Last week theologian Dr. Jeremy Holmes gave us an introduction to St. John Paul II’s 1993 encyclical, Veritatis Splendor, The Splendor of Truth.
St. John Paul II wrote the encyclical in response to trends in moral theology that for the most part denied that morality can be universal, objective, and permanent.
He critiqued any doctrines that would “grant to individuals or social groups the right to determine what is good or evil.”
Yet we make judgments about good and evil every day and the source of those judgments is our consciences.
Dr. Kent Lasnoski teaches moral theology at Wyoming Catholic College and has for many years been a student of St. John Paul II and his ethical writings. In this edition of The After Dinner Scholar, he explains the nature of conscience in Pope St. John Paul's writings.
Arithmetic, Murder, and Redemption in Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
Gothic Cathedrals: The Architecture of Contemplation with Dr. Jason Baxter
Sacred Signs: On the Physical Side of Being Spiritual with Dr Kent Lasnoski
The Pope, Authority, and “Religious Assent” with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
Paradise Lost: A Conversation with Dr. Glenn Arbery
The Roots of Philosophy: Theories about Everything
Silence and Sacred Space
Evil Enchantment and The Weight of Glory: What Dante Taught C.S. Lewis about Poetry with Dr. Jason Baxter
Euclid and the Beauty of Numbers with Dr. Scott Olsson
Introduction to "The Great Books" with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
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