This discussion is helping to make clear some of the issues at stake in this guideline. It seems that my suggestion of "topics with a large number of related Wikipedia articles" is too broad and vague. Looking at
Template:Suffrage, I would agree that
Emmeline Pankhurst should not be included
consistent life ethic on healthcare and Bernardin's efforts on secularity
Secularity of public discourse as a response to pluralism:
"The substance of a Catholic position on a consistent ethic of life is rooted in a religious vision. But the citizenry of the United States is radically pluralistic in moral and religious conviction. So we face the challenge of stating our case, which is shaped in terms of our faith and our religious convictions, in non-religious terms which others of different faith convictions might find morally persuasive."
Perl, Paul; McClintock, Jamie S. (2001). "The Catholic "Consistent Life Ethic" and Attitudes toward Capital Punishment and Welfare Reform". Sociology of Religion. 62 (3). Oxford University Press (OUP): 275.
doi:
10.2307/3712351.
ISSN1069-4404.
JSTOR3712351.
Sunshine, Edward R. (1989). "The Primacy of Abortion in the Moral Rhetoric of U.S. Catholic Bishops". The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics. 9: 167–186.
doi:
10.5840/asce1989910.
JSTOR23559454.
Expand consistent life ethic generally
Cleghorn, J. Stephen (1986). "Respect for Life: Research Notes on Cardinal Bernardin's "Seamless Garment"". Review of Religious Research. 28 (2): 129–142.
doi:
10.2307/3511467.
JSTOR3511467.
Dionne, E. J (2008). "What Happened to the Seamless Garment?: The Agony Of Liberal Catholicism". Souled Out: Reclaiming Faith and Politics after the Religious Right. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 151–182.
ISBN9780691143293.
JSTORj.ctt7sx1p.9.
Add to
binitarianism: "The statements about the Godhead are almost binitarian. The role of the Spirit is minimal and in many cases the Spirit is associated with Christ."[67]
National Housing Trust Fund, which receives funding outside the appropriations process. The HTF, the first new affordable housing program in a generation, is administered as a block grant to states and funds development, preservation, and operation of homes that are affordable for those with the lowest incomes. It received its first round of funding in 2016, and states are already putting these funds to good use in developing new, deeply affordable homes.[84]
the Trump administration is aiming to eliminate the Trust Fund to offset tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations[85]
"Whole Health Action Management (WHAM) is a training program and peer support group model developed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration/Health Resources Administration (SAMHSA-HRSA) Center for Integrated Health Solutions to encourage resiliency, wellness, and self-management of physical and behavioral health among people with mental illnesses and substance use disorders. Whole health is defined as having a healthy mind and body, and individuals are taught skills to better manage chronic physical health conditions, psychiatric illness, and addictions with peer support. The training is founded on the principles from existing research and programs in chronic disease management, such as the Health and Recovery Peer (HARP) Program and the Relaxation Response, developed by the Massachusetts General Hospital. WHAM is a powerful program intended to strengthen the peer workforce's role in healthcare delivery. Larry Fricks, Ike Powell, and Peggy Swarbrick are the authors of the WHAM curriculum"[129] citing
http://www.integration.samhsa.gov/health-wellness/wham/WHAM_Participant_Guide.pdf
WHAM "is fully aligned with the spirit of the Affordable Care Act and the increased focus CMS has been placing on the promotion of self-management in persons with all forms of chronic illness, most recently including behavioral health conditions"[130]
There are more than 12 million alcoholics in the U.S.[156]
Of the US adult population, 9% have been to an AA meeting at some time, 3.6% in the prior year, only about one-third of these for problems of their own.
[157]
During the prior year a further 2.1% used other support/therapy groups
[157]
Over 2 million people worldwide are members of AA as of 2016.[158]
Rigorous academic study demonstrates prayer reduces cravings for alcohol
Marc Galanter, Zoran Josipovic, Helen Dermatis, Jochen Weber, and Mary Alice Millard (2016-03-25). "An initial fMRI study on neural correlates of prayer in members of Alcoholics Anonymous". The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse: 1–11. doi:10.3109/00952990.2016.1141912
AA Methods
AA uses similar methods to cults
Alexander, Francesa; Rollins, Michele (1985). "Alcoholics Anonymous: the unseen cult". California Sociologist. Los Angeles: California State University. 17 (1): 33–48. ISSN 0162-8712. OCLC 4025459 <
http://www.silkworth.net/sociology/Soc63OCR.pdf>
the AA program's focus on admission of having a problem increases deviant stigma and strips members of their previous cultural identity, replacing it with the deviant identity
Levinson, D. (1983). Galanter, Marc, ed. "Current status of the field: An anthropological perspective on the behavior modification treatment of alcoholism". Recent Developments in Alcoholism. New York: Plenum Press. 1: 255–261. doi:10.1007/978-1-4613-3617-4_14 <
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007%2F978-1-4613-3617-4_14> ISSN 0738-422X
PMID6680227
^The pivotal changes seem to have come with the permission to charge interest on lent money: particularly the Act 'In restraint of usury' of Henry VIII in England in 1545 (see: a) 'In Restraint of Usury: the Lending of Money at Interest', Sir Harry Page, The Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accounts, London, 1985, b) the Bibliography therein, and c) especially 'The Idea of Usury: from Tribal Brotherhood to Universal Otherhood', Benjamin Nelson, 2nd Edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1949, enlarged 2nd edition, 1969.) -John Courtneidge
^"If you have money, don't lend it at interest. Rather, give [it] to someone from whom you won't get it back." (Gospel of Thomas, Saying 95)
^
Pope washes feet and more about pilgrim footwashing
foot washing was performed by nobles, pope, sovereigns (kings). Money, food, and clothing were also often given at this time (Holy Week). This was discontinued after Pius IX, but revived in 1961.
called Mandatum
first observed by Saint Gregory
more
^Durnbaugh, Donald F. (1997). "Sustainers or seducers? The rise and meaning of church-related institutions". Mennonite Quarterly Review. 71 (3): 356f.
ISSN0025-9373.
^"Eckhart Tolle: Does the Mask of "Stresslessness" Hide a Deep, Bitter Anger?". Retrieved 2013-07-28. Stackhouse has described Eckhart Tolle as one of several spiritual teachers who "purport to have investigated the world's religions (quite a claim) and found them wanting, who routinely subject those religions to withering criticism, and who then champion their own views as superior to all these alternatives".
^Lopez Trujillo has accused Guilio Girardi of subordinating faith to Marxist ideology and of creating antagonism within the church by presentin the hierarchy as representatives of oppressive classes.
^Allen, John L. JR. (28 May 1999).
"Resigned Priest Creates www.WomenPriests.org". National Catholic Reporter. Retrieved 14 July 2017. A well-known Dutch theologian who resigned his priesthood in protest of Ad Tuendam Fidem, last year's papal document tightening church rules on dissent, launched a Web site May 28 intended to be the leading international collection of resources in support of women's ordination. ... In 1977 Wijngaards (pronounced Wine guards) wrote the book Did Christ Rule Out Women Priests? in response to Inter Insigniores, a papal document that reasserted the ban on women priests. After Ad Tuendam Fidem, and especially a commentary by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger that asserted the teaching on women priests is infallible, Wijngaards said he felt compelled to resign
Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTENational Repository1878326" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTEEncyclopedia Americana1994520" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTETukerMalleson1897251" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTEHampson1841185f" is not used in the content (see the
help page).
This discussion is helping to make clear some of the issues at stake in this guideline. It seems that my suggestion of "topics with a large number of related Wikipedia articles" is too broad and vague. Looking at
Template:Suffrage, I would agree that
Emmeline Pankhurst should not be included
consistent life ethic on healthcare and Bernardin's efforts on secularity
Secularity of public discourse as a response to pluralism:
"The substance of a Catholic position on a consistent ethic of life is rooted in a religious vision. But the citizenry of the United States is radically pluralistic in moral and religious conviction. So we face the challenge of stating our case, which is shaped in terms of our faith and our religious convictions, in non-religious terms which others of different faith convictions might find morally persuasive."
Perl, Paul; McClintock, Jamie S. (2001). "The Catholic "Consistent Life Ethic" and Attitudes toward Capital Punishment and Welfare Reform". Sociology of Religion. 62 (3). Oxford University Press (OUP): 275.
doi:
10.2307/3712351.
ISSN1069-4404.
JSTOR3712351.
Sunshine, Edward R. (1989). "The Primacy of Abortion in the Moral Rhetoric of U.S. Catholic Bishops". The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics. 9: 167–186.
doi:
10.5840/asce1989910.
JSTOR23559454.
Expand consistent life ethic generally
Cleghorn, J. Stephen (1986). "Respect for Life: Research Notes on Cardinal Bernardin's "Seamless Garment"". Review of Religious Research. 28 (2): 129–142.
doi:
10.2307/3511467.
JSTOR3511467.
Dionne, E. J (2008). "What Happened to the Seamless Garment?: The Agony Of Liberal Catholicism". Souled Out: Reclaiming Faith and Politics after the Religious Right. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 151–182.
ISBN9780691143293.
JSTORj.ctt7sx1p.9.
Add to
binitarianism: "The statements about the Godhead are almost binitarian. The role of the Spirit is minimal and in many cases the Spirit is associated with Christ."[67]
National Housing Trust Fund, which receives funding outside the appropriations process. The HTF, the first new affordable housing program in a generation, is administered as a block grant to states and funds development, preservation, and operation of homes that are affordable for those with the lowest incomes. It received its first round of funding in 2016, and states are already putting these funds to good use in developing new, deeply affordable homes.[84]
the Trump administration is aiming to eliminate the Trust Fund to offset tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations[85]
"Whole Health Action Management (WHAM) is a training program and peer support group model developed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration/Health Resources Administration (SAMHSA-HRSA) Center for Integrated Health Solutions to encourage resiliency, wellness, and self-management of physical and behavioral health among people with mental illnesses and substance use disorders. Whole health is defined as having a healthy mind and body, and individuals are taught skills to better manage chronic physical health conditions, psychiatric illness, and addictions with peer support. The training is founded on the principles from existing research and programs in chronic disease management, such as the Health and Recovery Peer (HARP) Program and the Relaxation Response, developed by the Massachusetts General Hospital. WHAM is a powerful program intended to strengthen the peer workforce's role in healthcare delivery. Larry Fricks, Ike Powell, and Peggy Swarbrick are the authors of the WHAM curriculum"[129] citing
http://www.integration.samhsa.gov/health-wellness/wham/WHAM_Participant_Guide.pdf
WHAM "is fully aligned with the spirit of the Affordable Care Act and the increased focus CMS has been placing on the promotion of self-management in persons with all forms of chronic illness, most recently including behavioral health conditions"[130]
There are more than 12 million alcoholics in the U.S.[156]
Of the US adult population, 9% have been to an AA meeting at some time, 3.6% in the prior year, only about one-third of these for problems of their own.
[157]
During the prior year a further 2.1% used other support/therapy groups
[157]
Over 2 million people worldwide are members of AA as of 2016.[158]
Rigorous academic study demonstrates prayer reduces cravings for alcohol
Marc Galanter, Zoran Josipovic, Helen Dermatis, Jochen Weber, and Mary Alice Millard (2016-03-25). "An initial fMRI study on neural correlates of prayer in members of Alcoholics Anonymous". The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse: 1–11. doi:10.3109/00952990.2016.1141912
AA Methods
AA uses similar methods to cults
Alexander, Francesa; Rollins, Michele (1985). "Alcoholics Anonymous: the unseen cult". California Sociologist. Los Angeles: California State University. 17 (1): 33–48. ISSN 0162-8712. OCLC 4025459 <
http://www.silkworth.net/sociology/Soc63OCR.pdf>
the AA program's focus on admission of having a problem increases deviant stigma and strips members of their previous cultural identity, replacing it with the deviant identity
Levinson, D. (1983). Galanter, Marc, ed. "Current status of the field: An anthropological perspective on the behavior modification treatment of alcoholism". Recent Developments in Alcoholism. New York: Plenum Press. 1: 255–261. doi:10.1007/978-1-4613-3617-4_14 <
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007%2F978-1-4613-3617-4_14> ISSN 0738-422X
PMID6680227
^The pivotal changes seem to have come with the permission to charge interest on lent money: particularly the Act 'In restraint of usury' of Henry VIII in England in 1545 (see: a) 'In Restraint of Usury: the Lending of Money at Interest', Sir Harry Page, The Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accounts, London, 1985, b) the Bibliography therein, and c) especially 'The Idea of Usury: from Tribal Brotherhood to Universal Otherhood', Benjamin Nelson, 2nd Edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1949, enlarged 2nd edition, 1969.) -John Courtneidge
^"If you have money, don't lend it at interest. Rather, give [it] to someone from whom you won't get it back." (Gospel of Thomas, Saying 95)
^
Pope washes feet and more about pilgrim footwashing
foot washing was performed by nobles, pope, sovereigns (kings). Money, food, and clothing were also often given at this time (Holy Week). This was discontinued after Pius IX, but revived in 1961.
called Mandatum
first observed by Saint Gregory
more
^Durnbaugh, Donald F. (1997). "Sustainers or seducers? The rise and meaning of church-related institutions". Mennonite Quarterly Review. 71 (3): 356f.
ISSN0025-9373.
^"Eckhart Tolle: Does the Mask of "Stresslessness" Hide a Deep, Bitter Anger?". Retrieved 2013-07-28. Stackhouse has described Eckhart Tolle as one of several spiritual teachers who "purport to have investigated the world's religions (quite a claim) and found them wanting, who routinely subject those religions to withering criticism, and who then champion their own views as superior to all these alternatives".
^Lopez Trujillo has accused Guilio Girardi of subordinating faith to Marxist ideology and of creating antagonism within the church by presentin the hierarchy as representatives of oppressive classes.
^Allen, John L. JR. (28 May 1999).
"Resigned Priest Creates www.WomenPriests.org". National Catholic Reporter. Retrieved 14 July 2017. A well-known Dutch theologian who resigned his priesthood in protest of Ad Tuendam Fidem, last year's papal document tightening church rules on dissent, launched a Web site May 28 intended to be the leading international collection of resources in support of women's ordination. ... In 1977 Wijngaards (pronounced Wine guards) wrote the book Did Christ Rule Out Women Priests? in response to Inter Insigniores, a papal document that reasserted the ban on women priests. After Ad Tuendam Fidem, and especially a commentary by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger that asserted the teaching on women priests is infallible, Wijngaards said he felt compelled to resign
Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTENational Repository1878326" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTEEncyclopedia Americana1994520" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTETukerMalleson1897251" is not used in the content (see the
help page). Cite error: A
list-defined reference named "FOOTNOTEHampson1841185f" is not used in the content (see the
help page).