Dwight Longenecker's Blog, page 69
August 24, 2015
Women’s Ordination: Another Door Opens
My latest article for CRUX is posted here. It discusses the new wave of Catholic feminists and their response to the “closed door” on women’s ordination. In Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis recognized the “many women who share pastoral responsibilities with priests, helping guide people, families, and groups, and offering new contributions to theological reflection.” In her recent [Read More...]
Published on August 24, 2015 08:49
August 22, 2015
Saved By a Pilgrimage to England
Catholic Herald in the UK asked for an article about my recent pilgrimage to England with Joseph Pearce. My 10 years as a Catholic layman in England was somewhat of an exile in the wilderness. It was therefore with mixed emotions that I accepted biographer Joseph Pearce’s invitation to be priest chaplain on a pilgrimage [Read More...]
Published on August 22, 2015 16:21
The Desert Beast and the Coming Chaos
My article for Imaginative Conservative website this week is a reflection on W.B.Yeats’ famous poem, The Second Coming. While the world spins forward in what seems an ever-widening spiral of chaos, what conservative cannot lament the loss of all that once seemed stable, certain and secure? W.B. Yeats’ poem The Second Coming, like T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, seems a [Read More...]
Published on August 22, 2015 15:53
The Practical Dignity of Confession
I am blogging from Phoenix, Arizona where I’m speaking at a Marian Conference, and it was my joy last night to spend a couple of hours hearing confessions. There are nearly a thousand people signed up for the conference and all around the room were long lines of ordinary people wanting to make their confession. [Read More...]
Published on August 22, 2015 07:10
August 21, 2015
Overcoming Lust: How Do I Do That?
Pope St John Paul II said, “Chastity is the work of a lifetime.” With more and more guys dealing with pornography addictions, and with society wallowing more and more in the swamps of unrestrained sex and constant desire, how does a person overcome lust? I guess there must be therapies and techniques out there for self [Read More...]
Published on August 21, 2015 08:42
August 20, 2015
Planned Parenthood: Do We Have Horror Fatigue?
Some time ago I came across a memorable phrase: “compassion fatigue.” At the time there had been a wave of atrocities, famines and disasters across the world. Television and the internet brought unforgettable images into our living rooms–starving children with vultures standing by, emaciated prisoners behind barbed wire, whole town devastated by tsunamis and bodies [Read More...]
Published on August 20, 2015 04:21
August 19, 2015
Doubts, Difficulties and Disobedience
My article for Aleteia this week discusses the difference between genuine doubt and difficulties in the faith. The English Cardinal and theologian, Blessed John Henry Newman wrote, “Ten thousand difficulties do not make one doubt.” What he means is that there is a difference between a doubt and a difficulty. We wouldn’t be thinking [Read More...]
Published on August 19, 2015 17:55
Does the Bible Support the Papacy?
It’s a slow news day, so take time to read this long apologetics article which shows how the Bible and Apostolic Fathers support the ministry of the Pope. In a world where everybody seems to have the questions, but nobody dares to have an answer, Catholics believe they do have a source for some answers. [Read More...]
Published on August 19, 2015 08:40
Babies Born Alive for Organ Harvest
The Center for Medical Progress released their fourth video today. As predicted, this video is worse than the last one. We see Planned Parenthood officials discuss how they alter the abortion process to achieve “better” harvesting results. The most terrible detail: how a former StemExpress employee had to cut open the face of an “intact [Read More...]
Published on August 19, 2015 07:50
The Coming Plague of Gender Confusion
Let’s imagine for a moment that everyone forgot what eating is for. Eating is first and foremost for nutrition. However, eating is also pleasurable. Eating is also for conviviality. We share food with others and so we share life with others. If everyone deliberately rejected the nutritional aspect of eating what would happen? Let’s imagine [Read More...]
Published on August 19, 2015 05:47
Dwight Longenecker's Blog
- Dwight Longenecker's profile
- 80 followers
Dwight Longenecker isn't a Goodreads Author
(yet),
but they
do have a blog,
so here are some recent posts imported from
their feed.
