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Voices
Charles C. Camosy is a professor of medical humanities at the Creighton University School of Medicine and holds the Monsignor Curran Fellowship in Moral Theology at St. Joseph Seminary in New York. He is the author of eight books, including, most recently, One Church. 
FaithColumns
Charles C. Camosy
Engagement with Catholic schools can help seminarians enter ministry with a clearer sense of the pastoral needs of their flock.
FaithShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
If you identify as pro-choice, resist the label pro-abortion and sincerely want to reduce the number of unwanted and coerced abortions, the opportunities to do so are abundant and bipartisan.
FaithShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
Our consumerist throwaway culture has severe and palpable noneconomic effects, driving the resort to abortion, assisted suicide, and even the way we treat animals in factory farms.
Politics & SocietyShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
In his new document, 'Laudate Deum,' Pope Francis gives us more hope about humanity’s right relationship with other animals, even if it lacks specifics.
Politics & SocietyIdeas
Charles C. Camosy
AI has the capacity to undermine our understanding of the human person.
FaithOpinion
Charles C. CamosyJoe Vukov
With new technology that aims to manufacture a human embryo without sperm or egg, are scientists coming too close to playing God?
Politics & SocietyShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
The ‘wokeism’ crisis in public education is a historic opportunity for Catholic schools.
Politics & SocietyInterviews
Charles C. Camosy
It may appear strange that a Catholic moral theologian (me) would interact with an atheist philosopher who has consistently rejected the sanctity of human life while demanding we respect the lives of nonhuman animals.
A close-up of a Catholic wedding ceremony, focusing on the hands of the bride, groom and priest.
FaithShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
Falling marriage rates across the globe threaten vulnerable women and children. The Catholic Church can help if we put aside political idolatry and work as different members of the same body of Christ.
A painting of Galileo, dressed in black, right, facing off against three members of the Roman Inquisition, left.
FaithShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
Facts, as they say, are stubborn things. In defending abortion, some pro-choice activists can only ask women to ignore what their eyes evidently see.