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Understanding Religious Education and Taxation

The Principle of Fair Taxation in Religious Education The topic of how taxes are allocated for religious education, particularly within the context of Catholic and Protestant schools, raises important considerations about fairness and religious freedom. At its core, the issue revolves around whether Protestants should financially contribute, through taxes, to the education of Catholic children […]

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May not Catholics believe in creative evolution, or emergent evolution?

Creative evolution is a contradiction in terms. Evolution supposes an existent something progressively improving itself. Creation supposes the production of being where previously there was no being. No Catholic, therefore, can believe in creative evolution as if there were no need of a Creator. Many Catholics believe in a created evolution as a possible hypothesis

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The Church commands the rich “religiously to refrain from cutting down wages.” But the rich refuse to hear the Church.

The Church says that it is a crime to cut down wages in such a way that the worker is deprived of the ordinary necessities of life and of its moderate comforts. She has no objection to the reducing of wages if the cost of living be reduced proportionately. But these two reductions must be

The Church commands the rich “religiously to refrain from cutting down wages.” But the rich refuse to hear the Church. Read More »

If the miracles were so evident, I don’t see how the Jews could refuse to accept Christianity?

Many a man knows what he ought to do, but to do it is another thing altogether. The Jews could not honestly deny that Christ was of God, and that His religious teaching should be accepted. Some did accept it; others did not. Even God would not compel these to accept the true religion, and

If the miracles were so evident, I don’t see how the Jews could refuse to accept Christianity? Read More »

If two married Protestants both become Catholics, have they to be married again in the Catholic Church?

No. They were both Protestants at the time of their marriage, and the Catholic Church declares such marriages to be binding before God. The law of the Church in this matter extends to marriages in which at least one of the parties is a Catholic. Radio Replies Volume 1 by Rev. Dr. Leslie Rumble MSC

If two married Protestants both become Catholics, have they to be married again in the Catholic Church? Read More »

I have known Priests to worry Catholics who have married outside the Catholic Church.

A Priest has the obligation to try to save souls, and he has to inspire Catholics lo observe the laws of their Church. If a Catholic is living as the Catholic conscience forbids, a Priest would be little like Christ if he simply left that soul to perish. And after all, the Priest would find

I have known Priests to worry Catholics who have married outside the Catholic Church. Read More »

Protestantism is not a protest against Christ, but against the Roman Church.

Christ promised that His Church would not fail. The Protestant Reformers said that it did fail. Instead of protesting merely against the bad lives of some Catholics, and even of some Priests, they went too far, and protested against the Church as such, asserting that Christ had failed to keep His promise concerning it. This

Protestantism is not a protest against Christ, but against the Roman Church. Read More »

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