I must admit that this time Cardinal Dolan has gone too far. Apparently though the ok to the catholic themed gala was given by the Holy See through Cardinal Ravasi but it seems like Dolan just closed his eyes and played along. They have lost their common sense. The paradox is you have the Cardinals saying it was all ok and Piers Morgan, a lapsed Catholic and liberal cnn anchor shocked by what he saw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...med-hell-break-loose-disrespect-religion.html “I'm a Catholic. Not the most devout you'll ever meet, I'll admit. But I was brought up a Catholic – I even received not entirely successful spiritual guidance from nuns as a teenager! – and I still consider myself to be a Catholic. I know many people don't believe in any God or religion, let alone Catholicism, and I respect that. All I ask in return is for my beliefs not to be rudely disrespected. Just as I always respect other religions even if I don't believe in what they represent. To me, this year's Met Gala crossed a line and was openly, brazenly disrespectful. By doing so, it confirmed itself as an organisation of rank double standards, because everyone knows they'd have never dared do it to Islam or Judaism. Apparently – staggeringly - the Vatican gave permission for the Gala to be 'Catholic-themed' because it has already provided a variety of clothes and other items for an accompanying exhibition at the Met. To which my response is: what the hell was the Vatican thinking?”
https://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/...lics-are-fuming-with-disgusting-a3832891.html It kinda all speaks for itself. My two dogs would have known this was WRONG. How come Cardinal Dolan didn't ? I mean REALLY?
There is a very good reason they choose no other religion to ridicule and subject to scorn. None of the others are true and every single person who took part knows it. Our Lord suffered much worse than this and said not a word but subjected Himself to his persecutors willingly.
In fairness to Piers Morgan, I wouldn't describe him as 'lapsed'. By no means perfect (in that he wouldn't be alone), but Catholic all the same. We owe him a debt of gratitude for speaking out.
Those like Josh Barro who constantly bleat about cultural appropriation and, let's face it, culture in general, usually know next to nothing about it. To them it is something to play political games with, not something to live by.
So true. Same goes with the Satanists going only to the Catholic faith to steel and the desecrate the Holy Eucharist. A world renown evangelist and apologetics, Raymond DeSousa, who stayed with our family a few times, told of a story where he confronted a lady he saw receive communion and did not consume. He approached her after mass and asked her if her name was Eve, to which she was shocked he new her name. Raymond is no dummy in this area and new that many of these Satanist women go by the name Eve. He was able to get it out of her that he knew what her intentions were with the Eucharist, as they do a black mass where they desecrate it, fully knowing it is truly Jesus in the bread. Allot more details he provided, but it was a horrid example of what evil does behing the scene's.
I am too Padraig, but I was thinking this morning how even through all of the evil God is using it to call the good home. How many lukewarm Catholics have seen the current crisis and it has caused them to truly confront their faith for possibly the first time in their lives and truly ask themselves what they believe. We are being sifted. The wheat and the chaff. The sheep and the goats. Evil can be used by God to make the lukewarm fervent and the fervent even more faith-filled. Pope Francis has created the greatest revival of orthodox Catholicism that we have seen in a long time. It was not his intention, but it is the outcome. Just as they tried to destroy the early Church through martyrdom they are trying to destroy the last vestiges of faith today. What they don't know is that when you bury the faithful, a glorious fruit bearing tree emerges. You cannot bury the Truth! View attachment 7831
Thank God that many others spoke up against the 2018 Met Gala , Fifty shades of Catholicism’: Catholics castigate ‘tasteless, indecent, blasphemous’ Met Gala Claire Chretien https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/f...tholics-castigate-tasteless-indecent-blasphem catholic, met gala, timothy dolan May 9, 2018 (LifeSiteNews) – Catholics found a number of reasons to criticize the 2018 Met Gala. There was the presence of a Catholic-themed bondage mask in an exhibit alongside Vatican-loaned sacred vestments; there were the scantily-clad celebrities dressed as a cleavage-flaunting Blessed Virgin Mary, a seductive female cardinal, and a bejeweled female pope; and there was the presence of New York's Cardinal Timothy Dolan at the event who rhapsodized about the “Catholic imagination.” It was singer Rihanna who dressed as the pope, complete with a glittery mitre that Dolan later joked he loaned her. EWTN's Raymond Arroyo called the event a "very glitzy drag show" and a "narcissistic display." Laura Ingraham, who was speaking with Arroyo, called the event "Fifty Shades of Catholicism." Ross Douthat commented in the New York Times that attendees wore sacred-themed vestments, "sexing them up for shock value." Frequently raunchy, blasphemous singer Madonna performed a sensual version of Like a Prayer surrounded by monks and maids. The maids dressed in the same kind of corset as it was revealed that Madonna wore after the monks removed her monk cloak. "Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination" was the theme of this year’s annual fundraising gala for New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, and also the theme for the Met’s largest exhibition to date. Matthew Schmitz in First Things criticized the display for containing "tasteless, indecent, and blasphemous fashion items." But not all Catholics were disturbed by what is being called “blasphemy” by many. Claire Giangravè and Christopher White of Crux wrote a glowing report about the event, calling it a "homecoming" for celebrities who once practiced the Catholic faith. Their report exuded enthusiasm for the event. "Grammy-Award winner and evening co-host Rihanna, for instance, was one of the night’s real standouts, showing up with her own pope-like Golden miter, adorned with jewels and crystals," they reported. Archbishop of New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan told Crux that he "did not find the spirit of the evening to be offensive or blasphemous at all.” Eloise Blondiau of the Jesuit-run America magazine said that Catholics "should not complain about cultural appropriation in the same way that other groups might because they are so well-represented in popular culture." Below LifeSiteNews publishes a few reactions to the exhibit from across the Catholic world. ***Catholics who criticised the event*** Raymond Arroyo and Laura Ingraham on The Ingraham Angle, Tuesday, May 9, 2018: Arroyo: “Here’s the problem with all of this. There are some Catholics that look at this and they say, ‘these vestments that are on display form the Vatican – they mean something. And what they mean [is] they point to the reality of the Mass. And Catholics believe [that] in the Mass, Jesus Himself becomes present. That’s what all the smells and bells and the art and the architecture is about. “When you remove that meaning, you’re left, basically, with a very glitzy drag show.” “The Vatican gave permission for sacred vestments to be displayed at the Metropolitan Museum. They really should have put some conditions on the loan.” Ingraham: “Jewish people wouldn’t allow this, and rightly . . . and Muslim people wouldn’t allow it, it would be considered disrespectful. The Christians and the Catholics, you can always trash.” [Pointing to some of the “art” objects on display, like the bondage mask covered in rosaries] Arroyo: “These are side-by-side with Papal vestments. Ingraham: And Dolan is standing there near the bondage hat? What is going on with that? Arroyo: “Cardinal Dolan said, ‘This was to bring out the good, the beautiful and the true … ’” Ingraham interjected: “... and the leather.” Arroyo continued with his statement, “... It’s very hard to see that, for this narcissistic display.” Ingraham: “This is Fifty Shades of Catholicism. This is ridiculous. I’m going to get in all sorts of trouble [for saying this].” Ingraham then blessed herself with the sign of the Cross. Ross Douthat, the New York Times: Like Proust’s “caravans of swells” attending liturgical performances, the attendees at the Met were paying a cultural homage to the aesthetic riches of the Roman Church — when, of course, they weren’t sexing them up for shock value... ...in the case of the opulent style of Catholic fashion on display at the Met Gala, it is very clear where Francis stands. As Tara Isabella Burton points out in an astute piece for Vox, it’s the pope’s traditionalist adversaries who are more likely to don the sort of “heavenly” garb being feted and imitated at the Met — while from his own simple choice of dress to his constant digs at overdressed clerics and fancy traditionalists, the pope believes that baroque Catholicism belongs in a museum or at a costume gala, and that the church’s future lies in the simple, the casual, the austere and the plain. For this, as for his doctrine-shaking innovations, Francis has won admiring press. But as with the last wave of Catholic revolution, there is little evidence that the modernizing project makes moderns into Catholics. ...Here the Met Gala should offer the faith from which it took its theme a little bit of inspiration. The path forward for the Catholic Church in the modern world is extraordinarily uncertain. But there is no plausible path that does not involve more of what was displayed and appropriated and blasphemed against in New York City Monday night, more of what once made Catholicism both great and weird, and could yet make it both again. Matthew Schmitz, First Things: According to the organizers, this display of papal vestments and various tasteless, indecent, and blasphemous fashion items is meant to illustrate “the Catholic imagination.” Whenever someone uses the phrase—or its close cousin, “the sacramental imagination”—I know that I am about to hear a tedious disquisition on Flannery O’Connor, or an account of Catholic belief that muddles error and truth. In this regard, the exhibition does not disappoint… We should attend to the real Catholic imagination and not its sentimental counterfeit. The same faith that gave rise to these beautiful baubles proposed views on sexuality and social order that are contrary to the spirit of the age. It is foolish to suppose that either the Church’s teaching or its relics are mere artefacts that now have lost their power. These beautiful copes, stoles, clasps, and rings still move men—still have the power Leo XIII acknowledged in Testem Benevolentiae when he advised priests in America to spread the faith “by the pomp and splendor of ceremonies” as well as “by setting forth that sound form of doctrine.” In the Met's carnival atmosphere, their splendor seems all the more radiant. Michael Voris, Church Militant: Church Militant considered using the headline “Dolan pimps out Catholic beauty,” but “we didn’t want to insult any pimps.” Piers Morgan, Daily Mail: “...what the hell was the Vatican thinking?” continued...
continued from above... [and others spoke up in favor of it, ] ***Catholics who defended the event*** Claire Giangravè and Christopher White, Crux: Angels, Madonnas, and cinch-waisted bishop-inspired dresses graced the red carpet for the fashion world’s biggest night out at the 2018 Met Gala on Monday night. While the theme of the evening was “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination,” for some star-studded attendees, the event was more of a homecoming. [...] Grammy-Award winner and evening co-host Rihanna, for instance, was one of the night’s real standouts, showing up with her own pope-like Golden miter, adorned with jewels and crystals. Oscar winner Jared Leto entered the scene wearing a pastel light blue suit, decked out by a priest-like sash, topped by a gold leaf crown, prompting the paparazzi on hand to immediately exclaim “Jesus!” Hollywood darling Anne Hathaway, wearing a voluminous cardinal red gown, passed by members of the press on the red carpet. When one shouted, “You look like an angel,” she snapped back “Actually, I’m feeling quite devilish.” Pop-singer Ariana Grande made waves wearing a ball-skirted gown covered in creamy tulle with twisting bodies of Michelangelo’s Last Judgment from the Sistine Chapel. More controversial, however, was actor and producer Lena Waithe, who entered wearing a rainbow flag cape to draw attention to LGBT concerns. While Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, was on hand for the evening’s gala, he did not make his way down the red carpet, choosing instead to enter from a side entrance. Yet that didn’t keep his name from being a part of the celebrity chatter, with many attendees saying they were delighted he would be joining. Inside, Dolan was met with more familiar company, when the Sistine Chapel choir offered a surprise performance. Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, to Crux: “I did not find the spirit of the evening to be offensive or blasphemous at all.” “Was some of it edgy? Yes, but I never met any person that seemed to be snippy or snotty about the Church, or who intended anything to be offensive.” “We could have had a lecture at the museum on the Catholic imagination and not too many people may have showed up, especially the crowd from last night. But when you do an evening like that, you get everybody.” “Boy, you talk about the public square - with some of the movers and shakers who were there - and they’re reminded of positive memories of the Church and of devotions, prayers, traditions, and liturgies, as many of them told me they were. This could only be for the good of the Church.” Eloise Blondiau, America magazine: ...Catholics, while entitled to offense, should not complain about cultural appropriation in the same way that other groups might because they are so well-represented in popular culture. The stakes would be much higher, for example, if the “Islamic imagination” were taken as the exhibition and gala’s theme. For every shallow engagement with the faith that a Catholic must endure, there is an abundance of better examples (“The Young Pope,” “Lady Bird”) to look to, and the consequence of misrepresentations are less dire.
No wonder Our Blessed Mother is crying. We should be too! Pray for these lost souls for Jesus loves them.
Well Cardinal Dolan liked it. One of the guys who brought us, 'Who are we to judge?', Pope Francis. Cardianal Dolan and I quote said of Pope Francis, ' We got the gravy' Yeah. great discernment there too.
If we look back to the time Jesus walked this earth and taught and sanctified his disciples, it seems to me the only two people who understood what it was all about was Jesus and Mary. All others did not come to fully understand what the 33 years of Jesus life on earth was all about until after Pentecost. Many mystics, saints and prophet's today have spoken of the Second Pentecost that is coming. I assume most, even among the faithful, will be somewhat clueless as to what God is doing through the purification that we are now experiencing until after the Second Pentecost (the warning) in the outpouring of God's great mercy of illumination of conscience. I pray this happens soon, lest Jesus prophecy "when I return, will I find any faith" be fulfilled. Many of the once holy faithful (including clergy) are now at best only good people. But, good people do not go to heaven, only holy people do (those who are doing the will of God).
GEE, WHY DIDN'T JESUS THINK OF THIS? Pope assigns Vatican office to promote women's participation VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis has assigned a Vatican office to promote the participation of women in the Catholic Church and reflect on their "equal dignity" — his latest effort to address longstanding complaints that women have a second-class status in the church. Francis approved revised statutes for the Vatican's laity and family office, one of the big new departments created by Francis as part of his reform of the Vatican bureaucracy. The original 2016 statutes made no specific mention of women. The new ones released Tuesday say the office should contribute to a reflection "on the identity and mission of women in the church and in society, promoting their participation." Francis recently appointed three women as consultants for the Vatican doctrine office, the first time in its history.
I wonder what Benedict thought of this heinous praise. I read his 1969 classic, Introduction to Christianity; Ratzinger took Karl Marx out to the woodshed to put it kindly. Safe in the Refuge of the Immaculate Heart!
I hardly have words to express my thoughts about the Met Gala. So shocking, the lack of piety, the irreverent clothing, the mockery. Unbelievable. But for me, the most sad costume of all was a photo of a woman/celebrity wearing a large red heart on her breast,with 7 large daggers piercing the heart. What a mockery of the Sorrowful Heart of our Blessed Mother. The prayer, "Father forgive them, they know not what they do" comes to mind. But to then find out that the controversial Father Martin and Cardinal Dolan not only attended, but were gladly helping to organize and promote this event? I want to weep.