Everything old is new again, unfortunately

Even old slanders against Christianity. As you may know, back in Roman days, Christians were sometimes suspected of eating human flesh:

Under a veil of suspicion, the Christian Eucharist was rumored to be a covert cannibalistic feast. To the uninitiated, the transubstantiation of the body and blood of Christ into bread and wine seemed a metaphor for cannibalism, and consequently Christians were intermittently persecuted by officials, or accosted by mobs, for their “irreligion.” The worship of Christ was rumored to have been the cause of plagues, drought, or some barbarian invasion of the Empire.
(from an article on "Pagan Influences in Christian Culture")

Now, Britain's Channel Four television is going to give the broadcast audience a real-life counterpart of that old myth: some so-called "artist" from Beijing eating human flesh as part of his performance. (British TV is oh so liberated, don't-cha-know.) And the guy claims to be a Christian too, so he seems to be fulfilling the old pagan slander himself. Fortunately, the prominent Catholic MP Ann Widdecombe was around to properly sum up this grotesquerie:
"Jesus Christ said suffer the little ones to come unto me, not that they should be eaten for public entertainment. This programme sounds hideous."

It's disturbing that this sick show is happening at a time when the regime in Beijing has been increasing its persecution of Christians. Is it thinkable that the whole episode might even be a setup arranged by the regime for propaganda purposes? We can expect that after the show airs in Britain, authorities in China will at least use it as propaganda against Christians and smear them as "dangerous cultists" as they did the Falun Gong followers.

What? Who?

On life and living in communion with the Catholic Church.

Richard Chonak

John Schultz


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This page contains a single entry by Richard Chonak published on December 30, 2002 11:06 PM.

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