It gives me pause that a priest should move to bless objects sight unseen which he has not inspected. Does the priest not have the responsibility to ensure that the objects being blessed are actually holy and worthy of being blessed? I mean, if I gift-wrap a pornographic DVD for Christmas and ask a priest to bless it, whose fault is that? What if I’ve deceived him about the gift’s contents? Is the item indeed blessed?
I understand that we must take account of circumstances such as a public blessing when the faithful all hold up our rosaries and the Holy Father blesses them from hundreds of feet away…
Frankly, as a priest of Europe, I have never seen the sorts of bizarre and absurd scenarios in real life that are presented on this American website. They are beyond ridiculous and border on the ludicrous.
When a person brings to me religious objects to be blessed…no, I do not demand that they allow me to inspect them. Why would I? I ask what they are and bless them accordingly. If, for example, they are bringing a scapular and want investiture that is its own ceremony – which I do.
If a person brings a shopping bag filled with religious items, my intention circumscribes the blessing to the religious articles in the bag – or on or about their person. I am not blessing the cast that encases their broken leg or food or cosmetics in their handbag.
As for disguised pornographic materials — how is that even to be understood? It is absurd. When a blessing is given, for example, at a shrine like Lourdes or at a papal audience, as also when it is more individual, it is religious articles or objects of piety that are being blessed…not pornography or contraceptive devices or handbags or suitcases or overcoats or sporting equipment or weapons or kitchen utensils.
This scenario shows a radical misunderstanding of a cleric’s action in imparting a blessing – or what a blessing actually means or what is effected by the imparting of a blessing relative to having on one’s person pornographic materials.