Religion

Two Choices, Neither Science

By Justin Katz | April 21, 2010 |

Robert Chase restates a recurrent theme in a recent consideration of science fiction and religion: … Starting with Fred Hoyle, himself the author of such science-fiction novels as The Black Cloud, scientists have realized the universe is exquisitely fine-tuned to produce life. If protons were just 0.2 percent more massive, they would be unstable and…

Zealots Never Sleep

By Justin Katz | April 18, 2010 |

Think what you will of the outcome, it’s astonishing — and not a little unsettling — that there are people who think it the most important use of their time and resources to battle the benign and vapid symbolism of a particular “national day of”: A federal judge in Wisconsin ruled the National Day of…

A Dangerous Fine Line in Blending Public/Private Education

By Justin Katz | April 17, 2010 |

There are two factors — arguably in opposing ideological directions — in which this news should raise concerns: A plan to create what could be the first U.S. public charter schools run by a Roman Catholic archdiocese is meeting resistance from those who worry about whether religious messages and icons will really stay out of…

Growth Rather than Radical Reworking

By Justin Katz | April 9, 2010 |

The following passage, from an autobiographical essay by Fr. Richard Neuhaus, from 2002, caught my eye, because it strikes me as a generally applicable principle for organizational growth, as opposed to continual redefinition: The Church’s teaching lives forward; it is not reconstructed backward—whether from the fifth century or the sixteenth or the nineteenth or the…

The Religion of Rhode Island’s Public University

By Justin Katz | April 5, 2010 |

Last year, Notre Dame University was the center of national attention, because it had asked abortion-supporting President Obama to give the commencement address and was planning to give him an honorary degree. The problem was, of course, that Notre Dame is explicitly a Catholic organization, and while nobody objected to pro-choice speakers, in general, many…

The Believing Modern

By Justin Katz | April 4, 2010 |

Given the day, and the surprising amount of interest displayed, ’round here, in conversation of religion’s clash with modernity and postmodernity, current editor Joseph Bottum’s first publication in First Things, back in 1994, merits some consideration: We were all of us raised as moderns, however, and even as I write these words, my own modernness…

Fish on Fridays

By Carroll Andrew Morse | April 2, 2010 |

Nothing symbolizes the supposed arbitrariness of religion to those predisposed towards skepticism towards religious belief more than does the Catholic practice of eating fish on Fridays during the season of Lent. I’ll admit to having asked myself, especially on Good Friday, what connection there is between fish and the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. And then…

The World Has a Story

By Justin Katz | April 2, 2010 |

Given comment section conversation, and the fact that it’s Good Friday, a Robert Jensen piece from 1993 seems an appropriate item for contemplation: … modernity has supposed we inhabit what I will call a “narratable world.” Modernity has supposed that the world “out there” is such that stories can be told that are true to…

The Sun Exists Always Beyond the Clouds

By Justin Katz | April 1, 2010 |

Already, with the rains, the bushes had begun to bud, and by this morning, flowers were asserting themselves on the landscape. Now the sun is working its way from behind the clouds, and though we’ll be a long time drying, the day will come, and the greenery will be all the more plentiful for the…

Acknowledging One Ultimate Path

By Justin Katz | March 22, 2010 |

My column in the Rhode Island Catholic, this month, takes up the question of whether every religion can be equally valid: This brand of ecumenism reduces religion to a ritualized variation on self-help psychology. Rather than standing as an attempt to understand the world as we find it, one’s religious affiliation becomes a font of…