L
livingwordunity
Guest
He means that the National Catholic Reporter aggressively promotes a heterodox agenda. They want the Catholic Church to give up her Catholic teachings on faith and morals.When you say “the National Catholic Reporter has a certain reputation,” I’m not sure what you are referring to. I perused their website, and I found many articles related to helping the poor, pointing out societal injustices, and also an honest discussion of what the Church must do to right the wrong of child sexual abuse.
Website Review: National Catholic Reporter
Description
The National Catholic Reporter is a lay-edited Catholic newsweekly. This website is an online version of the Reporter. Its self-described mission is to “report, comment and reflect on the church and society. It strives for excellence in its publications, supporting a full, honest and open exchange of ideas. It works out of a Roman Catholic tradition and an ecumenical spirit.” Unfortunately, the Reporter’s version of honest and open exchange is to criticize the Church and many of its most central teachings.
Because of the ever changing nature of this site, specific examples may vary. However, every visit to this site confirms its commitment to dissent. For example, a visit on July 11, 2007, reveals a fund raising effort which includes a free copy of the notorious dissident Sr. Joan Chittister’s book, From Where I Stand. We recommend that you resist the urge to contribute.
Fidelity: Danger!
Resources: Poor
Useability: Excellent
Strengths
None Reported.
Weaknesses
Fidelity: Not-so-Catholic newsletters
Fidelity: Subscribes to liberation theology
Fidelity: Supports priesthood as a gay vocation
Fidelity: Criticizes the institutional church
Fidelity: Attacks the priesthood
Fidelity: Dissidents as regular columnists
Source