Author Archive for Kathy Schiffer

Separated At Birth: <em>The Identical</em> Explores Identity, Conflict, Mission
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Separated At Birth: The Identical Explores Identity, Conflict, Mission

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First, there’s the great music: The Identical, which has been showing in theaters across America, is replete with rock-and-roll music that is eerily reminiscent of the great Elvis Presley.  In fact, the legendary rock star Drexel Helmsley, one of the twin protagonists played by Blake Rayne, is a dead ringer for the ’50s icon; and if you’re […]

Saints, Sung and Unsung: Unique Art Exhibit
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Saints, Sung and Unsung: Unique Art Exhibit

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What does a saint look like? We have our preconceptions:   Saints are serene, eyes cast downward, hands folded in prayer. Saints flash joyful smiles while reaching out to help the poor and needy. Saints stand bravely against the enemies of the Gospel, praying as the bullets or the machete or the poison claims their bodies, […]

New Movie: <i>Mary of Nazareth</i>
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New Movie: Mary of Nazareth

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I recently attended a sponsored screening of the new motion picture Mary of Nazareth, which has just been released by Ignatius Press. First off, let me tell you:  I loved it.  This full-length feature film about the life of Mary, the mother of God, was filmed in Europe and shot in English in high definition.  It […]

Pope, President Offer Point/Counterpoint on Marriage
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Pope, President Offer Point/Counterpoint on Marriage

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In his inaugural address on Monday, January 21, Barack Obama called for Americans to embrace same-sex marriage, saying: Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law–for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal […]

The Sistine Chapel: A Liturgical Classroom
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The Sistine Chapel: A Liturgical Classroom

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On October 31, 2012, Pope Benedict XVI observed the 500th anniversary of the Sistine Chapel by offering a prayer—celebrating Vespers beneath Michelangelo’s famed frescoes of biblical stories including, most famously, the Creation of Adam. The Holy Father called the chapel a “liturgical classroom,” explaining that “It is as if during the liturgical action, the entire […]

<i>Rerum Novarum</i> and Obama’s Economic Policy
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Rerum Novarum and Obama’s Economic Policy

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On the first Monday of September, Americans say goodbye to summer with picnics and parades, fireworks and festivals. Traditionally, it’s the last day for women to wear white. It signals the start of the NFL and college football seasons.  It’s Labor Day! The first official Labor Day was celebrated on September 5, 1882, with a parade organized by the […]

Maslow’s Hierarchy Revisited—Parenthood’s On Top!
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Maslow’s Hierarchy Revisited—Parenthood’s On Top!

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Sometimes you just want to roll your eyes and say “Duh!”  A team of researchers at Arizona State University, led by evolutionary psychologist Douglas Kenrick, has noticed that most people really like being parents.  Despite the challenges of child-rearing, Kenrick reported that the warmth, the love, the creativity, the sense of purpose and belonging—all of these […]

The Power of a Mother’s Prayer
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The Power of a Mother’s Prayer

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Her son was a wild one.  She had tried to impart solid virtues and a lively faith—but her atheist husband quashed that with his brusque way and bad example. So when her eldest son reached his teens, he broke away—rejecting Christianity for an occult religion, and preferring an easy life of casual relationships and carefree […]

Ain’t I a Woman? Sojourner Truth, and the Liberation of America’s Smallest Women
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Ain’t I a Woman? Sojourner Truth, and the Liberation of America’s Smallest Women

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On March 8, feminists observed the centenary of International Women’s Day—a day when we remember the struggles of women in the fight against gender discrimination, and celebrate the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future. I would like to dedicate this post to the smallest of women:  those who have not […]

The Unborn Baby: Watched by the White House, Blessed by the Church
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The Unborn Baby: Watched by the White House, Blessed by the Church

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ASTONISHING: The Washington Free Beacon has broken the news that although a baby can be aborted up until the ninth month in Washington DC, the White House Visitors Office requires that an unborn child must be counted as a full human being when its parents register for a White House tour. HEARTENING: The U.S. Conference […]

God and the Elderly
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God and the Elderly

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Belief in God increases with age. That is the finding of a longitudinal study by researchers at the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center. The Center conducted three surveys on religious faith, questioning people of different age groups in 30 different countries. The surveys—conducted in 1991, 1998, and again in 2008—explored the range of […]

Catholic Higher Education: Still Not Practicing What We Preach
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Catholic Higher Education: Still Not Practicing What We Preach

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Notre Dame is still struggling with its mission as Our Lady’s university. On August 15, 1990, Pope John Paul II promulgated the Apostolic Constitution Ex Corde Ecclesiae (English: From the Heart of the Church). The document marked the first step in the systematic effort to renew and reform Catholic higher education around the world. One […]

You Are What You Do / Say / Think….
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You Are What You Do / Say / Think….

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I read once that when a neurosurgeon touches a spot on the human brain with a probe, he elicits memories.  All kinds of memories: a moment in childhood, a school day, a family vacation from years past.  Sights, sounds, tastes, smells, feelings.  Pain and pleasure, fear and fury and fun.  Whatever is stored on that particular […]

For Mothers Everywhere: On Scrubbing Toilets and the Challenger Disaster
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For Mothers Everywhere: On Scrubbing Toilets and the Challenger Disaster

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Twenty-six years ago, on January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds into its flight,disintegrating over the Atlantic Ocean off the course of central Florida.  All seven of its crew were killed, including the “Teacher in Space,” Christa McAuliffe. On this sad anniversary, it’s not space flight I want to talk about, […]

CNN Wants to See More Female Altar Servers?
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CNN Wants to See More Female Altar Servers?

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Readers on my Facebook page got into a discussion one day recently about the CNN “Belief Blog.”  The general consensus was that it’s actually more of an “UN-Belief Blog”:  The point of the feature seems to be to identify a particular teaching or practice of the Catholic Church that is unpopular this week, then pontificate […]

It's Time to Say Good-bye to the Girl Scouts
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It’s Time to Say Good-bye to the Girl Scouts

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Who can turn away a sweet little girl, boxes of cookies in her wagon, smiling hopefully at your front door? And who can turn down the savory pleasures to be found in every box of Thin Mints and Samoas and Savannahs? Well, I can. You see, the proceeds from the sale of Girl Scout cookies […]

On Thanksgiving: Eat. Pray. Love. Do Not Watch Lady Gaga.
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On Thanksgiving: Eat. Pray. Love. Do Not Watch Lady Gaga.

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ABC has just announced that on Thanksgiving Day, as Americans sit back to digest the turkey and stuffing, the network will air a 90-minute prime-time special “A Very Gaga Thanksgiving.” Call me a cynic, but I’m thinking this won’t be your typical “Charlie Brown Thanksgiving” kind of show.  Hopefully, the pop star won’t be wearing […]

Detacho: Modular Dollhouses for Fractured Families
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Detacho: Modular Dollhouses for Fractured Families

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Okay, now this is just sad. Toys help children to learn and prepare them for life.  That’s why industrial designer Ben Forman (benformandesign.co.uk) has introduced a new dollhouse to help today’s modern preschooler prepare for the inevitable unhappy changes in her family structure.  It’s called Detacho. Detacho families, like so many contemporary American families, can […]