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Mozarabic Liturgy, The Family and Social Justice, 21st Century Child Sacrifice, Hungary, and more! (948)

The Best in Catholic Blogging

01/26/2012 Comments (2)

Tito Edwards of ThePulp.it

Mozarabic Liturgy Celebrated by Toledo Archbishop on St. Ildefonso Feast - Shawn Tribe, New Liturgical Movement

The Family & Social Justice - Donald DeMarco PhD, HLI America/Truth & Charity Forum

Child Sacrifice in 21st Century America - George Weigel, Crisis Magazine

EU’s Crusade Against Hungary to End in Defeat & Ridicule? - J.C. von Krempach JD, Turtle Bay and Beyond

The Devil Cares (Mark 1:21-28) - Fr. John Bartunek, Catholic Spiritual Direction

Quæritur: The Leonine Prayers after Mass in the Ordinary Form - Fr. John Zuhlsdorf, What Does The Prayer Really Say?

Art Masterpieces Teaching Church History - Dr. Jeff Mirus, Cthlc Culture/On the Culture

Understanding Disparities in Diocesan Ordination Rates - Anne Hendershott & Christopher White, Catholic World Report

Angel to the Rescue - Patti Maguire Armstrong

Great March for Life Video Summation - Marc Barnes, Patheos/Bad Catholic

Beautiful Vid: Christendom Leads March for Life - Matthew Archbold, Creative Minority Report

A Generation Lucky to be Alive - Chelsea Zimmerman, Ignitum Today

The Church Persecuted in 2011 - George J. Marlin, The Catholic Thing

For the latest on the best punditry in the Catholic blogosphere click on the ThePulp.it.

 

Filed under angels, catholic blogosphere, christendom college, church history, family, hungary, leonine prayers, mozarabic liturgy, pro life video, social justice

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“Pope Benedict had reason to celebrate during the Year of the Priest. Despite the media hype about the projected shortage of priests and its negative effect on the sacramental life of the Church, the reality is that the number of priests is growing worldwide.”

So much for the argument that vocations to the priesthood have been hurt by the presence of altar girls.

Not all diocese allow altar girls.  And if you identify those that don’t have altar girls, they have a significant higher rate of vocations that those that allow altar girls.

Diocese of Lincoln is a shining example of this.

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