Ireland has enjoyed universal literacy for hundreds of years because of the Catholic Church. Judging by the political and religious leanings of the modern Irish, I'm sure most of them will be illiterate in a generation or two.
Ireland has enjoyed universal literacy for hundreds of years because of the Catholic Church. Judging by the political and religious leanings of the modern Irish, I'm sure most of them will be illiterate in a generation or two.
Through the incessant din of atheistical and diabolical propaganda (the main driver of political movements for 500 years) it is often hard to remember that Christianity in general, and the institution of the Church, is the very integument that holds together the lifeboat of Western society and culture. (True even for those who sit in the boat and refuse to row.)
Ireland has enjoyed universal literacy for hundreds of years because of the Catholic Church. Judging by the political and religious leanings of the modern Irish, I'm sure most of them will be illiterate in a generation or two.
Through the incessant din of atheistical and diabolical propaganda (the main driver of political movements for 500 years) it is often hard to remember that Christianity in general, and the institution of the Church, is the very integument that holds together the lifeboat of Western society and culture. (True even for those who sit in the boat and refuse to row.)