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"Ale Mary" Dive Bar Uses Monstrance and Chalices for Drunken Revelries
Eponymous Flower ^ | March 25, 2012

Posted on 03/26/2012 1:38:33 PM PDT by NYer

Edit: A definition from Wikipedia is useful here: Blasphemy is irreverence towards religious or holy persons or things.[1] Some countries have laws to punish blasphemy,[2] while others have laws to give recourse to those who are offended by blasphemy. 


[Fell's Point, Baltimore, MD] There was a show called "Cheers" on television years ago.  It was bawdy and vulgar yet there were some borders it was not safe to pass in the early 80s when the show first aired.  It depicted a homey place, reminiscent of an unpretentious neighborhood bar with a hint of old world ambiance and Boston charm.  The heavy wooden furniture and the bar spoke of permanence, elegance,  and  that favorite piety of secular artists, human dignity. It was not always clear who the show's buffoons were, but you knew them when you saw them, and sometimes, it was a comedic mailman who could be the most noble in the simplicity of his fears.  Some other writer said something about irony being lost on a society which had no shame.  That's why we'd like to wield a metaphorical hammer.  Perhaps there are others who can put a better finish on the details of what we will tell.

Satirical painting: priest displeased with Nun?

All we can say is that sometimes evil is really mundane and some of us don't realize that we're not only bufoons needlessly offending  people's religious sensibilities, but far worse than that, we're offending God.  Even the name of the bar, a pun on the Blessed Mother's name seems calculated to be offensive.

Would you like some candy?

 We're not talking about this place, but it's not far from Boston, but it boasts a similar unmistakable charm you'd expect in New England with friendly folks.

One of the features of the bar, and there are many, is its unmistakable Catholic ambiance. It's called, Ale Mary's and is located in Fell's point Maryland. One can just smell the faint aroma of the ocean as you think about it. The food is inexpensive, but if you're Catholic you might find it too expensive for the peace of your conscience to see the sacramental elements of your religion appear for the sake of decoration in peculiarly deliberate ways.

Chalices Used for Holy Sacrifice Being Abused by Patrons

It's not surprising, but it's not acceptable either that chalices which are used in Catholic Mass for the consecration of wine which becomes the blood of Christ, are used by patrons to drink (and get drunk from). They're made of precious metals, sometimes jewels, but their use in such a secular setting is strange and unsettling. No less than the inexplicable painting of a priest with a stole, looking aghast or in surprise at a nun who has her back to him.

The most disturbing thing in the restaurant is the monstrance which is behind the bar used as decoration. The monstrance is large ornate disk, often resembling the sun, which is surmounted in a long stand with a heavy base. It contains a crystal compartment at the center of the disk where a consecrated communion Host can be placed inside and it allows the priest to elevate the entire object by the stand for the veneration of the Sacrament it contains. Seeing this monstrance here in this bar, covered with mardigras beads and a mustached smiley face where the Host would normally be is a little bit like finding family heirlooms in the hands of people who not only use them for purposes for which they were never intended, but use them in disrespectful ways.


Mustached Smiley Face Seems Particularly Malevolent

We found out about this recently and the individual who sent this to us wrote an e-mail complaining about the display of these religious items and even offered to purchase them. Far from being treated with the respect she deserved, her concerns were met with derision. 

Despite the bar owner claiming that no one cared about this clearly blasphemous display of religious artifacts, he asked her to remove an entry she made under the bar at a public site allowing comment on establishments.

As he berated our friend, the proprietor insisted as an argument to justify his sacrilege and disrespect for Catholic sacramentals, that there were even Bishops and priests who thought that his blasphemous inclusion of religious articles was comical and that there was nothing wrong with this display.

Apparently, there's some truth to what he says, because Catholic clergy, including senior, does frequent this place.

We'll be praying a Rosary in reparation for having seen this blasphemy.  Hopefully, the proprietor can be persuaded to part with these items before word of this affects his business either spiritually or financially.


Give them a call:

Corner of Fleet & Washington Sts.
Fell's Point
Baltimore, MD.
21231
410-276-2044


TOPICS: Current Events; Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: bar; md; sacramentals
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To: editor-surveyor

I’m not sure what your position regarding the Eucharist is, but I detect hostility to the constant Tradition of Christ’s Church. If you will not listen to the Church...

From St. Paul through to the early Church Fathers to today, Catholics have seen the Eucharist the same way.

______________________________________________________________________________

Paul Confirms This

Paul wrote to the Corinthians: “The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ?” (1 Cor. 10:16). So when we receive Communion, we actually participate in the body and blood of Christ, not just eat symbols of them. Paul also said, “Therefore whoever eats the bread and drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will have to answer for the body and blood of the Lord. . . . For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body, eats and drinks judgment on himself” (1 Cor. 11:27, 29). “To answer for the body and blood” of someone meant to be guilty of a crime as serious as homicide. How could eating mere bread and wine “unworthily” be so serious? Paul’s comment makes sense only if the bread and wine became the real body and blood of Christ. 
 
What Did the First Christians Say?

Anti-Catholics also claim the early Church took this chapter symbolically. Is that so? Let’s see what some early Christians thought, keeping in mind that we can learn much about how Scripture should be interpreted by examining the writings of early Christians. 

Ignatius of Antioch, who had been a disciple of the apostle John and who wrote a letter to the Smyrnaeans about A.D. 110, said, referring to “those who hold heterodox opinions,” that “they abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they do not confess that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, flesh which suffered for our sins and which the Father, in his goodness, raised up again” (6:2, 7:1). 

Forty years later, Justin Martyr, wrote, “Not as common bread or common drink do we receive these; but since Jesus Christ our Savior was made incarnate by the word of God and had both flesh and blood for our salvation, so too, as we have been taught, the food which has been made into the Eucharist by the Eucharistic prayer set down by him, and by the change of which our blood and flesh is nourished, . . . is both the flesh and the blood of that incarnated Jesus” (First Apology 66:1–20). 

Origen, in a homily written about A.D. 244, attested to belief in the Real Presence. “I wish to admonish you with examples from your religion. You are accustomed to take part in the divine mysteries, so you know how, when you have received the Body of the Lord, you reverently exercise every care lest a particle of it fall and lest anything of the consecrated gift perish. You account yourselves guilty, and rightly do you so believe, if any of it be lost through negligence” (Homilies on Exodus 13:3). 

Cyril of Jerusalem, in a catechetical lecture presented in the mid-300s, said, “Do not, therefore, regard the bread and wine as simply that, for they are, according to the Master’s declaration, the body and blood of Christ. Even though the senses suggest to you the other, let faith make you firm. Do not judge in this matter by taste, but be fully assured by faith, not doubting that you have been deemed worthy 
of the body and blood of Christ” (Catechetical Discourses: Mystagogic 4:22:9). 

http://www.catholic.com/tracts/christ-in-the-eucharist


161 posted on 03/28/2012 4:57:37 PM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas (Viva Christo Rey)
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Comment #162 Removed by Moderator

To: Pyro7480

Put it back in the context of the verse. Paul remonstrated those that had literally come to satisfy their hunger with the communion bread.

How did you miss that?


163 posted on 03/28/2012 5:06:13 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: editor-surveyor

164 posted on 03/28/2012 5:12:21 PM PDT by Pyro7480 (Viva Cristo Rey!)
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To: editor-surveyor
"Paul remonstrated those that had literally come to satisfy their hunger with the communion bread."

Please explain Jesus' use of the word "Epiousios" (επιούσιος), in the Lord's Prayer translated as "Supersubstantial Bread" in describing the "communion bread". Note the term ousios meaning the philosophical term "substance" exactly like that used by the Church in the "Consubstantial" and the Eucharist being Transubstantial.

165 posted on 03/28/2012 5:30:10 PM PDT by Natural Law (If you love the Catholic Church raise your hands, if not raise your standards.)
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To: Natural Law

Jesus did not use that word. That was a later corruption of the Greek.

Jesus spoke only Hebrew anyway. He didn’t ask his Father for any hocus-pocus bread.


166 posted on 03/28/2012 5:36:04 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: Pyro7480

The Antichrist has a sinus headache?


167 posted on 03/28/2012 5:47:15 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: theKid51

Should I drive you there.


168 posted on 03/28/2012 5:50:10 PM PDT by bmwcyle (I am ready to serve Jesus on Earth because the GOP failed again)
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To: editor-surveyor
Jesus spoke only Hebrew anyway.

Really? How did his disciples understand him since Aramaic was probably the most common language of the area at the time, along with Greek. And unless Scripture is not to believed Jesus is quoted to have spoken Aramaic on several occasions. He no doubt spoke and read Hebrew but the notion of Him only speaking Hebrew is silly.

169 posted on 03/28/2012 5:50:22 PM PDT by conservonator (God between us and the devil!)
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To: editor-surveyor

170 posted on 03/28/2012 6:13:52 PM PDT by Pyro7480 (Viva Cristo Rey!)
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To: editor-surveyor
"Jesus did not use that word. That was a later corruption of the Greek."

So now you are saying that the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, both written in Koine Greek, both using the word Epiousios ( επιούσιος ) in the Lord's Prayer are errant?

171 posted on 03/28/2012 6:24:31 PM PDT by Natural Law (If you love the Catholic Church raise your hands, if not raise your standards.)
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To: editor-surveyor
The bride of Christ doesn’t need nicolaitan canons; it has the Holy Spirit to guide Bible study.

You are going to blame the Holy Spirit for your beliefs? Better be careful about blaspheming against Him.

Of course, catholics have no more concept of how the Holy Spirit works in the real church than a blind man has of a color wheel.

You gotta stop staring at the strobe lights.

Keep on thrashing; you remind me of Sambo’s tigers running around the tree until they turn into butter.

When one's theology is cut whole cloth from a fantasy life, I think it good that you are branching out from the usual fantasy merchants into actual literature.

172 posted on 03/28/2012 6:42:24 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: editor-surveyor
The Ark was not worshiped; in fact, in practice only the high priest even entered to it, and then only after filling the place with enough smoke that he couldn’t even see it.

Are you saying that the high priest could be only a dwarf, midget or small child?

You are awesome, dude.

173 posted on 03/28/2012 6:45:31 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: editor-surveyor
More nonsense to smoke-up the room. Paul’s writing demolished the pagan alchemy of transsubstantiation. Live with it.

Ah. Paulianity. Declared heresy.

You still wanna be called Christian?

174 posted on 03/28/2012 6:47:13 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: editor-surveyor
Jesus spoke only Hebrew anyway.

Uh huh. Try Aramaic. Nice to see that you fail at this as well as every other posting on this thread.

175 posted on 03/28/2012 6:49:39 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: MarkBsnr

Relax,The Holy Spirit and I are in constant contact.

I can’t imagine what kind of parties you attend, but I havent seen a strobe in decades. No wonder you have such demonic views on things; get different friends.


176 posted on 03/28/2012 7:04:53 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: Natural Law

I want to go on record here that the Gospels were written in Hebrew, and later translated to Greek and Aram. The Hebrew and Aram MS were largely destroyed in great numbers when Rome sacked Israel, which is the primary reason for the dominance of Greek MS.

There are many corrupted Greek MS in this world, and I can see why you’d love them.


177 posted on 03/28/2012 7:11:58 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: Pyro7480

Nobody would pick you up?

Could it be your disposition?


178 posted on 03/28/2012 7:13:28 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: editor-surveyor
Relax,The Holy Spirit and I are in constant contact.

Gotcha. You're blaming the Holy Spirit for your beliefs.


179 posted on 03/28/2012 7:14:38 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: editor-surveyor
I want to go on record here that the Gospels were written in Hebrew, and later translated to Greek and Aram. The Hebrew and Aram MS were largely destroyed in great numbers when Rome sacked Israel, which is the primary reason for the dominance of Greek MS.

You wouldn't have any evidence for this, would you? I must say that you have a fascinating world view.

180 posted on 03/28/2012 7:17:28 PM PDT by MarkBsnr (I would not believe in the Gospel, if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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