Month: March 2018

Retired Pope dubs Francis criticism as ‘foolish prejudice’

On the eve of the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis’ election, retired Pope Benedict XVI has defended the continuity of the Church’s teaching under his successor and dismissed those who criticise the Pope’s theological foundations. In a letter sent to Msgr Dario Vigano, prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for Communication, Pope Benedict applauded the publication…

Holding the nation together

Martin Mansergh The View   Following the recent acute and unseasonal cold spell, a photograph appeared on the front of the Tipperary Star showing a winter scene of the centre of Thurles, taken from the bridge over the River Suir, with the caption (anonymous): “A snowflake is one of God’s most fragile creations, but look…

The many ways of Faith in modern times

What We Talk About When We Talk About Faith by Peter Stanford (Hodder & Stoughton, £14.99) Emily
 Keyes   Though religion implies community, it is easy to forget that religion is also an individual pursuit, with each practitioner possessing their own understanding of faith. This is what Peter Stanford, a long-time journalist for the Catholic Herald with…

John Redmond: New light on a great Irish leader

John Redmond. Selected letters and memoranda, 1880-1918 edited by Dermot Meleady (Merrion Press, €29.99/£26.99) Ian
 d’Alton   On March 6, 1918, John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party, died – “a broken-hearted man”, in his own words – at the relatively young age of 61 years. History was in the process of overtaking him, and what…

Overturning Humane Vitae is ‘crime against Church’

Speaking at a presentation of a book on Humanae Vitae, Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, stressed that attempts to change the Church’s teaching are “a crime against the Church”. “The current attempt,” he said, “to put in contrast the last three pontificates, with the pretext…