
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Reference: Announcing the Apostolate Of Common Sense by Dale Ahlquist
The Magazine of the Apostolate of Common Sense engages in the spreading of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
We are an apostolate dedicated to evangelization, education, and justice.
Justice, because every child demands it, starting in the nursery.
Education because every parent demands it.
Evangelization, because Christ demands it!
There is a crisis of the normal.
We need the Apostolate of Common Sense.
The Apostolate of Common Sense provides encouragement to lay people, to be living witnesses of the Catholic faith especially in the secular work place and secular settings, and to defend the faith when it is attacked.
To adhere faithfully to Church teaching on marriage and family.
To have a special reverence for the Holy Mass.
To hold to the centrality of the Incarnation in education for a true understanding not only of theology but of history, philosophy, art, and science.
To acknowledge the value of studying and contemplating the classical principles of truth, beauty, and goodness.
To reveal joy as "the gigantic secret of the Christian."
By DebReference: Announcing the Apostolate Of Common Sense by Dale Ahlquist
The Magazine of the Apostolate of Common Sense engages in the spreading of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
We are an apostolate dedicated to evangelization, education, and justice.
Justice, because every child demands it, starting in the nursery.
Education because every parent demands it.
Evangelization, because Christ demands it!
There is a crisis of the normal.
We need the Apostolate of Common Sense.
The Apostolate of Common Sense provides encouragement to lay people, to be living witnesses of the Catholic faith especially in the secular work place and secular settings, and to defend the faith when it is attacked.
To adhere faithfully to Church teaching on marriage and family.
To have a special reverence for the Holy Mass.
To hold to the centrality of the Incarnation in education for a true understanding not only of theology but of history, philosophy, art, and science.
To acknowledge the value of studying and contemplating the classical principles of truth, beauty, and goodness.
To reveal joy as "the gigantic secret of the Christian."