Anonymous wrote:Why do you refuse to accept that these schools are affiliated with the Church as a whole?
You can't completely separate the two. There are different levels, yes, but Jesuit is still affiliated with the Church.
You may not see it so much in the academics, but there are still going to things that pop up that are based in religious beliefs that might affect student life. Whether those are enough to turn someone away, that is their call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you refuse to accept that these schools are affiliated with the Church as a whole?
You can't completely separate the two. There are different levels, yes, but Jesuit is still affiliated with the Church.
You may not see it so much in the academics, but there are still going to things that pop up that are based in religious beliefs that might affect student life. Whether those are enough to turn someone away, that is their call.
I loved theology class and I’m agnostic. One needs
some religious knowledge to be able to chose for own self. Stop trying to box any one out of a great education at a religious institution if they choose.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll cop to being close-minded on this but I will NEVER cite to or rely on a list compiled by Newsmax.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the most liberal Catholic colleges?
Which are the most LGBTQ friendly?
Look into Jesuit colleges only.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you refuse to accept that these schools are affiliated with the Church as a whole?
You can't completely separate the two. There are different levels, yes, but Jesuit is still affiliated with the Church.
You may not see it so much in the academics, but there are still going to things that pop up that are based in religious beliefs that might affect student life. Whether those are enough to turn someone away, that is their call.
Anonymous wrote:What are the most liberal Catholic colleges?
Which are the most LGBTQ friendly?
Anonymous wrote:What are the most liberal Catholic colleges?
Which are the most LGBTQ friendly?
Anonymous wrote:I do not understand why posters are not allowed to state that the Church itself has problems and that some people don't care to support institutions affiliated with it.
Yet someone else can go around calling people names when they disagree
Anonymous wrote:Sure when it's a T20 like Notre Dame with superb student care or even little lesser but great schools like Georgetown or Boston College.
My kid is at ND. Not attending mass.
Doing great so far. Kid is also a minority.
Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure: I was raised Catholic, but left the church after college and never had my kids baptized nor did we practice any religion.
My daughter is now a high school senior and has three Catholic colleges/universities on her college list. She is not religious and does not particularly believe in a god or any type of higher power as far as I know.
She has never even attended Catholic mass and of course she has never been involved in anything like CCD or catholic school, catholic catechism.
She is very socially liberal (pro choice, LGBTQ+ ally etc). I truly do not think a Catholic college would be a good choice for her, but I am unable to explain to her why. She doesn't believe me, basically. She has heard that the colleges on her list are "very liberal". I'm sure they are -- for Catholics. But, they are still Catholic schools!
Do atheists or non believers attend Catholic colleges?
Anonymous wrote:No, I would not. Why would you educate yourself based on someone else's lenses.