Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Christians and their allies should respond to ideologues’ mockery of their faith.

 https://www.wordonfire.org/articles/olympian-obscenity/



Radical queer ideologues have long been willing publicly to profane Christ and Christian values. But before last week, they had never done so at an Olympic ceremony, which had historically represented our common humanity across nations and cultures. 

That line has now been crossed. In a now-infamous moment from the Paris Olympics’ opening ceremony, a group of drag queens flanked a woman with a ring around her head, with a topless, blue-painted man lying atop a platter at the display’s center. The exhibit was an obvious mockery of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. The display prompted pushback from Christian leaders across the globe. For example, Bishop Robert Barron, at whose Word on Fire organization I serve as senior director, called on Christians to take a public stand against the mockery.

In response, Olympic organizers removed the opening ceremony from YouTube and issued a qualified apology for causing offense. Unfortunately, these same organizers now seem to be gaslighting the public, denying that the display was a play on The Last Supper, despite their own performers’ claims to the contrary.

How can Christians and like-minded allies prevent this ugly event from being memory-holed? More broadly, how can they combat an increasingly pervasive queer ideology—that is, a political worldview that seeks to dismantle objective, biologically based conceptions of women, men, and family formation and replace them with subjective, transgressive expressions of gender and sexuality decoupled from the creation and nurturing of human life? 

Here are five suggestions:

Boycott the Institutional Backers

The movement plants its flag on the territory it holds. Garish rainbow symbols identify the movement’s corporate supporters. Christians and all who embrace traditional values should pull their money from such organizations, forcing them to choose between virtue-signaling and profit.

Cleanse Our Temples

The belief system that inspired the Olympic debacle has too often penetrated Protestant and Catholic churches, charities, and schools. My family and I, for example, just visited one of the most well-known Catholic universities in the world; we were greeted by an admissions counselor who enthusiastically introduced herself to prospective students and their parents with her pronouns: “she/they.”

Such capitulation is now commonplace in many Christians institutions, despite the obvious conflicts between biblical religion and the radical ideology. The Bible upholds and celebrates the integrity of the human body, the intrinsic and complementary goodness of the two (and only two) sexes, the innocence of children, and the creation of new human life within a natural family. Queer ideology, by contrast, denies every one of these goods. No effort to resist it will succeed if Christians continue to allow its exponents to capture the pulpits and indoctrinate children. It’s time for believers to insist on doctrinal orthodoxy within their ranks.

Go on the Rhetorical Offensive

The ideology’s most effective weapon of institutional capture is rhetorical. Grounded in a postmodern understanding of the subjectivity of language, its proponents have gutted words of their meanings and stuffed them with their own content. They have redefined, for example, “compassion,” “kindness,” “inclusion,” “safety,” “diversity,” and “equality,” to fit their political goals. The opening ceremony’s creative director put this linguistic manipulation on display when he stated that the drag exhibit was intended to “celebrate community tolerance”—“tolerance,” in rainbow argot, meaning publicly mocking those whose values you do not share.

Christians and their allies must not only reclaim the stability and coherence of language but also go on the offensive, describing in clear terms the perversions of the ideology, including its support of so-called “gender-affirming care.” Consider, as a representative example, Christopher Rufo’s use of the term “child sex-change procedure” to describe the surgical mutilation of children’s healthy reproductive organs. The phrase accurately captures the reality underneath the euphemism and shows how Christians can respond to the ideologues’ efforts to use language to shield their radicalism.

Reclaim Where We Can, Build Anew Where We Must

The opening ceremonies may have been the most prominent display of the ideology’s success at institutional capture, but at the local level, especially in public schools and universities, its proponents are taking power as well. Some of these institutions are past the point of reform, but others might yet be reclaimed. In those cases, organized campaigns—such as the legal challenges and parent-led movements that have liberated some public schools from transgender madness—can save institutions. It will be an uphill battle and require courage and persistence, but motivated, organized, and politically savvy people can succeed.

Be Fruitful and Multiply

Queer ideology is literally sterile. Its view of human sexuality denies the primacy of the naturally formed family and makes idols of kink, fetish, and self-mutilation. Left to its internal logic, it will die out. Those who remain after this ideology’s demise will be the descendants of those who cherished and fought to protect the creation and nurturing of new human life. But those who seek to pass on the goods of civilization to the next generation must produce the next generation.

The 2024 Olympic ceremony is a watershed moment. The organizers’ version of The Last Supper ridiculed self-sacrificial love and laid bare the rotten fruit of a radical ideology. Christians and non-Christians alike ignore the threat at their own peril.

Friday, August 9, 2024

Woe to those who do not make reparation - Our Lord WILL NOT be Mocked -



Reparation for the blasphemies committed against Jesus Christ 
by the organizers of the 2024 Paris Olympics 

Sponsored by 
St. Joan of Arc Community https://stjoanofarc.ca/
 St. Joseph's Missionaries of the Holy Face https://sjmoftheholyface.org/

From Notre Dame Cathedral Ottawa, ON. Canada to the French Embassy 

for Sunday's procession and prayers of reparation click here
for Tuesday's procession and prayers of reparation click here
for Thursday's procession and prayers of reparation click here

Videos from Ottawa Photographer Paul Lauzon click here

Paris Blasphemy: What Took the Vatican So Long to Respond?| National Catholic Register - Fr. Raymond De Souza

Paris Blasphemy: What Took the Vatican So Long to Respond?| National Catholic Register: COMMENTARY: The Vatican’s brief Aug. 3 statement in the wake of the Paris Olympics’ opening ceremonies culminated a disjointed seven days.

Father Raymond J. de Souza CommentariesAugust 8, 2024
It was a very strange week for Vatican communications.
Pope Francis was badly served in June when his communications chief, Paolo Ruffini, defended his department’s ongoing use of Father Marko Rupnik’s art by invoking the unofficial motto of the pontificate, “Who am I to judge?”
Certainly, the Holy Father could not have been pleased that his most famous phrase was being deployed to defend art that, for example, the Knights of Columbus has decided to remove from display.
The week after the Paris Olympics’ opening ceremonies ought to have been comparatively easy for Vatican communications to handle. When there is a global denunciation of anti-Christian blasphemy, it ought to be simple for the Vatican to add its voice.

But instead, the Holy Father kept silent for eight days, and only released a tepid statement on a Saturday evening in the most understated manner possible. It was decidedly little and very late.

While the brief statement said that the Holy See “cannot but join the voices raised in recent days to deplore the offense,” it had spent the week proving that it could do just that. It was only when voices from outside the Catholic world spoke out that the Holy Father decided to speak himself.

What happened?Forgetting Charlie Hebdo?

In January 2015, Islamist terrorists killed 12 people in the Paris offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, claiming to avenge cartoons that depicted offensive images of Muhammad. Pope Francis addressed the matter in an airborne press conference.
“You cannot provoke. You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith,” Pope Francis said. Those who make such provocations “can expect a punch.
The remarks were widely debated at the time, as they seemed to show some sympathy for the terrorists’ motivations, while condemning their actions. “But we cannot kill in God’s name,” Francis said. “This is an aberration.”

The Holy Father was clear in 2015 about not insulting the faith of Muslims. It should have been easy for the Vatican to state the same about insults to the Catholic faith. Both events were in the same city.
Constantinople and Cairo Speak. Within 24 hours of the Friday ceremonies, the French bishops had issued their statement, as had Bishop Robert Barron and Bishop Andrew Cozzens, both of Minnesota. Much more important, Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople, the “first among equals” among the Orthodox Churches, issued a statement on Monday, lamenting the “insulting performances.”
“Blasphemy towards God is not progress, nor is it a right to insult the religious beliefs of our fellow men,” it read. “The spontaneous expression of aversion and disapproval by the world, hopefully, has sent a sufficiently loud message to those responsible and is a source of hope to avoid similar actions in the future.”

Constantinople’s praise for “sufficiently loud” “expression[s] of aversion” was an open invitation for other Christian pastors to speak. Given the exceptionally close relationship between Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew, it would have seemed automatic for the former to join the latter.

Also that Monday, the Muslim Council of Elders, led by chairman Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of al-Azhar in Cairo, condemned the Paris ceremonies, which “blatantly insulted Jesus Christ and the esteemed status of prophethood.” The Muslim Elders further rejected “all attempts to demean religious symbols, beliefs, and sacred figures.”

Al-Azhar is a leading center of Islamic scholarship in Cairo and is a favored dialogue partner of the Vatican. In 2019, Sheikh al-Tayeb and Pope Francis met in Abu Dhabi to co-sign the “Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together,” one of the most important initiatives of the pontificate. Al-Tayeb referenced that declaration in his condemnation of what took place in Paris.

Bartholomew and al-Tayeb are two of the most important religious leaders in the world, and both are close collaborators with Pope Francis. They would have been reluctant to comment strongly upon something going on in a historically Catholic country if they thought it would put Pope Francis in a difficult position. On the contrary, both likely expected that they would be reinforcing the Vatican's response. That the Vatican would, in fact, not join them was more than strange.

No Outrage but Outreach

While there was no outrage from the Vatican, Vatican News did publish on Thursday a brief message from the Holy Father to Jesuit Father James Martin on the occasion of his annual Outreach conference. Pope Francis does that every year.

This year’s handwritten papal note was dated July 11, well before the Olympics. Nevertheless, the release of a supporting note for Outreach — Father Martin’s effort to “celebrate and elevate the LGBTQ Catholic experience” — was unfortunate timing. Some of the drag queen performers in the blasphemy in Paris characterized their work as a celebration of the LGBTQ community. Skilled communications officials ought not to have been silent on outrage while affirming Outreach.

The Turk Is Not Delighted

Having resisted joining his fellow Catholic bishops and Orthodox and Muslim leaders, Pope Francis finally gave in. Pressure came from the president of Turkey, an unlikely source.

The process by which Pope Francis finally conceded to say something was reported by papal friend Gerard O’Connell, a preferred inside source for this pontificate. As a friend of Pope Francis for 20 years, O’Connell provides in America magazine inside information that the Holy Father’s courtiers wish to make known. In this case, those close to the Holy Father wanted to describe the impact that other figures had on his react
ion.




On the same day that Vatican News published the message to Outreach, President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan of Turkey revealed that he had spoken by phone with Pope Francis about the “immoral displays at the opening of the Paris Olympic Games which caused outrage and provoked reactions.”

The president’s office reported that ErdoÄŸan told the Holy Father that “it was necessary to raise voices together and take a common stance in this regard.”

That was likely the final point at which, having received an explicit — and publicly disclosed — request from a Muslim head of government, the Holy See could no longer resist. Another two days would pass before the muted statement would be sent out after hours on Saturday evening. Previous generations of Ottomans would have been surprised to learn of such Turkish influence in Rome.

Thus ended a strange week in Paris. Rome kept silent on anti-Christian blasphemy but, just as Pope Francis defended Muslim sensibilities in 2015, Muslims defended Christian sensibilities now. Strange times indeed.Keywords:
Olympics
holy see press office
vatican communications



Father Raymond J. de Souza Father Raymond J. de Souza is the founding editor of Convivium magazine.

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Procession of Reparation - Joan of Arc Commuinity - August 8, 2024 -

This is all about the Battle - The Holy Face is the Devotion for our Time


 
Procession of Reparation for the blasphemies committed against Jesus Christ by the organizers of the 2024 Paris Olympics 

Thursday, August 8th, 7PM

Sponsored by 
St. Joan of Arc Community
St. Joseph's Missionaries of the Holy Face

From Notre Dame Cathedral Ottawa, ON. Canada 
to the French Embassy 
Procession and Prayers of Reparation

for Sunday's procession click here
for Tuesday's procession click here



Procession from Notre Dame Cathedral
to the French Embassy below ( and back )

Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary led by John and Pat

John's Closing Remarks

A few Photos
May God Reward and bless you!










Fr. Mike Reacts to Olympics "Last Supper" - It was God Himself who was mocked


Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Procession of Reparation - Joan of Arc Commuinity - August 6, 2024 - Feast of the Transfiguration


Procession of Reparation for the blasphemies 
committed against Jesus Christ 
by the organizers of the 2024 Paris Olympics 
Tuesday, August 6th 7PM

Sponsored by 
St. Joan of Arc Community
St. Joseph's Missionaries of the Holy Face

From Notre Dame Cathedral Ottawa, ON. Canada 
to the French Embassy 


PROCESSION and Prayers



Holy Rosary with John Pacheco
The Luminous Mysteries 
from the Procession above



PHOTOS

Walking down Sussex with Marlene and Jackie
I remember as a child my aunt Mary telling me that she rented a room at the Joan of Arc while studying to be a teacher







Gathering at the Cathedral
Our Lady of Kibeho, Mother of the Word, pray for us






Beginning of the Procession to the French Embassy









Returning to the Cathedral 
Beautiful Evening Sunlight. Glory to God in the highest!


Sunday, August 4, 2024

Procession of Reparation - Joan of Arc Commuinity - August 4, 2024

God will not be Mocked

Procession of Reparation for the blasphemies 
committed against Jesus Christ 
by the organizers of the 2024 Paris Olympics 
Sunday, August 4th 3PM

Sponsored by 
St. Joan of Arc Community
St. Joseph's Missionaries of the Holy Face

From Notre Dame Cathedral Ottawa, ON. Canada 
to the French Embassy 

With speeches at the Embassy by John Pacheco, Ted Sabourin and Father Timothy Nelligan of Blessed Sacrament Parish Ottawa,  Ontario

Procession


John Pacheco



Ted Sabourin





Father Timothy Nelligan



Photos by Jackie 

On our way to Notre Dame
Angel Gabriel maybe



Joan of Arc Institute












In the Church



In the Kiosk 






In front of Notre Dame

Before the Procession 
Notre Dame Cathedral









Procession







Embassy





Under the Fig tree Maybe?




Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Saturday, July 27, 2024