Showing posts with label desecration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desecration. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

the new evangelization — it’s pizza time!


Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe opens the door of the Cathedral Church to 600 people — the poor, the homeless, and the unemployed



Cardinal Sepe calls it the “Solidarity Dinner”



Nothing tells God you love him more than turning his cathedral into a dining hall!




It’s an ‘old tradition’...


Here they are in 2011...
 


...in 2016
 


...in 2017
 


At least the Neapolitans will be pleased that Sepe served pizza!

Monday, March 27, 2017

the new evangelization in Italy — the Sunday night pub in the sacristy of Trent’s Cathedral


Mixing the Sacred and the Profane?


Everyone has heard about the new crop of priests coming through the ranks.  Those that are conservative in their tastes of ‘fashion’ as Francis would say.  Well, this post isn’t about them, instead it’s about their brethren clowns, two in particular — don Mauro Leonardelli and don Ronaldo Covi.  On the last Sunday evening of the month after the 7:00 PM Novus Ordo mess, the two clowns turn the sacristy of the Cathedral of Saint Vigilius in Trent into a pub.  Don Mauro (34 years old) and don Ronaldo (37) are in charge of Campus Ministry at the local university (Pastorale Universitaria Torino) and thought this would be a good idea to bring people to the Novus Ordo religion.  Don Mauro tells it best,
“The goal is to create a moment of contact between students that goes beyond traditional events, at 7 o’clock we celebrate the Mass which is open to everyone, but with a specific dedication to the university and then [afterwards] we move students into the sacristy where the entrance is free.”
Homemade hors d'œuvres and snacks are brought by the participants and a professional bartender whips up an alcoholic drink of the night.  For February’s Sunday the theme was winter drink — New Moskow Mules consisting of vodka, ginger beer, cranberry juice, and various trimmings were served.  Hundreds of students showed up and mixed in the sacristy.  One thing was missing from this unique pub — music — as don Mauro explains,
“[Music is] missing on purpose because this moment is one to be aware of. Those who come may invite one or more friends, the guys talk to each other and could not do so if there was the music.”
What do the students think of this sacrilegious pub?

Francis says,
“It’s perfect, because it would not be the same thing if you held it at the oratory or at the priest’s house.  We attended mass, and with only a few steps and we stood together laughing and joking.”
Thuj and Luu, two Vietnamese students in Italy,
“It’s beautiful also because on Sundays many of the places that we frequent on weekdays are closed.  Here we can talk and maybe even find company for a pizza.”
When confronted about his sacrilegious behavior don Mauro doesn’t back down,
“You may not like it, but if we want to attract young people, to revitalize Pastorale Universitaria and give way to a basic evangelization process, we need to change. The mode of action in place, has proven not to be effective.”
And there you have it folks, taking the Novus Ordo to it’s logical conclusion.  When you don’t have the Faith and your religion stands for nothing — the sacristy becomes a pub.  It’s no wonder that Islam is spreading across Europe.




Realted:

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

the new evangelization in Flanders


When the last pub shut down in the village of Brielen in the Netherlands, the presider of the church decided to serve beer until one hour after noon under one condition, that you attend his morning Novus Ordo mess!

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Mark Kenney has more Catholic sense than the rector of St. Cecilia Cathedral

Mark Kenney, the former custodian of St. Cecilia Cathedral.

Another one from the you can't make this up file.  In Omaha, Nebraska at the St. Cecilia Cathedral from January 29th to the 31st was the 31st Annual Cathedral Flower Festival.  As if having a flower festival in a cathedral wasn't bad enough it also had a secular theme, “A Night at the Movies”.  Suffice to say these movies such as “Grease” are immoral.  Here's what the rector of St. Cecilia, Fr. Michael Gutgsell, wrote in his Pastor's Column;
January 29, 30 and 31 this year will mark the 29th Flower Festival weekend. The theme of this year’s festival is “A Night at the Movies”. Movie themes and stars from the Golden Age of motion pictures will be captured and celebrated in dazzling floral arrangements. More than thirty artists, plus the Cathedral Flower Guild, will ply their creative imaginations in these exhibits. 
During the exhibit hours on Saturday and Sunday there will be instrumental and vocal presentations by local groups and stylists. The Cultural Center will feature a complementary art exhibit and the Parish Center will have musical presentations and the goodies of Wheatfields.

The cathedral must be hurting for money as they charged quite a sum of money to privately view this affront to God.
For $75, one can attend a private viewing of the festival exhibits Jan. 29 from 7-9 p.m., and a party from 7:30-10 p.m. at the cultural center. Camille Metoyer Moten and Jim Boggess will perform songs from the movies in the Cinema Cabaret. Call 402-827-3847 by Jan. 18 to register.

Now that the stage has been set, Mark Kenney the then custodian of St. Cecilia Cathedral enters the story.  As written by Michael kelly of Omaha.com in his article, With a pair of bolt cutters and sense of indignation, custodian cuts down what flies in church:
On the first morning of the 31st annual Cathedral Flower Festival, with its theme of “A Night at the Movies,” an agitated church custodian made a bold move. 
Mark Kenney, 59, who grew up in the parish, had worked at St. Cecilia Cathedral for three years. Around 8 a.m. on Jan. 29, he went to a work shed, picked up a pair of heavy-duty bolt cutters and ascended to a catwalk high above the mostly empty nave, or main sanctuary. 
He looked through a peephole, he said, to make sure he wouldn’t hurt any people. And then he cut a steel cable, which sent a suspended, umbrella-carrying, hat-wearing Mary Poppins figure crashing to the floor.
Kenney then went downstairs and removed a cardboard Buddha figure from the Nash Chapel, which also featured costumed mannequins from “The King and I.” He threw the Buddha out one door and proceeded to toss costumed mannequins out two other doors.

Sadly, Mary flew in the cathedral once again.
Gutgsell had known that his custodian had misgivings about secular displays in the church but says he was dumbfounded and didn’t understand why Kenney would take such drastic action. In a brief meeting that week, the pastor said, he had asked for Kenney’s promise not to be disruptive. 
Now the priest was shocked, saying, “You promised!” 
In response, Kenney said, he lashed out. “I started screaming, ‘Father, this is bullshit! We can’t have this in the church. This isn’t culture, it’s Disney crap!’ ” 
Kenney — who has served three terms of up to six months in federal prisons for crossing security lines at military bases in protest of nuclear weapons — then knelt at the communion rail and prayed until officers arrived and handcuffed him. 
He spent a night in jail before he was bailed out and pleaded no contest. He said he is scheduled for sentencing “on Holy Thursday,” March 24. 
Damaging items at the flower festival was wrong, and Kenney said in an interview this week that he will make restitution. But he says secular items such as movie characters are inappropriate in the sacred space of the cathedral and amount to sacrilege and idolatry. 
 Idolatry entry, Concise Catholic Dictionary (1943) 
Gutgsell, a former chancellor of the Omaha Archdiocese and a Catholic University-licensed “canon lawyer,” an expert in church laws and rules, disagrees. 
“Obviously, context is everything,” the priest said, noting that the cathedral also is home to about six concerts a year. No sacrilege or disrespect is conveyed, he said, in the concerts or the dozens of exhibits at the flower festival. 
“Cathedrals,” he said, “are kind of the epicenter for culture presentation and development.” 
Eileen Burke-Sullivan, a theologian and vice provost for mission and ministry at Creighton University, said she sees no problem. The cathedral and the archdiocese, she said, have supported the arts in Omaha for many years. 
“In mixing thematic popular culture with the beauty of God’s creation in flowers,” she said, “I don’t think there’s any inherent idolatry.”

 Sacrilege entry, Concise Catholic Dictionary (1943) 

Are these people who work in the archdiocese insane?  

No sacrilege or disrespect?  

A buddha in the house of God?


The amoral ex-chancellor of the archdiocese of Omaha, Fr. Michael Gutgsell, who desecrated the cathedral with a sacrilegious display but had Mark Kenney arrested.


Michael Kelly then continues in his article,
In a letter of termination two days after the festival incident, Gutgsell wrote to Kenney: “None of the florists and none of the volunteers, any number of whom took time off their work or traveled some distance, had the slightest intention or reason to dishonor the Cathedral. You assigned the word ‘desecration’ to the entire project and as a result slandered anyone associated with it.”
Desecration entry, Concise Catholic Dictionary (1943) 


If this is what the Novus Ordo thinks honoring God and His Angels and His Saints is...yikes! 


The complete list of films were as follows: Mary Poppins, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat, Doctor Zhivago, The King and I, Beauty and the Beast, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Hairspray, Gone with the Wind, Shoes of the Fisherman, The Nission, Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Man of La Mancha, El Cid, Harvey Girls, Lawrence of Arabia, E.T. the Extra-Terrestial, Lilies of the Field, Peter Pan, The Wizard of Oz, The Sound of Music, Phantom of the Opera, Virgin Queen, Hello Dolly!, Grease, Amadeus, and lastly, Ben-Hur.

To view the complete set of photos from 2016 and past years click here.



Some photos of the movies on display at the
31st Annual Cathedral Flower Festival

Dr. Zhivago

 Dr. Zhivago

Hello Dolly!

Hello Dolly!

Lawrence of Arabia


 Virgin Queen

Virgin Queen (yes that's Queen Elizabeth I)


Mary Poppins

Mary Poppins

Grease

The Sound of Music


The Phantom of the Opera

Wizard of Oz
Amadeus

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

Gone with the Wind

Beauty and the Beast

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

The King and I

The King and I

The King and I

The King and I


a local television report on the great tradition of the flower show