Catholics, in their exercise of their citizenship, too often succumb to what the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council warned of in the “Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World” (“Gaudium et Spes”). They wrote: “This split between the faith which many profess, and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious errors of our age” (Par. 43)

Faith and Life must come together for Catholics. The full Deposit of Faith must be guarded - and it must inform every area of our life, including our social and civic participation. That includes our voting.

“The social doctrine of the Church is not an intrusion into the government of individual countries. It is a question of the lay Catholic’s duty to be morally coherent, found within one’s conscience, which is one and indivisible. There cannot be two parallel lives in their existence: on the one hand, the so-called ‘spiritual life’, with its values and demands; and on the other, the so-called ‘secular’ life, that is, life in a family, at work, in social responsibilities, in the responsibilities of public life and in culture. The branch, engrafted to the vine, which is Christ, bears its fruit in every sphere of existence and activity.”

We need to fully participate in the election process, as Catholic citizens, in a manner which is morally coherent.

Objective: In this course, students will learn what it means to live a morally coherent life. Students will learn about the Right to Life, the Right to Religious Freedom, Parental Choice in Education, and marriage and family and why each one is important.

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Course curriculum

  • 01

    Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship

    • Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - Introduction

    • Resources for Students, Parents, and Teachers

    • Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - LESSON PLAN / STUDY GUIDE

    • Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - VIDEO

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - Live Lesson Recording with Professor Marshall Connolly (4/19/21)

    • Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - QUIZ

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 1 - Morally Coherent Catholic Citizenship - Live Lesson with Professor Marshall Connolly - April 19 @ 9 AM Pacific

  • 02

    Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life

    • Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - Introduction

    • Resources for Students, Parents, and Teachers

    • Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - LESSON PLAN / STUDY GUIDE

    • Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - VIDEO

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - Live Lesson Recording with Professor Marshall Connolly (4/20/21)

    • Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - QUIZ

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 2 - The Pre-Eminent Moral Mandate: The Right to Life - Live Lesson with Professor Marshall Connolly - April 20 @ 9 AM Pacific

  • 03

    Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting

    • Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - Introduction

    • Resources for Students, Parents, and Teachers

    • Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - LESSON PLAN / STUDY GUIDE

    • Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - VIDEO

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - Live Lesson Recording with Professor Marshall Connolly (4/21/21)

    • Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - QUIZ

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 3 - The Right to Religious Freedom Should Inform our Voting - Live Lesson with Professor Marshall Connolly - April 21 @ 9 AM Pacific

  • 04

    Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family

    • Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - Introduction

    • Resources for Students, Parents, and Teachers

    • Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - LESSON PLAN / STUDY GUIDE

    • Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - VIDEO

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - Live Lesson Recording with Professor Marshall Connolly (4/26/21)

    • Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - QUIZ

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 4 - Vote for Candidates who Respect and Protect Marriage and Family - Live Lesson with Professor Marshall Connolly - April 26 @ 9 AM Pacific

  • 05

    Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education

    • Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education- Introduction

    • Resources for Students, Parents, and Teachers

    • Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education - LESSON PLAN / STUDY GUIDE

    • Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education - VIDEO

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education - Live Lesson Recording with Professor Marshall Connolly (4/27/21)

    • Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education- QUIZ

    • Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church - Lesson 5 - Vote for Candidates who Support Parental Choice in Education - Live Lesson with Professor Marshall Connolly - April 27 @ 9 AM Pacific

What others are saying about this course:

Patrick Chendes

5 star rating

“This will make me rethink my selections, we all need to do our homework!”

“This will make me rethink my selections, we all need to do our homework!”

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Aurora Taliaferro Dickson

5 star rating

“That you must participate in life activities, including politics. Through the faith that was inculcated from childhood to maturity. Without unparalleled thought.; That's is Jesus Christ our Lord. ”

“That you must participate in life activities, including politics. Through the faith that was inculcated from childhood to maturity. Without unparalleled thought.; That's is Jesus Christ our Lord. ”

Read Less

Ravi Samping

5 star rating

“Marriage, Children, Teachers and Education.”

“Marriage, Children, Teachers and Education.”

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Deborah Peterson

5 star rating

“Very informative perfect just like our God”

“Very informative perfect just like our God”

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Sean Maki

5 star rating

“Thorough.”

“Thorough.”

Read Less

Fred Grosse

5 star rating

“Excellent course.”

“Excellent course.”

Read Less

Instructor(s)

Instructor Bio:

Bishop Joseph Edward Strickland serves as the fourth Bishop of Tyler.

To read messages from Bishop Strickland, visit BishopStrickland.com.

Bishop Strickland was born the sixth child of Raymond and Monica Strickland on October 31, 1958. He grew up in Atlanta, Texas. The Strickland’s were founding members of St. Catherine of Sienna Church in Atlanta, Texas where he assisted as an altar server. He entered first grade in Atlanta public schools in 1965 and graduated from Atlanta High School in May of 1977.

He entered Holy Trinity Seminary and the University of Dallas; studying for the Diocese of Dallas in August of 1977, and earned a Bachelor of Philosophy in May of 1981. He continued his education at Holy Trinity and the University of Dallas and was ordained to the Diaconate by then Bishop Michael Sheehan at Holy Trinity Seminary on December 8, 1984.

He earned a Master of Divinity Degree in May of 1985 and was ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Dallas by Bishop Thomas Tschoepe at St. Monica Catholic Church in Dallas, Texas on June 1, 1985.

He was assigned as a newly-ordained priest to Immaculate Conception Parish in Tyler, Texas in June of 1985 and served as Parochial Vicar until June of 1989. Upon the erection of the Diocese of Tyler on February 24, 1987, he then joined the presbyterate of the new diocese and was named the first vocation director for the diocese in March of 1987 by Bishop Charles Herzig. He was assigned as Parochial Vicar of Sacred Heart Parish in Nacogdoches, Texas in June of 1989 and served there until October of that same year when he was assigned as pastor of St. Michael Parish in Mt. Pleasant, Texas. He served as pastor of St. Michael's until August of 1992 when he was assigned to canonical studies at the Catholic University of America by Bishop Edmond Carmody.

Strickland completed his canonical studies with a Licentiate in Canon Law in May of 1994 and was assigned by Bishop Edmond Carmody as rector of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Tyler, Texas in June of that same year. He was appointed Judicial Vicar for the Diocese of Tyler in May of 1995 and named a Prelate of Honor with the title Monsignor by His Holiness Pope John Paul II in February of 1996.

He was elected Administrator of the Diocese of Tyler in March of 2000 when Bishop Carmody departed for Corpus Christi and served in that capacity until January of 2001 when Bishop Álvaro Corrada, SJ, was installed as the third bishop of the Diocese of Tyler. He continued to serve as rector of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and Judicial Vicar of the diocese until February 1, 2010, when Bishop Corrada named him Vicar General. He served in that capacity until September of 2011 when Bishop Corrada was installed as the second Bishop of Mayagüez, Puerto Rico and appointed Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Tyler sede vacante. At that time, Bishop Corrada appointed him as Delegate of the Apostolic Administrator.

On September 29, 2012, it was announced that His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI had chosen Strickland as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Tyler. He was ordained to the episcopacy on November 28, 2012, by His Eminence Daniel Cardinal DiNardo of Galveston-Houston with Bishop Álvaro Corrada, SJ of Mayagüez, Puerto Rico and Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan of Santa Fe assisting as co-consecrators.

Bishop Joseph Strickland

Bishop of the Diocese of Tyler