Posted on 01/08/2017 3:43:31 PM PST by ebb tide
In Matt. 16:18 Jesus said: You are Peter and upon this rock I shall build my Church.
Its unlikely that at that time Jesus was thinking of any franchising opportunities for His Church by including a fast food restaurant. When He gave Peter the keys to the Kingdom, He didnt give him keys to a McDonalds.
Well folks, if you have not heard about this yet, McDonalds has just opened one of its newest franchise locations just steps away from where the center of all Catholicism sits. Just before 2016 came to a close, McDonalds started serving up its world-famous Big Macs, Happy Meals, and Quarter Pounder with cheese hamburgers on Vatican City property.
In return for this privilege, the Vatican will collect approximately $31,000 per month rent from the franchisee. Has Pope Francis turned Jesus over to Ronald McDonald for 31,000 monthly pieces of silver?
As Elio Cardinal Sgreccia, president emeritus of the Pontifical Academy for Life, said about the advent of McDonalds, this is a controversial, perverse decision to say the least.
From a financial standpoint, the Vatican and Church arent in dire straits. Its not like Pope Francis has to take his vehicle down the street to the nearest car title loan store. The Vatican doesnt need this money: So why rent a piece of the Vatican to the hamburger-peddling moneychangers?
It appears that the faithful pilgrims and many tourists who visit the Holy City every year have enough choices of restaurants to eat at during their visit to the Eternal City much better culinary choices, Im sure.
The problem doesnt stop at McDonalds because the plans are already in motion to open the Hard Rock Vatican City within the next couple of years. Thats right, the world-famous Hard Rock Café will now have electric guitars hanging on its walls right along all sorts of rock and roll memorabilia that the Hard Rock is known for, only minutes away from the Sistine Chapel.
I can almost imagine Pope Francis stopping by one of the rock concerts the Hard Rock often hosts for its customers, dancing along in his papal robes.
This is truly a disturbing development, in my opinion. I have never had the fortune of visiting Rome or the Vatican, but its in my plans to somehow make it there with my family one day. I shudder to think what the place might look like by the time I finally make it there.
What is next after that? Will the Piazza San Pietro soon start to look like the Las Vegas strip, all lit up in neon once the sun goes down? I may be exaggerating a little, but these types of commercial developments in international cultural institutions raise a red flag for me.
One might initially think that a McDonalds may be a harmless thing. After all, there are several cultural institutions which already have a McDonalds on campus, such as the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., and even the Louvre in Paris. Whats the harm in a McDonalds at the Vatican?
So far the Louvre in Paris has not become a hotbed of fast-food franchises, though at first McDonalds did face some resistance from art purists who imagined that Mona Lisa might change her expression at the constant aromatic presence of McDonalds yummy French fries. Should we flip tables over at the Vatican McDonalds and Hard Rock Café?
In 2012, Catholic Exchange writer Gayle Somers wrote an article titled Jesus and the Money Changers where she invites us to know something about the physical arrangement of the Temple at this time, as well as some of the customs and business conducted there.
Somers explains how it wasnt necessarily the moneychangers being there that was the problem, given that there had been an approved-of area where livestock could be sold and bought as well as the business of exchanging foreign currencies and as well as paying taxes.
Here, the judgment against Gods people is not simply doing business where they shouldnt have. . . . The fact that the Court of the Gentiles, which was supposed to be a place of prayer and evangelization, had become a marketplace was emblematic of Israels terrible spiritual desolation.
In His cleansing of the Temple, Jesus prophetically demonstrates that the Temple was no longer a place of true encounter with God, for Jews or Gentiles. It was destined to be eclipsed and replaced. So, after having read Somers assessment of Jesus outburst, how would the McDonalds and Hard Rock Café situation play out today? Will having these two businesses in and around the Vatican help water it down as simply a marketplace emblematic of todays spiritual desolation?
The Romans eventually destroyed the Temple, and it was never to be rebuilt. I hope that this isnt the case with the Vatican! Perhaps it will be McDonalds and the Hard Rock Café that will eventually be torn down, but why build them in the first place?
I have one last cringe-worthy thought I have to share with you, and perhaps it wouldnt be so bad, but here is the question which popped in my head as I wrapped up this column: What will the surprise toy be inside the Happy Meals at the Vatican McDonalds?
It could be anything from holy cards, a Miraculous Medal, a rosary, or a Pope Francis action figure. Cringe-worthy indeed.
At least it’s not a heresy. I haven’t been to the Vatican for quite a while, but it might not be a bad thing to have another nearby place for quick meals available for people who are visiting there. When I last went, I think all there was nearby were sidewalk food carts.
This garbage has got to stop.
>>You are Peter and upon this rock I shall build my Church.<<
Someone got their Aramaic messed up and came up with “on this KROK I will build my church.”
That’s not been my experience.
At 3:6, St. Peter says, "Gold and silver I have none. How about a Big Mac?"
The anti-capitalist, communist Bergoglio is, at heart a capitalist.
The rent at VacDonalds is over $30,000 per month.
Question: How much is a Happy Meal, a fish sandwich and
are the drinks only a $1.00? Just Curious.
There has been a McDs right next to the Parthenon for years. The signs allowed are tiny and not lit.
I assume this one is located close by the Vatican post office, that would seem the easiest location. The analogy with Jesus at the Temple is not a good one. The McDs is not inside St. Peter’s itself.
The Church has real problems, problem much larger than this one, which is a nothingburger, heh.
St. Peter’s has been a tourist destination rather than a pilgrimage church for decades. If you want to pilgrimage there are many other churches in Rome which qualify, St. Helen’s being probably the best, given its astounding relics. St. Peter In Chains is a good one two, and you can see Michangelo’s Moses there as well, a twofer.
If you are determined to pilgrimage at the Vatican, sign up for the Scavi Tour, a guided only tour with 12 people at a time. It takes you below the Vatican basement, to the site of St. Peter’s grave, about 20 feet below the main altar in the Basilica.
You got a problem with capitalism?
You got a problem telling right from wrong?
I thunk that’s the pope who has that problem
I’d order the water. Who knows what it might cure?
You probably had a problem with Jesus cleansing the Temple. It was capitalism after all; right , isn’t that how we justify everything??
Matthew 21:12-13: 12 Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves. 13 It is written, he said to them, My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers
Jesus had a problem with price gouging and the manner in which the transactions were taking place.
It says just steps from Vatican City. It’s probably in one of the buildings the church owns outside the walls. Anyone who has been there knows there are lots of restaurants and cheesy (and not so cheesy) tourist shops right along the walls, and just outside the square.
It’s a false equivalency. The Vatican is a city. People live there and work there. Why would you deny them access to affordable dining choices?
Yep, like I wrote, this is a nothingburger, especially in Italy.
My favorite McDs are in France. You can get wine!
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