• Strangers in the family

    Strangers in the family

    Every January Catholics commemorate the World Day of Migrants and Refugees. This day is about both justice and celebration. It “celebrates the human drive to belong, to protect, to grow and to share in family, and the immeasurable importance of family in the lives of migrants and refugees in all corners of the world” (International [...]

  • Anti-discrimination, Ethical Issues, Featured

    Posted on June 6th, 2011

    Written by Ethics Centre

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    Mind the gender gap

    Mind the gender gap

    When it comes to gendered language our culture is all over the map. The sexual revolution has indeed mitigated sex-based discrimination and brought women deserved recognition as valuable human beings. Sometimes this is reflected in our speech. Chairman is abbreviated to chair. Policemen have become police officers. But a gender bias does persist. We still [...]

  • Standing at the Crossroads

    Standing at the Crossroads

    One of the inescapable realities is that we presently live in a secular, pluralist, post-modern … what? I want to say “society” or “culture,” but part of the challenge is that society and culture imply a cohesiveness that we don’t know exists any longer. So, let’s settle for “milieu” or “environment.” Whatever it’s called, and for better or worse, Christian communities and organizations in the West now live in a milieu that no longer takes Christian values, forms and structures to be “the” way to live. What does grace have to say about this?

    Secularism
    To begin with, secularism refers to a belief in the separation of church and state. At one time many Western countries had a state church. While this has never been true in Canada, even some of the original states of the United States had “established” churches. This meant that kings and governors had a role in appointing bishops and other church officials, and in turn those church officials had a role in legitimizing the kings and governors. We can’t imagine this happening nowadays. Places in the world that are experimenting with it―especially “fundamentalist Islamist states”―are reported on with some fear and enormous incredulity. Whether we come at it from the side of ordinary citizens and elected politicians or from the side of ordinary church members and ecclesiastical authorities, we will defend a division of power between state and church.