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Category: health

Fitness and Health for Growth in Holiness

Today we discuss how your physical health and wellness go hand in hand with your development in virtue and growth in holiness. Dr. Kevin Vost joins us to address the huge rise in diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, liver disease, obesity, and other health-related illnesses in society today. We go into the false notion that you are either physically strong or mentally strong and that the integration of the two leads to a more grateful, loving, healthy, and holy life. Do we have a moral obligation to take care of ourselves and what is the correct balance?

The post Fitness and Health for Growth in Holiness appeared first on The Catholic Gentleman.

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The Bookends of Catholic Health Care

Could anyone have predicted that less than a quarter of the way through the twenty-first century, many of us would be seriously questioning the ethics, practices, and philosophies of one of the most powerful segments of our society, the medical establishment? But the COVID-19 pandemic upended many of our assumptions and presuppositions. “Losing trust in […]

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Catholic Charities panel explores links between housing and health

The COVID-19 pandemic “added a healthcare crisis on top of a housing crisis, and the only way to truly solve either is going to require bold investments and innovations in both,” said Michael Goar, Catholic Charities of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ CEO, ahead of the social services organizations’ annual social justice assembly March 1.

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Bishops reach out to UK Health Secretary about life support case in Plymouth

Bishops John Sherrington and Mark O’Toole have written a letter expressing their concern to British Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock about the removal of life support from a Catholic man in Plymouth, after a court ruling in January.

The post Bishops reach out to UK Health Secretary about life support case in Plymouth appeared first on Catholic Herald.

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Pope Francis – citing back pain – to skip Te Deum, Mass of New Year’s Day

Bruni’s statement explained that the Dean of the College of Cardinals, His Eminence Giovanni Battista Re, will preside at First Vespers and Te Deum, while the Cardinal Secretary of State, Pietro Parolin, will say Mass of New Year’s Day, while Pope Francis still plans to lead the Jan 1 recitation of the Angelus from the Library of the Apostolic Palace.

The post Pope Francis – citing back pain – to skip Te Deum, Mass of New Year’s Day appeared first on Catholic Herald.

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The greatest threat in our world today

Are we as concerned about our spiritual health as our physical health? Most of us are doing all we can to limit the continued spread of the coronavirus. We are trying to be prudent and healthy, and we are striving to protect ourselves, our families, an…

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