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• Who's a Real Woman? Who's a Real Man? Gender Bending in Judges
• Fall Feast - Restorative Justice Week
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• Incorrigible plurality: Ecumenical theological education as a practice of peace
• A Catholic Philosopher Argues for Relativism
Technorati tags: Mots clés : christian feminism, scripture, events,
Posted: November 24, 2005 Transmis : 24 novembre 2005
Technorati tags: Mots clés : restorative justice, ecumenism, prayer, events,
Posted: November 20, 2005 Transmis : 20 novembre 2005
Technorati tags: Mots clés : ecumenical centers, ecumenism, christian unity, canada,
Posted: November 17, 2005 Transmis : 17 novembre 2005
Technorati tags: Mots clés : restorative justice, ecumenism, education,
Posted: November 15, 2005 Transmis : 15 novembre 2005
Signed articles do not necessarily represent the opinions of "Ecumenism in Canada" or the Prairie Centre for Ecumenism.
Les articles signés ne représentent pas nécessairement les avis de "Oecuménisme au Canada" ou le Prairie Centre for Ecumenism.
"After the first few months of the new pontificate, the general impression is that no one within the Church is seriously criticizing the central theses - philosophical and theological - of Benedict XVI's preaching. But that's not the way it is. One Catholic philosopher has disputed one of the main points of Joseph Ratzinger's thought: the one dealing with the natural law and relativism. The philosopher is Dario Antiseri, a professor of social sciences methodology at the Free International University of Social Studies in Rome."
The above comes from Sandro Magister, an Italian journalist. The full text can be found at http://www.chiesa.espressonline.it. Magister's article includes a translation of a major piece of Dario Antiseri's original journal article.
Technorati tags: Mots clés : benedict xvi,
Posted: November 6, 2005 Transmis : 6 novembre 2005
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