Ruth Bader Ginsburg may one day be a Jesuit saint...

 At the entrance to the Jesuit church-chapel on rue Sainte-Anne, there is a display stand which provides the faithful with brochures announcing the films screened by the Center Saint-Ignace as part of the "Film and Spirituality" activity. ".

The one I have in front of me indicates that a next session will take place this Sunday, March 19 and it is the film "A woman of exception" (On the basis of sex) devoted to the judge of the Supreme Court of the States States, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, which will be introduced and followed by a discussion.

There is already an icon!
and this is blasphemy


As much in a MJC or any neighborhood media library the thing would be banal, as there is reason to be surprised that a church in Reunion welcomes priests or deacons with a mentality warped enough by woke victimism to highlight the hagiography of a radical feminist who promoted the right to abortion.

Perhaps this is a faux pas whose importance we should charitably refrain from exaggerating? But if not? If there was there a deliberate, assumed and only too eager will? In this event, should we expect that the Saint-Ignace center will one day offer us films to the glory of Femen or some great figures of the LGBTQ+IA struggle? Why not also works that would praise the merits of Freemasonry to which we still owe most of the "progressive" laws of our republic, such as "marriage for all"?

Perhaps the time has come to ask ourselves if the Church should not be placed in the mysteries of iniquity which have been announced to her? Wouldn't she be losing her direction? After the Pachamama idol was welcomed to the Vatican, was the Latin Mass not recently “canceled” when it made the Church for generations?

I cannot answer these questions, but let me conclude by simply quoting Mr. Smith, a wise psychologist for whom “optimism is a mistake, hope a grace”. In other words, things are probably not going to get better, but let's keep the faith, because the darker the night, the closer the day...

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