Father Marcel Guarnizo Photo via WUSA 9 News Washington |
My friend Barbara, the daughter of the deceased woman, was denied communion at her mother’s funeral. She was the first in line and Fr. Guarnizo covered the bowl containing the host and said to her, “I cannot give you communion because you live with a woman and that is a sin according to the church.” To add insult to injury, Fr. Guarnizo left the altar when she delivered her eulogy to her mother. When the funeral was finished he informed the funeral director that he could not go to the gravesite to deliver the final blessing because he was sick.Werner adds:I will tell you a little about the woman who drove that priest from the altar. She is kind, she is smart, she is funny and she works hard promoting the arts. She pays her bills, she cares deeply for her family and she loved her mother and her mother loved her right back. And now she will never set foot in a Catholic church again and who can blame her?
As the story broke this past weekend, noted author Anne Rice weighed in via Facebook with the following reaction:
"This is all so hypocritical. No priest giving out communion at a funeral mass examines each and every person for sins, for adultery, for living out of wedlock with a lover, for having embezzled money, for having committed sins of greed or anger. And yet this priest dares to refuse communion to an openly gay person? Why? What if the woman had gone to confession that morning? It's outrageous to stigmatize and treat gays in a persecuting way."
As the outrage grows- the story is now viral- Brie Hall, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Washington released the following:
"In matters of faith and morals, the Church has the responsibility of teaching and of bringing the light of the Gospel message to the circumstances of our day. When questions arise about whether or not an individual should present themselves for communion, it is not the policy of the Archdiocese of Washington to publicly reprimand the person. Any …issues regarding the suitability of an individual to receive communion should be addressed by the priest with that person in a private, pastoral setting. The archdiocese is looking into the incident at a funeral Mass that was celebrated by Fr. Marcel Guarnizo and will handle this as a personnel issue.”
The priest's superior at St John Neumann's, Reverend Thomas G. LaHood, refused to comment when contacted by LGBTQNation.
1 comments:
Obviously it is simply not good enough for Fr. Marcel Guarnizo to leave any possible condemnation to God, he has elected to elevate himself to equal that position all on his own. And the "Church" is going to handle this as a personal matter? Shame on all of them.
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