Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.ncregister.com/cna/catholic-university-of-america-unintentional-abortion-coverage-for-students-was-not-used
Catholic University apologized for erroneously providing health care coverage for abortions in the case of rape or incest, or in the event the mother's life was endangered.
They promise to change that.
Where do jesuits fall on this?
Or the usage of birth control?
Anonymous wrote:https://www.ncregister.com/cna/catholic-university-of-america-unintentional-abortion-coverage-for-students-was-not-used
Catholic University apologized for erroneously providing health care coverage for abortions in the case of rape or incest, or in the event the mother's life was endangered.
They promise to change that.
Anonymous wrote:For those talking "theology class" - my theology classes at my Jesuit college were essentially history or social studies classes. One was about how imperialism in Africa spread various religions to the continent (not just Christian religions). The other was learning the foundations of several different religions. They were not about indoctrinating or even discussing beliefs of the Catholic church. I suppose someone could find a class like that if they wanted one....I didn't. I never even had these sorts of discussions with my Catholic friends. We were all on the same page RE pro-choice, contraception, inclusion, etc.
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.
They are not permitted to acknowledge this. But it's fine.
I'm entitled to my choice and how I spend my money, regardless of what other people think of it. People just don't like it when they are reminded of certain things: gender inequality, history of pedophilia, to name just two.
Those who want to go are free to do so. But, some of the hysterical ones and name-callers are just another example of why I wont support it. Preaching the value of Christian education while acting that way . . . no thank you. I've seen enough of that to know that, even with the plenty of well-intentioned, good people who are Christian that I know, the ones that aren't and who use their religion as a weapon are enough to turn me off. They speak for the rest of them, or at the very least, drown them out.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I thought the exact same thing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The jesuit schools that people actually want to go to are pretty socially liberal (Georgetown, Boston College, Fordham, Villanova, etc)
Interestingly, on a recent BC tour, during the full auditorium session, only 2-3 kids said they were attending a Jesuit HS. (Made me wonder how much bump, if any, that would give an applicant).
Anyone know if Catholic or Jesuit HS kids get any bump for admission?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The jesuit schools that people actually want to go to are pretty socially liberal (Georgetown, Boston College, Fordham, Villanova, etc)
Interestingly, on a recent BC tour, during the full auditorium session, only 2-3 kids said they were attending a Jesuit HS. (Made me wonder how much bump, if any, that would give an applicant).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Depends upon the school. Most of the Jesuit universities, yes.
Agreed, for my daughter I’d be willing to consider a Jesuit school in an otherwise blue state. So, Santa Clara, Loyola Marymount, Loyola Chicago, Boston College, Gonzaga, University of San Francisco, Georgetown, Fordham….