Cosmos & One More Telling of the Tired Myth
Reflecting on a recent and misleading remake of the television programme “Cosmos” , Fr Robert Barron explains why religion does not oppose science, as many would believe, but rather presupposes it.
Reflecting on a recent and misleading remake of the television programme “Cosmos” , Fr Robert Barron explains why religion does not oppose science, as many would believe, but rather presupposes it.
This time Luke, Kiara and Victoria delve in to the virtues which guide proper Christian behaviour, the difference between psychoanalysis and morality, and how attaining virtue can be a case of “fake it ’til you make it”…
Eamonn Keanne of Redfield College speaks on how faith and reason are integrated – and thus how God has a place in all parts of our lives.
This week Luke, Kiara and Victoria look at C.S. Lewis’ commentary on the competing concepts and caricatures of of God, how a good God is consistent with our human experience of evil, and why God became Man two thousand years ago…
Three Catholics dive in to the first book of C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity by exploring the book’s background, how human behaviour brings us to God, and how Lewis’ criticism of “the march of progress” is relevant in our own day.
We spoke to Dale Ahlquist to find out what G.K. Chesterton brings to our century, how we can look to him in facing contemporary problems, and the example he sets for lay Catholics in a secular world.
In this Lumen Verum lecture, Mr Hitchings discusses the tragedy of AIDS in recent times, the response of governments and NGOs, and the policy-oriented obscuring of non-contraceptive prevention measures.
Fr Robert Barron explains why a society that wishes to maintain its moral integrity needs to maintain its belief in God.