Author: Anne Dickinson

Calls for legalisation of euthanasia refuted

Features Cecily McNeill 11 November 2011 Calls for euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide to be legalised are the result of an increasingly individualistic society and an unwillingness to take a holistic approach to death and dying. A public issues forum at St John’s in the City in September canvassed views around the issue of legalising euthanasia […]

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Doctors still behind in attitudes to disability

Features Cecily McNeill10 November 2011 Life for people with disabilities has changed ‘hugely’ in the past 40 years with more enabling legislation and a far greater awareness of the issues, but the medical profession still lags behind. Dr Martin Sullivan of Massey University’s sociology department says a doctor asked a friend of his during a […]

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The browning of child poverty – are we concerned?

Sr Marcellin Wilson9 November 2011 With the increasing incidence of violence against children, Rev Hone Kaa set up a Maori Child Advocacy group in Auckland known as Te Kahui Mana Ririki to advocate for vulnerable Maori and Pasifika children. In mid-October as part of a social justice reflection in the archdiocese, the Maori Child Advocacy […]

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Lives on a different course – time to catch up with society

Greg Byrne9 November 2011 One of the workshops at a recent Diocesan gathering, within the Foundation of ‘Identity and Community’, raised the issue of gay people in the Church. The time has come for the Catholic Church to have discussions about this and other topics within the broader field of human sexuality. Society’s attitudes and […]

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First Papal social encyclical has advice on Pike River

Gerard Burns9 November 2011 What price a worker’s life? The investigation of safety measures at the Pike River mine, scene of the tragic death of 29 miners last November (2010), reveals the implications of not having the safe working conditions which are central to a healthy workplace. The Royal Commission of Enquiry into the Pike […]

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The martyrdom of Perpetua, Felicitas and companions

Features Msgr John Broadbent4 April 2011 I noted in my account of the life of St Valentine in last month’s Wel-com that so many of the first to third century accounts of saints’ martyrdoms were added to in the sixth to eighth centuries by monks with little credibility because of their lack of research materials. […]

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St Columba – converting Ireland, England and the Scots

Features Mgsr John Broadbent10 June 2011 We have seen in the lives of the saints, the martyrdom of some of the early Christians in the almost three centuries after Jesus. The final and most bloody of these was under Diocletian as Emperor during the early years of the fourth century (300s). One of the principal […]

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St Athanasius – May 2, helping Catholicism’s official status

Features Mgsr John Broadbent3 May 2011 Catholicism was briefly the official religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth century AD before it crumbled in the fifth century. Last month we saw how, at the beginning of the fourth century AD, Diocletian perpetrated perhaps the most ferocious of all the persecutions against the Christians. He […]

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St Bernard of Clairvaux – promoter of the Cistercians

Features Msgr John Broadbent8 August 2011 1090–1153 – Feastday August 20 I remember as a fourth former receiving as a class prize The Family that overtook Christ by Fr M Raymond OCSO.  The family was that of St Bernard, a young, handsome and brilliant nobleman who, on deciding at 22 to be a monk, chose […]

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