Question: How should Catholics react/respond to Youtube vids of atheists and other anti-religious types desecrating the Blessed Sacrament?
Two reactions seem to me to be perfectly reasonable. . .
First, a private reaction: horror and then prayer for the individual who does such a thing.
Second, a public reaction: ignore it. Even better, a declaration from the bishops' conference stating that the Sacrament is no longer the Sacrament the instant someone intents to desecrate the species. [see note below]*
To understand the force of the second reaction you have to understand the adolescent attention-seeking mindset of the person who would abuse the sacred species to make anti-Catholic propaganda.
Traditionally, the point of desecration is to offer offense to the god(s) of the enemy. It's a terror tactic used to demoralize a conquered people. Essentially, destroying a temple or pulling down an idol is a way for the victor to say, "See! Your god(s) have abandoned you. We won because your god(s) is weak!" Conquerors may not have worshiped the enemy's god(s), but they probably believed that this god(s) really existed. Defeating the nation dedicated to the offended god(s) proved the deity too weak to defend his/her people. Such a god(s) deserves no worship.
But the crybabies who desecrate the Eucharist do not believe in the Christian god. They do not believe that the bread and wine are the Body and Blood of Christ. In their own minds, they are not offering offense to Christ b/c they do not believe that Christ is who he says he is. The point of desecrating the Eucharist is offend Catholics. More importantly, the act of desecration is specifically designed to provoke Catholics into angry, indignant reactions that prove we are religious fanatics willing to defend bizarre Dark Age superstitions.
I would argue that the instant anyone steals the sacred species for the purpose of desecration the sacrament is no longer the Body and Blood of Christ. If some idiot wants to nail a piece of bread to the wall or flush it down the toilet and post a video of the event on the internet, then more power to him. I'm not offended b/c I don't believe that the host is the Body of Christ.
If the Holy Spirit can effect the transformation of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ through the agency of human intention and prayer, then there is no reason to believe that the Holy Spirit is powerless to revoke the effects of the transformation and leave the species perfectly ordinary in the face of human disbelief and the intention to desecrate.
Christ freely and willingly died for us on the cross 2,000 years ago. He endured torture, humiliation, abandonment, and death so that we might be reconciled with the Father through his sufferings. He has already suffered far worse than being peed on by some undergrad atheist looking for his 15-minutes of internet fame. By telling the attention-seeking crybaby that we are not offended by his desecration, we deflate his self-importance; undercut the anti-Catholic propaganda power of his silly gesture; attract attention to the faith; and come out of the whole thing looking like adults patiently indulging a child in the midst of a public temper-tantrum.
Email campaigns, signing petitions, calling for new laws, filing lawsuits--all of these give the offender exactly what he wants and only encourages others to imitate him.
So, the next time one of these bozos make the news with a desecration stunt, simply respond, "Um, dude, that host stopped being the Body of Christ the second you stole it with the intent to desecrate. Why should anyone be offended that you are playing with a piece of bread on Youtube?"
[NB. My purpose in this post is not to put forward a theology of the Eucharist but rather to address how faithful Catholics should respond to acts of public desecration. Given that Christ doesn't need our protection--he can take care of himself--and that the purpose of the desecration is publicity for the Bozo Desecrator, the best Catholic response is to deny said Bozo the satisfaction of seeing us insulted. One way to deny him the attention he craves is to tell him that the Sacrament is no longer the Sacrament b/c he stole it with evil intent. Now, is this true? Does it matter? If Christ doesn't need our protection (and he doesn't); and Bozo doesn't believe in God (and he doesn't); and the point is to insult Catholics (and it is), then I don't think it matters whether or not the Sacrament is still the Sacrament. However, if the Holy Spirit wills it, Bozo's desecration could be used as a means of grace for Bozo's conversion. Say, it nails the Host to a wall and it starts bleeding! Now there's a great conversion story. PLEASE HEAR ME: I am not saying it's OK to desecrate the Sacrament. All I am asking here is: what do we say to Bozo to take the wind out of his attention-seeking PR stunt? Is desecration insulting to Catholics? Of course! But do we want to react in a way that encourages or discourages any future desecrations? Let's be careful not to attribute our insult to God. We are perfectly right to feel insulted. But we do not speak for God.]
*This sentence (and the whole idea of the host reverting to bread b/c of evil intent) has turned out to be a distraction from the issue at hand. It was meant more as a thought experiment, not serious sacramental theology. Please see the post directly above this one, "Desecrating the host: another try" for clarification.
[NB. My purpose in this post is not to put forward a theology of the Eucharist but rather to address how faithful Catholics should respond to acts of public desecration. Given that Christ doesn't need our protection--he can take care of himself--and that the purpose of the desecration is publicity for the Bozo Desecrator, the best Catholic response is to deny said Bozo the satisfaction of seeing us insulted. One way to deny him the attention he craves is to tell him that the Sacrament is no longer the Sacrament b/c he stole it with evil intent. Now, is this true? Does it matter? If Christ doesn't need our protection (and he doesn't); and Bozo doesn't believe in God (and he doesn't); and the point is to insult Catholics (and it is), then I don't think it matters whether or not the Sacrament is still the Sacrament. However, if the Holy Spirit wills it, Bozo's desecration could be used as a means of grace for Bozo's conversion. Say, it nails the Host to a wall and it starts bleeding! Now there's a great conversion story. PLEASE HEAR ME: I am not saying it's OK to desecrate the Sacrament. All I am asking here is: what do we say to Bozo to take the wind out of his attention-seeking PR stunt? Is desecration insulting to Catholics? Of course! But do we want to react in a way that encourages or discourages any future desecrations? Let's be careful not to attribute our insult to God. We are perfectly right to feel insulted. But we do not speak for God.]
*This sentence (and the whole idea of the host reverting to bread b/c of evil intent) has turned out to be a distraction from the issue at hand. It was meant more as a thought experiment, not serious sacramental theology. Please see the post directly above this one, "Desecrating the host: another try" for clarification.