are devoted in varying ways to the abortion issue, specifically the Freedom of Choice Act. In the same month, Cardinal Francis Stafford gave a lecture at Catholic University of America in which he noted that “On November 4, 2008, America suffered a cultural earthquake.” He then described President-elect Obama’s rhetoric as postmodern and marking an agenda that is “aggressive, disruptive and apocalyptic.” The cardinal noted that “apocalyptic either means resistance to the divine and natural laws on reproduction and the preservation of human life or states the fundamental law of post-Christian world history: the more Christ’s kingdom is manifested as the light of the world …the more it will meet determined opposition.”

Why should we reflect on this use of rhetoric? Perhaps because it did not serve its purpose of dissuading Catholics for voting for a candidate who is, among other positions, moderately pro-choice. A majority of Catholics voted for Obama. In the diocese of Scranton, where Bishop Joseph Martino interrupted a parish group meeting on Faithful Citizenship to declare that he was the only authentic teacher of Catholic doctrine in the diocese, a significant majority of Catholics voted for Obama. What might we learn from this?

Of Many Things
Drew Christiansen
Confessions of a Lincoln devotee
News
High Hopes for U.S./Vatican Diplomacy VATICAN CITY--While registering its disappointment over an early presidential decision to restore funding to programs that offer abortions overseas, the Vatican has struck a predominantly positive tone as it opens relations with the administration of President B
Gerald F. Cavanagh
The ethical legacy of Catholic business schools
Faith in Focus
Frank Moan
A retired priest receives a revelation in prayer
Letters
Elephantine Issue In “Making a Mark” (1/5), Richard G. Malloy, S.J., writes eloquently of the danger of not acknowledging “the elephant in the sacristy” when writing about vocations to the priesthood: gay priests, and the impact the current church climate has on both these pr
Books
William C. Mills
First an acknowledgment I am not new to the work of Barbara Brown Taylor Years ago when I was in seminary a friend of mine recommended her collection of sermons Home By Another Way as well as her thoughts on preaching called The Preaching Life both of which I quickly devoured Her sermons cap
Michael J. O’Loughlin
Gail A. Gerono holds an MBA from the Donahue Graduate School of Business at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, PA, as well as a BA in French from Mercyhurst College. Gerono is the vice president of investor relations, communications, and human resources at Calgon Carbon, a company that removes conta
Gerald D. Coleman
Barack Obama, FOCA & Catholic attitudes about abortion