Catholic Magazine: Most Catholics believe Jesus was human
A study, which will be featured in the U.S. Catholic Magazine's October issue, inds that the people surveyed view Jesus as a feminist who likely would approve of women in the ordained priesthood today.The unscientific questionnaire, distributed to hundreds of the magazine's readers, provides the foundation for a special issue examining how Jesus is seen by members of America's largest church. The respondents largely adhere to traditional Catholic...
Internet 'adultery' sinful, says Catholic magazine
Forget about phone sex. That's Stone Age stuff. What has the editors of an Italian Catholic magazine worried these days is "adultery" over the Internet. Adultery is adultery, even if it is virtual, according to Famiglia Cristiana (Christian Family), a magazine close to the Vatican. It is just as sinful as the real thing.The question of the morality of flirting, falling in love and perhaps betraying a spouse via the World Wide Web surfaced in the advice...
CATHOLIC MAGAZINE EDITOR TO DISCUSS THE CHURCH
Margaret O'Brien Stenfels, the editor of Commonweal, an independent Catholic magazine published in New York, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Bishop William Cosgrove Center located near St. Peter Catholic Church, E. 18th St. and Superior Ave.She will speak about how the Catholic Church in America has been shaped and factors that will influence the future of the church....
Catholic Magazine: MAHONY DISPUTES PRIEST'S SEXUAL ACTIVITY CLAIM
Archbishop Roger Mahony has disputed a claim of widespread sexual activity by Roman Catholic priests in violation of celibacy vows.St. Anthony Messenger magazine, published in Cincinnati by the Franciscan religious order, printed an article in its August edition in which a Midwestern priest using the pseudonyn "Father William Wells" said mandatory celibacy is being flouted routinely, sometimes with the knowledge of bishops. Wells, saying he was using a false name to...
Editor calls 'virtual adultery' a sin,
Catholic magazine addresses fears about Internet morality
Forget about phone sex. That's stone age stuff. What has the editors of an Italian Catholic magazine worried these days is "adultery" over the Internet. Adultery is adultery, even if it is virtual, according to Famiglia Cristiana (Christian Family), a magazine close to the Vatican. It is just as sinful as the real thing.The question of the morality of flirting, falling in love and perhaps betraying a spouse via the World Wide Web surfaced in the advice...