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To learn the Catholic faith well, not only do we have to understand something about God, but we also need to understand something about our human need as men and women created by God. Our understanding of the human person will affect our understanding of the great questions: Who am I? Where did I come from? What is my purpose? What happens after I die? This booklet will provide an overview of the Catholic understanding of the human person. Thanks to the Saint Gregory Society for providing music.
Atheists deny God’s existence. Mystics experience God directly. Saints are called friends of God. But how much can we, finite human beings, really know about Him, the infinite, omnipotent God? Thanks to the Saint Gregory Society for providing music.
The Church does not believe that cohabitation before marriage is a moral or acceptable preparation for this sacred bond. Rather, the Church sees cohabitation as a threat to the marital happiness that engaged couples so desperately seek.
When someone in the Western world today asks how we can know God exists, he or she usually has in mind the God presented to us in the Bible.
Throughout the twentieth century, Western civilization has witnessed a titanic struggle between two radically opposed philosophies of human life: the traditional “sanctity of life” ethic and the new “quality of life” ethic. The new morality judges human lives by the standard of “quality,” and by this standard it declares some lives not worth living and the deliberate “termination” of these lives morally legitimate.