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My Name is Legion, Usus Antiquior in India, The Power in Stories in Teaching NFP, and much more! (4604)

The Best in Catholic Blogging

12/31/2011 Comments (2)

Tito Edwards of ThePulp.it

8 Key Questions for Making a New Year’s Resolution that Lasts - Jeff Cavins, Integrated Catholic Life™

Hello, My Name is “Legion” - Matthew Alderman, Crisis Magazine

Usus Antiquior in India - Shawn Tribe, New Liturgical Movement

There Is Nothing Gay About Homosexuality - The Ordinary Catholic, Peter’s Barque

Catholic Church Builds It, Homosexuals Will Take It Away - Patrick Archbold, Creative Minority Report

Why isn’t the Holy Spirit Called Jesus’ Father? - Fr. Ryan Erlenbush, New Theological Movement

Please May We Have Our Bell Back? - Richard Collins, Linen on the Hedgerow

The Power of Stories in Teaching NFP - Valerie Pokorny, Catholic Lane

Postmodern Man Needs Catholics to Show Him How to Party - Jeffrey Tucker, Catholic Exchange

Like I Mean It - Ryan Kraeger, Ignitum Today

A Milestone in the Decline in Latin? - Fr. Tim Finigan, The Hermeneutic of Continuity

Susan Boyle: Still Fascinating - Vanessa Barnes, Gulf Coast Catholic

The “Lourdes of the East” Celebrates 50 Years - Santosh Digal, AsiaNews.it

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

 

Filed under catholic blogosphere, catholic church, gay, homosexuality, latin, legion, our lady of velankanni, party, religious liberty, susan boyle

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Tito thank you for posting the blog from Peter’s Barque about the “gay” death-style. We can’t respond to the site, so I am saying once again that the term gay SHOULD NEVER be used in this ugly fashion as it is a lie & is very insulting to people that have Gay as their name or apart of it.  To Peter’s Barque: AMEN AMEN & AMEN!!  +JMJ+

“Gay” means more than just happy or merry.  It is also defined in Webster as “Licentious.”  And “licentious” in Webster is defined as: “1 : lacking legal or moral restraints; esp : disregarding sexual restraints 2 : marked by disregard for strict rules on correctness.”

In that sense, it seems “gay” is an appropriate word for politically active homosexuals and that is why a leader in the homosexual life style in New York started using that word to describe himself and those in his movement back in the late ‘70s early ‘89s.

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