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“Because when we resist the law we are in the spirit of God!”
Do they not realize Christ is the Lawgiver?
Do they not realize Christ is the Lawgiver?
It is MLK. They’re really angry that the banner was taken down. One of the parishioners was complaining about it in The Oregonian comments. I asked, “When was Martin Luther King canonized?”The latest from Church Militant. Like a petition is really going to make anybody care.
Who is the guy pictured in the banner hanging over the sanctuary? Is that MLK? What is he doing there?
He was neither a Catholic nor a saint.
Church Militant - Serving Catholics
The article was written by a reporter who doesn’t have a clue about the Catholic Church. I would have thought that the Oregonian was a large enough newspaper that might actually have a dedicated religion reporter or at least a reporter that’s knowledgeable about general Catholic practices. Such a reporter would have understood from the get go that this Catholic Church prior to the new priest was celebrating Mass in a very unorthodox way and that the new priest was only trying to get the liturgy back to the norms of the church.CTBcin:![]()
From the article, which admittedly was very one-sided:Neither the priest nor anyone from the Archdiocese was interviewed or spoken to.
An archdiocese spokesman turned down multiple requests to interview Sample or Kuforiji.
Looks like the reporter tried to get the church’s side of the story.
Just a note about the “Immigrants & Refugees Welcome” banner that was taken down from the front of the church. That banner (which features an image that looks like Mary on a donkey with Joseph walking with a cane besides her) was only put up after 2016 (most likely after Trump was elected President). One can verify this easily by looking at the Google Street View of the church (which goes as far back as 2007). There were no banners of any kind on the front of the church until 2017 when this banner appears.It would be interesting to see what other signs they have hung over the past 50 years. I’m guessing they would be a direct reflection of left-wing causes from decade to decade.
You’re probably right. While I’m not there either, being from the South it just blew my mind at how rude they were to their priest. People shouldn’t speak to someone that way. Let the man do his job in the way he sees fit, imho.I don’t think they’re racist. I’m not there, but I don’t think they accept the authority that comes with being pastor, even when the pastor has not been ordained for a long time.
I think there’s a problem there.We stand firmly against clericalism, sexism, fundamentalism, and dogma of faith.
Hmm… that’s not the way I took it. Rather, it seemed like they were insinuating that someone up the chain of command must’ve told them to do it. After all, they’re protesting the archbishop’s instruction to kneel during the Eucharistic Prayer, as well.“Somebody of authority” – he seems to be saying that the parishioners have “authority” over the pastor, and that the pastor is an uppity Nigerian who refuses to recognize his inferior status.
There’s some discussion in this August 6 article about Catholic Charities taking over the parish soup kitchen for the homeless.Since this incident happened back on June 30th, I wonder what’s been happening since then? My guess is not much, or there would be more video / weird news.
“After mass, six people stood in the dining hall kitchen, mixing refried beans into four huge pans of tortilla chips. They poured red chili sauce, flattened more beans over top and sprinkled in olives. Enchilada casserole.