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Can I Get Married in the Catholic Church?

Marriage is one of the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church. That means it is a supernatural institution, as well as a natural one. The Church, therefore, restricts sacramental marriage to men and women who meet certain requirements.

Preparing for Marriage

Scott's Catholicism Blog

Wordless Wednesday: St. John the Baptist

Wednesday August 27, 2008

Icon of Saint John the Baptist on the front of the Serbian Orthodox Patriarchate in Belgrade, Serbia. (Photo © Scott P. Richert)

(Photo © Scott P. Richert)

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Should Politicians Who Support Abortion Receive Communion?

Monday August 25, 2008
In 2004, the Democratic nominee for president was Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), a Catholic who defends abortion rights. In the wake of his nomination, Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis, Missouri, declared that he would deny Holy Communion to Senator Kerry, and he later wrote a pastoral letter to the Catholics in his archdiocese, explaining that Catholics should not vote for politicians who support abortion.

Other U.S. bishops remained silent, and the Vatican itself did not weigh in on the issue, though one could reasonably assume that there was no need, since a series of papal encyclicals, documents from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the Catechism of the Catholic Church all support Archbishop Burke's position. Still, some took the silence to mean that Archbishop Burke stood alone.

Thus, when the archbishop was named prefect of the Apostolic Segnatura earlier this year and transferred to Rome, it was natural that, as Fr. John Zuhlsdorf reports, some people would think that the move was an attempt "to get him out of the way before the November elections." But in his first major interview in his new position, Archbishop Burke has made it clear that nothing could be further from the truth. Read more...

Election 2008: Joe Biden and Abortion

Monday August 25, 2008
It's official: Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has announced that his choice for vice president is a Catholic, Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden.

On the April 29, 2007, episode of NBC's Meet the Press, Senator Biden described himself as a "practicing Catholic" who is "prepared to accept my church's view" that life begins at conception. (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf has the relevant portion of the transcript in a post on his indispensable blog, "What Does the Prayer Really Say?".)

Unfortunately for Catholics considering voting for the Democratic ticket, Senator Biden believes that his "political responsibility" outweighs his "religious and cultural views." Read more...

Reader Question: Sunday as a Day of Rest

Friday August 22, 2008
A reader writes:
My husband and I like on Sundays just to ride around in our car and see different things. We like to stop at different stores just to wander around the stores. Maybe sometimes we would find something that we would buy. Why would this be a sin? I do attend Saturday evening Mass, read the Bible, and say the rosary every day. Why is it not a sin to go to a restaurant to eat but not to go to a grocery store to buy some food? If everyone didn’t shop on Sundays, the people that have to work on Sundays would make no money, and we would be hurting them. This doesn’t make sense to me. I can understand not working on Sundays and devoting some time to helping people and reading the Bible.
The reader has raised a number of important questions. Our obligation as Christians to keep Sunday as a day of rest extends beyond our Sunday duty to participate in communal worship. But how far do we need to take it? Read more...

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