We’re under attack — again. This time, it’s Apple. And what they’ve just done is one of the worst public desecrations of the Eucharist ever broadcast. https://cgo.ac/scnBAOBg
Signed. I once saw something loathsome (I had no idea of said moment before it happened) where the ciborium was placed on the ground and I was filled with the innermost revulsion and horror and the utmost sorrow for how God was mocked, and within two minutes walked out of such filth, but as evil as that was, this is much, much worse not only because of it being on the ground, but due also to the blasphemous partaking of the Hosts, the mocking of them being God's body, the act of desecration of a church. It is from the pits of hell, and shame on Apple for putting it on, the actors for being part of the scene, and especially the woman who wrote the script for that scene, because it comes from the pits of hell.
Evil cannot be apologize, because to apologize it would mean doing something moral that is, something of God. If I were an atheist seeking faith through reason, I would ask myself this: Why would a megacorporation that promotes militant atheism and liberalism hate something it claims does not exist and considers a Christian illusion? If I were a Protestant, I would ask: if they persecute and hate faith, why do they mock Christianity specifically by attacking Catholic sacraments? Why does Satan seem so disturbed by the sacrament of the Eucharist? Is Christ truly present there in the flesh? As a Christian, this to me is a clear sign that Christ is truly present in the Eucharist that I, as an individual, need to devote more time and reverence to adoration and the worship of Christ’s Body and Blood. In this, evil reveals both its fury and its impotence. No apology is needed; rather, this reality must be spread through deeper worship. They cannot hate our Christian faith, homeland, God, and family more than we are able to love...
I thought of something from TV's past today that was rather the antithesis of this blasphemous episode.... Back in 1991, there was an episode of the TV series thirtysomething that was quite astonishing. The episode, about halfway through the final season found one of the main characters of the show, a fallen-away Catholic who led a secular life, who earlier in the episode had some uncharitable things about the church and prayer, express to a priest in a late scene how much he missed Christ, how he missed incense and the Latin mass, how the Church's teachings on mortal sin saved him from giving into despair and committing suicide in college, and how he wanted to come back to the Church and God but was afraid it might be too late for him, although the priest told him otherwise. And it was hinted at the end that he and his family would be returning to Church. It might not have been a morally perfect episode, but it made a deep impression on me, largely due to how positively it viewed traditional Catholic teaching, with the priest even having a line slamming cafeteria Catholicism. It's just a shame that such an affecting episode isn't attempted anymore. And, unlike the blasphemous Apple show, it took things seriously.