Religion

When Caesar Claims What Is Not His

By Justin Katz | February 11, 2010 |

Joseph Bottum notes a piece of legislation in the United Kingdom that looms as a logical subsequent step for liberal legal and cultural trends in the United States: … the bill’s most controversial provision would enjoin churches and other religious bodies from discriminating on the basis of gender or sexual orientation in the selection of…

The Difference a Pope Makes

By Justin Katz | February 10, 2010 |

In keeping with the theme of confidence as a prerequisite to true tolerance, Joseph Bottum explores the way in which the authority represented by the papacy gives the Roman Catholic Church a theological coherence that has preserved its voice in modern society: For a long while, Americans thought Catholicism was an un-American form of religion,…

A Millennium of Separating

By Justin Katz | February 9, 2010 |

With the intention of zooming out a bit for some mid-afternoon reflection, I note Robert Louis Wilken’s review of a book by Tom Holland and its striking proclamation: That, at least, is the thesis of Tom Holland’s new book, The Forge of Christendom, a provocative and elegantly written account of the end of the first…

A Relationship with Knowledge

By Justin Katz | February 5, 2010 |

First, a line that’s supremely relevant for those of us who’ve been beating our heads against a wall of political inertia, in Rhode Island: In my experience, compulsively objective scientists are evenly matched, or even outmatched, by shamelessly subjective humanists. More than once I’ve been shocked by colleagues who seem unable to grasp that richly…

Top Baseball Prospect Signed by God’s Team

By Marc Comtois | January 25, 2010 |

I heard about Grant Desme this morning on the radio. He’s a pretty good baseball player. The Athletics picked Desme in the second round of the 2007 amateur draft and he was starting to blossom. He was the only player in the entire minors with 30 home runs and 30 stolen bases last season. Desme…

Learning to Be Good

By Justin Katz | January 24, 2010 |

A comment section recently brought out the topic of whether children are born with a moral sense and ended with BobN arguing as follows: … Young minds are very plastic and amoral. As Reagan said, freedom is never more than one generation away from being lost. Today’s society is filled with examples of young people…

Taking the Less Traveled Path

By Justin Katz | January 20, 2010 |

Folks who remember Ryan Bilodeau from his days as a prominent College Republican at the University of Rhode Island might not know that he’s entered Our Lady of Providence Seminary. He tells his inspiring story in the current Rhode Island Cathotlic: My journey to OLP, like that of my brother seminarians, is a unique one.…

Corrupted by Association

By Justin Katz | January 18, 2010 |

My Rhode Island Catholic column, this month, takes up the corrupting influence that associations and images can have on our thoughts: We live in a society that’s much too quick to dismiss the significance of simple associations, taking on faith that the images that splash across television screens and flood public spaces couldn’t possibly lodge…

Don’t Let Randomness Validate Chaos

By Justin Katz | January 17, 2010 |

The photograph of the two-year-old Haitian being handed into his mother’s arms has got to be among the most amazing captures of human expression that I’ve ever seen. The ordeal from which the boy has just been rescued is still discernible in his face, but his focus on his mother mixes with, well, almost surprise,…

The Federal Church of the United States of America

By Justin Katz | January 17, 2010 |

By now, you’re likely to have heard Martha Coakley’s interpretation of the First Amendment’s application to the matter of abortion. In conversation with radio talk host Ken Pittman, the Democrats’ candidate for U.S. Senate spoke as follows: Ken Pittman: Right, if you are a Catholic, and believe what the Pope teaches that any form of…