EPPC’s latest work renewing culture
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May 24, 2024
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** Two Lives at the Service of Life
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** The threats to human dignity and the sanctity of life that Jérôme Lejeune and John Paul II strove so mightily to resist have intensified.
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** George Weigel, Catholic World Report
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These two lives in the service of life were built on one great conviction, an insightful analysis, and two firm commitments:
First, the conviction that there are truths inscribed in the world and in us, truths that we can know by both philosophical and scientific reason in a searching process that can be facilitated by attending to divine revelation;
Second, a clear reading of the signs of these times, in which humanity was putting itself in grave jeopardy by losing its grip on those truths, and most especially the truth that every human life is not merely an aggregate of biological materials but rather the life of a person, a spiritual being with an infinite value and an eternal destiny;
Third, a firm commitment to defend the uniqueness of every human life, in whatever condition and at whatever stage of development; and
Fourth, an equally firm commitment to mount that defense of life in terms that could be engaged by those who were losing their grip on the truths inscribed in nature and in us.
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** EPPC Is Hiring
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We seek a full-time Director of Communications to ensure that our scholars become and remain well-prepared, sought-after experts who appear across the full range of media channels. The position may be located either in EPPC’s Washington, DC, office or remotely with regular visits to Washington. Talent Market is managing the search.
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For National Review, Hunter Baker and Andrew T. Walker write that a revival of interest in C.S. Lewis’ idea of the tao may point atheists to Christianity ([link removed]) .
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The definition of online freedom has been depressingly constricted over the last thirty years ([link removed]) , argues Aaron Kheriaty for American Mind.
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Natalie Dodson writes in The Hill that IVF isn’t pro-life or pro-women ([link removed]) .
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For the Wall Street Journal, Lance Morrow reflects on the power of clichés in our politics ([link removed]) .
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The United Methodist Church has lost sight of what it means to be human ([link removed]) , writes Carl R. Trueman for World Opinions.
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Alexandra DeSanctis writes for Religion and Liberty on how churches can better serve their unmarried members ([link removed]) .
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For Fusion, Matthew Malec writes about the recently concluded mini-series Shogun and the universal truths of Fusionism ([link removed]) .
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Nathanael Blake joined the World and Everything in It podcast to discuss the spiritual hazards of replacing physical existence with technology ([link removed]) .
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** Richard John Neuhaus Fellowship
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Applications are now open for the 2024–2025 Richard John Neuhaus Fellowship, a graduate-level program in Washington, D.C., for those working in government, journalism, think tanks, or other policy-relevant institutions, which explores the Judeo-Christian tradition and its role in shaping public policy and the mediating institutions of civil society.
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The Ethics and Public Policy Center is excited to present our 2023 annual report. As you’ll see, EPPC is flourishing, and our efforts to bring about renewal in American public life are bearing good fruit.
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