Vatican’s "Sexually Suggestive" Nativity

Started by Vetus Ordo, December 21, 2017, 08:47:49 PM

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Vetus Ordo

Vatican's "Sexually Suggestive" Nativity Has Troubling Ties to Italy's LGBT Activists

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/vaticans-sexually-suggestive-nativity-has-troubling-ties-to-italys-lgbt-act

ROME, December 20, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) — The Vatican Nativity scene featuring a naked man, a corpse, and no sheep or oxen is the artistic offering of an abbey which is the focus of Italian LGBT activists, it has emerged. Enquiries by LifeSiteNews have revealed that the Abbey of Montevergine, which donated the innovative 'Nativity of Mercy,' houses the Marian image that has been adopted as patroness by LGBT activists in Italy. The abbey shrine is the annual destination of a sort of sacred and profane "ancestral gay pride" pilgrimage which, according to one LGBT activist, in recent years has gained the "active, political participation of the LGBT community."

An official of the Vatican's Governorate has told LifeSiteNews that the abbey of Montevergine initially proposed the original idea for the 'Nativity of Mercy.' The Vatican discussed and developed a more detailed design with the abbey, then submitted final plans to the Secretary of State and Pope Francis for approval, which was duly granted. "The presence of the Vatican Nativity Scene for us is a reason to be even happier this year," Antonello Sannini, president of homosexual activist group Arcigay Naples, told LifeSiteNews on Tuesday. "For the homosexual and transsexual community in Naples, it is an important symbol of inclusion and integration."

Fury over the Christmas crèche

The Christmas crèche fury blew up on Twitter last week, when photos of a virtually nude male figure representing the corporal work of mercy 'to clothe the naked' made the rounds on social media, sparking sharp criticism and debate.



Viewers lamented the figure's "prominent placement and languid pose," according to Breitbart, which reported that the figure's pose "led many on social media to suggest that there is a vaguely homoerotic tone to the scene." Facebook, adding to the fury, rejected the photo referencing its policy against "sexually suggestive or provocative" images. One observer remarked, regarding the poor man in need of clothes: "I've worked with a personal trainer. That guy's been in the gym two hours a day, six days a week."

"This horrendous exhibit, a sacrilegious, highly deceitful and malevolent attempt to turn the holy innocence of the manger in St. Peter's Square into a lobbying tool for the homosexual rights movement, is just the latest fiendish act, but one that's symptomatic of this entire pontificate," one source close to the Vatican told LifeSiteNews. Meanwhile, the Neapolitan artist who crafted the crèche, Antonio Cantone, appeared to suggest that he intended it to be provocative. "It is not a camp nativity; it is particular and makes you think," he said. "It leaves no one indifferent; there are provocations."

Enter a Marian Icon

This year's Christmas crèche also features a reproduction of the ancient and beautiful icon of Our Lady of Montevergine. The original icon, housed in a chapel of the mountain shrine, measures 12 feet high and six feet wide, and depicts the Blessed Virgin seated on a throne with the divine Infant Jesus seated on her lap.



The Marian image is dark, and so the icon is often referred to as one of the "Black Madonnas." Among local Italians, her dark complexion made them believe she was part of the serving class and so she came to be affectionately known by the faithful as "Mamma Schiavano" or "Slave Mama." Each year, Our Lady of Montevergine is honored through two pilgrimages to her mountain shrine: one on February 2, the feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, or Candlemas; and the second on September 12, the feast of the Holy Name of Mary, which is preceded by a three-day festival. On the night before the feast pilgrims are hosted by Ospedaletto d'Alpinolo, the nearest town to the abbey, before making the "sagliuta" or "juta" (from the Italian "salire," i.e. ascent) on foot to the shrine of Our Lady of Montevergine early the next morning. The three-day celebration is a mix of sacred and profane, and features dances and songs accompanied by large tambourines.

The "juta dei femminielli"

Our Lady of Montevergine has a particular significance for homosexuals and transgenders in Italy.  According to a legend, Our Lady of Montevergine saved two homosexuals from death in the winter of 1256. The couple had been beaten and driven by night from their city and brought to the mountain where they were tied to a tree and left to die of the cold or be eaten by wolves. According to the legend, Our Lady of Montevergine had pity on them and 'miraculously' freed them. In 2017, La Repubblica called it "the progressive miracle of a gay friendly Madonna." More commonly, she is known as the mother "who grants everything and forgives everything."

The "juta dei femminielli" [ascent of the femminielli] is therefore held each year on Candlemas Day to recall the legend through song and dance. Femminielli is a term used to refer to a population of homosexual males with markedly feminine gender expression in traditional Neapolitan culture.



The LGBT community also looks to Our Lady of Montevergine because she sits on the ancient temple site where the pagan goddess Cybele was once worshiped. In a 2014 article entitled "the procession of the femminielli," La Repubblica noted that the eunuch priests of Cybele ritually castrated themselves "to offer their sex as a gift to their goddess in order to be reborn with a new identity." Antonello Sannino, the president of Arcigay Naples, told LifeSite that the "juta dei femminielli" involves a "mix of the sacred and profane." Admitting his own distance from the Church, Sannino said "there is a strong popular devotion among believers" but for others represents entrusting oneself to a non-Christian divinity.

The annual Candlemas pilgrimage is a kind of "ancestral gay pride," he said, and has been a "way to welcome into the culture of the city [of Naples], the figure of the femminiello which is disruptive in a binary 'masculine-feminine' society."

Montevergine politicized

In 2002, the pilgrimage made the papers when the then abbot of Montevergine, Tarcisio Nazzaro, expressed his displeasure at the presence of the Neapolitan 'femminielli.' According to La Repubblica, during Holy Mass, Nazzaro told them: "Your prayers aren't prayers but a clamor that Our Lady is not pleased with and so does not welcome. You are like the merchants that filled the temple until Jesus threw them out." Allegedly, he later confided to the Sacristan: "I don't have anything against anyone and I didn't wish to offend anyone, much less these individual faithful. But what's too much is too much. We need a little respect for the sacred place, and the dignity of the shrine has to be preserved."

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states in paragraphs 2358-2359, that although homosexual inclinations are "objectively disordered," men and women who suffer this trial "must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity" and "every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided" but like all Christians they are "called to chastity" and to Christian perfection.



Sannino didn't berate the abbot but thought the presence at the abbey in 2002 of Vladimir Luxuria, Italy's first transsexual parliamentarian, precipitated the dispute. "It was too political in 2002," he said. That incident galvanized the LGBT movement, Ottavia Voza, president of Arcigay Salerno, told LifeSite. Another minor incident followed in 2010, but the "active, political participation of the LGBT community" began after the dispute in 2002.

A new abbot and a new approach

In September 2014 under Pope Francis, a new abbot of Montevergine was elected, Dom Riccardo Luca Guariglia. Earlier that year, Luxuria wrote a letter to Pope Francis on behalf of the LGBT community, and publicly presented it at the Candlemas pilgrimage at the Shrine of Montevergine. No one is aware of a response to that letter. An English translation can be read here.



In 2017, leaders of the LGBT community met Abbot Guariglia. Voza said the relations are now "excellent" and this year they "had an opportunity for dialogue with the abbot." Voza told LifeSite that Vladimir Luxuria was there and the abbot "stopped to speak with us." It wasn't a private meeting but "in essence, he gave us his blessing," Voza continued, adding that the incident in 2002 "was completely overcome."

"He welcomed us," Voza said, "and understood the importance of the presence of the community." Matters also intensified politically in 2017 when LGBT activists inaugurated Italy's first ever "no gender" bathroom in Ospedaletto d'Alpinolo during the February 2 pilgrimage, and a civilly 'married' homosexual couple was given honorary citizenship by Ospedaletto d'Alpinolo's civic authorities. Together with the LGBT activists, the civil authorities also unveiled a plaque at the entrance of the town, reading "Ospedaletto d'Alpinolo is against homotransphobia and gender violence." At the ceremony, Vladimir Luxuria said the small town of Ospedaletto d'Alpinolo should serve as a model for the rest of Italy.

Abbot Guariglia was interviewed about the 'juta dei femminielli' in 2017, saying: "St. Benedict tells us that guests are to be welcomed as Christ himself" and the abbey has "this peculiarity, that of being welcoming every type of pilgrim who comes to the shrine, first, to give homage or to entrust themselves to the Mother of God, and then also to celebrate the Sacraments."

Descent into neo-paganism

Sannino welcomed the Vatican Nativity Scene, saying he believes it is an "important symbol of inclusion and integration," but whether it signifies greater openness by the Church depends on "how conscious" Vatican officials were of the connection with LGBT activists in making the decision. "We hope that the Church will finally develop a real sense of openness in the wake of the Pope's words," he said, referring to Francis' "Who am I to judge?" comment. "The Church is extremely slow in its transformations," he believes, and is fairly confident "this will also happen."



But people in Rome are wondering how Pope Francis will respond. As in past years, Pope Francis is expected to spend time before the crèche in silent prayer on December 31 after Vespers and the chanting of the Te Deum prayer of thanksgiving in St. Peter's Basilica. The concern is that the optics of his silent prayer before the icon of Montevergine and the naked man, positioned on either side of the Nativity Scene, will send a signal, or be used by the more politically motivated in the LGBT community, to push their agenda. Officially, the Vatican isn't commenting on the Nativity scene, so it's unclear how aware those who made the decisions are of its connections to Montevergine abbey and its associations with Italy's LGBT activists. LifeSite contacted Vatican spokesman Greg Burke but he declined to answer.

Italian Church historian Roberto de Mattei of the Lepanto Foundation sees this as the latest attempt to "paganize Italy and Europe" through indirect means, in what he calls "soft neo-paganization." This involves choosing places of Christian worship "to return them to their pagan origins," De Mattei explained, sending Christianity back into the age of catacombs where it was persecuted by the pagans. The LGBT movement is not only political or cultural but a "religious movement" with pagan characteristics, he added. "This should not surprise us, because sex was also at the center of many pagan cults," De Mattei said. "This therefore portends a new neo-pagan persecution of those who remain faithful to Catholicism."

De Mattei noted that next year marks 50 years since the cultural, or sexual, revolution of 1968, and he believes it is now being "transformed into a religious revolution" where sex is still at the center, but being "transformed into a divinity intended to replace Christianity." 
DISPOSE OUR DAYS IN THY PEACE, AND COMMAND US TO BE DELIVERED FROM ETERNAL DAMNATION, AND TO BE NUMBERED IN THE FLOCK OF THINE ELECT.

martin88nyc

This looks like an LGBT gathering in the vatican
"These things I have spoken to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you shall have distress: but have confidence, I have overcome the world." John 16:33

Elizabeth

That ugly fag figure will be sprawled on top of Our Lord's little Crib.
Go back to Hell, Satan.

martin88nyc

an the angels are frightened. What is this? Vatican has stooped so low. I wonder what trick they're going to pull next year?
"These things I have spoken to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you shall have distress: but have confidence, I have overcome the world." John 16:33

Reader

Got to wonder why the "naked" aren't ever old, balding, fat, with warts, missing teeth, etc.?

trentcath

I remember reading a story about Facebook rejecting a photo of the nativity as it was "sexually explicit" and thinking it was typical anti-christian nonsense, however having seen the nativity I'm not surprised. Just shows who's in charge at the Vatican these days sadly...

The story I'm referring to can be seen here https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/facebook-rejects-picture-of-vatican-nativity-scene-with-naked-man

SamVanHouten

and you wonder why people have stopped being Catholic

Elizabeth


What a freak show.  The pervy "angels", the wretch responsible for putting  this abomination up in the first place.  Christ have mercy on us sinners.

dymphna17

Quote from: SamVanHouten on December 24, 2017, 06:24:49 PM
and you wonder why people have stopped being Catholic

No, actually I don't.  I just wish the Pope and his magisterium would quit calling themselves Catholic.  We are having to suffer the consequences of their nonsense.  What an embarrassment PF is.
?
I adore Thee O Christ, and I bless Thee, because by Thy holy cross Thou hast redeemed the world!

Jesus, Mary, and Joseph save souls!

Of course I wear jeans, "The tornadoes can make dresses immodest." RSC

"Don't waste time in your life trying to get even with your enemies. The grave is a tremendous equalizer. Six weeks after you all are dead, you'll look pretty much the same. Let the Lord take care of those whom you think have harmed you. All you have to do is love and forgive. Try to forget and leave all else to the Master."– Mother Angelica

ServusMariae

#9
I have a terrible, terrible feeling that this year has been the Year of (exceptional) LGBT Yuckiness as they will continue to inflict massive havoc upon the Church AND society. "Consequences be damned." (in the words of a famous "transgender" in my country.)

But let's take a deep breath & pray for the triumph of the King through the Immaculate Heart of Mary ... The gates of hell will not prevail ... (*breathes*)

Carleendiane

Since Faith can no longer be found in the Vatican, we are being called to live by Faith and Tradition. Much like the beginning Church. We have to go on believing, go on practicing, go on worshipping, as though what is happening at the Vatican matters not. We have our deposit of faith, our teachings and our liturgy. We are sort of on automatic pilot. We will pass all this on to our children and they will do likewise. We have much more (2000 years) than the early Christians had. At least they were persecuted from without. We are persecuted from within!
To board the struggle bus: no whining, board with a smile, a fake one will be found out and put off at next stop, no maps, no directions, going only one way, one destination. Follow all rules and you will arrive. Drop off at pearly gate. Bring nothing.

Innocent Smith

Quote from: SamVanHouten on December 24, 2017, 06:24:49 PM
and you wonder why people have stopped being Catholic

I don't see a homosexual orgy occurring in this Nativity display. Much seemed to be made early that Facebook censored it. I don't look at Facebook and do not base any of my judgements, or views, on Facebook reactions to anything. Obviously photo scanning software detected a naked body and rejected it. I suppose this is a good thing in it may prevent certain blasphemous images from being posted on Facebook.

I think it would be wise to not instantly adopt the idea that this entire effort is tied to LGBT initiatives. Because that would mean we are doing  our part to promote it as well. If such an agenda is actually being subtly or, according to views expressed here so far, not so subtly being expressed it does us no good to complain to the point of giving these progressives the victory.

It's not that I don't sympathize with the folks who are complaining. Do I really need to state that I do not find this to be my cup of tea either?

But there does seem to be a lot of conjecture going on here about the order, who participates in it, old legends, and just about everything else that can possibly be thrown into this stew to say, "they won".

Has it not been established that Michelangelo was a homosexual? Are these busybodies at Life Site News and the Lepanto Institute ready to condemn all, or most, art from the Renaissance on as being corrupt and forming corrupt feelings and opinions in those that behold it?

No, I do not see the merit or wisdom in such an approach.

I think the proper approach would be to chalk it up as one more silly innovation that does no justice to Christ or his Church.

If I have not yet been clear, I see this effort on the part of "conservative" Catholic media to pre-concede the victory to the progressives. And that seems to be the entire focus of "conservative" Catholic media these days.

Maybe a better approach would be to actually help recruit some people who know what they are talking about to find the channels necessary to offer constructive criticism to the commission in charge of approving these displays each year. Maybe use rhetoric like, "this particular display may give the impression of this or that", rather than total condemnation.

Once that is done, actual artists can demonstrate another way, according to their more traditional vision, to bring out the same elements that the creators of this display claim to be trying to do.

I'm sorry. But I do believe in clothing the naked, and feeding the hungry, of giving drink to the thirsty, and visiting those in prison. I also realize I don't do nearly enough in these areas. I suppose no one ever does and maybe that is why there is such a large passage in the Gospel of Mathew in which our Lord says we do these things to him. Whether it be the good or bad that we do.

I'm really tired of people like Voris, and Matt, et al, bemoaning all forms of Social Justice instead of trying to channel it in the right direction. 




I am going to hold a pistol to the head of the modern man. But I shall not use it to kill him, only to bring him to life.

Relicario

Nothing but the usual hogwash from lifesitenews.
Southern Europeans and Latin Americans use the nativity scene as a way to teach people about the faith. The only problems I see with the nativity scene is that it's too cluttered. They should have made the pieces smaller and spread them out more.

Are we gonna start saying that statues of St Sebastian are part of the LGBT agenda as well?



Maybe the LGBT community went back in time and commissioned this statue of the Lord from Michelangelo!


Don't let those prudes see images of Our Lady of the Milk! They might be scandalized!



In Mexico we add a statue of Satan in the nativity scene to represent the presence of evil in the world but some of you might say that's all part of some sort of conspiracy.

red solo cup

non impediti ratione cogitationis

ermy_law

Quote from: Relicario on December 26, 2017, 11:37:47 PM
Are we gonna start saying that statues of St Sebastian are part of the LGBT agenda as well?

I presume you are aware that St. Sebastian has been co-opted as a "gay icon"...?