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Crop duster plane used to "bless" Louisiana rural community with "holy water".

kenny

Super_Ideal_Rock
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OMG! Most offensive thing I've heard about in years! :nono:
Could anyone be more fvcking arrogant!
Talk about religion shoving itself down people's throats. :doh:
Spanish Inquisition v 2.0 here we come. :roll:

Can sprayed people who are not not in this religious group (or in this group but still have functioning brains) sue?
Does a muslim, member of a competing X-ian religion, or a satan worshiper in that community have the same right to spray their magic water over same community?
What happened to separation of church and state?

Thanks for all your dog whistles Donald Trump!


A Roman Catholic church in rural Louisiana hoping to maximize its blessings has come up with a way to do it: filling up a crop-duster plane with holy water and letting the sanctified liquid mist an entire community.

"We can bless more area in a shorter amount of time," Rev. Matthew Barzare of St. Anne Church in Cow Island, La., told NPR.

Following this past Saturday's mass, parishioners from the church in southwestern Louisiana headed to an airstrip about five minutes away from the church.

Churchgoers brought with them 100 gallons of water, which was loaded into the crop duster.

"I blessed it there, and we waited for the pilot to take off," Barzare said, noting that it was the largest amount of water he had ever turned holy.

"I've blessed some buckets for people and such, but never that much water," he said.

The pilot had instructions to drizzle certain parts of the community, including churches, schools, grocery stores and other community gathering places.

Word of it raining blessings spread fast in Cow Island, which Barzare points out is not really an island. But when hurricanes strike, he said, the community is typically surrounded by water, hence the name.

"They heard the plane coming first and so they had enough time to step out of their house and see it spraying," he said of the holy water falling from the sky.

The idea was first proposed by a parishioner who is studying to become a missionary who was looking for a way to spread both community togetherness and holy water across Cow Island.

And the more Barzare considered it, the more it made sense.

"Most parishes have a central location, but my area that I have to cover is a good 30 minutes to the next church, and so by plane, we realized, it might be the easiest way to sprinkle people's fields, rather than me going in a car to different locations," he said.

It was such a hit among the 200 Catholic families who attend the church that Barzare said he is going to make it an annual event, with hopes of upping the holy water haul from 100 gallons to 300, the maximum amount the plane can carry at one time.

"It does have a history for us in our Catholic faith, that the priests would bless the fields, and of course the community, around certain times of the year, especially harvest times," he said. "We call them ember days."

Since the weekend sky blessing, Barzare has heard from other churches across the country.

"Other places saw the headline and they are already trying to plan to do something, as well," he said.

Before taking off on its holy mission, the crop duster was cleaned out of pesticides. Barzare said he is confident the agricultural aircraft did not stir worry or confusion among any Cow Island residents.

"It is not the time to spray pesticides," he said." So the people from the community knew it was not spraying chemicals."
 
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i think its a nice idea that has not been thought through properly as its definatly going to offend some people and will end up doing more harm than good

and what on earth did all this cost ?
the 3rd world has plenty of Catholics who could use the money to build a well to supply a village or two with clean safe water
 
If it makes you feel any better, Vermillion Parish is in South Louisiana in Cajun country where Catholicism is part of the culture. It’s very very very catholic there. If you move or live there, it’s because you are either catholic or are willing to go along with catholic traditions and rituals.

I can practically guarantee you no one there was bothered by this.
 
If it makes you feel any better, Vermillion Parish is in South Louisiana in Cajun country where Catholicism is part of the culture. It’s very very very catholic there. If you move or live there, it’s because you are either catholic or are willing to go along with catholic traditions and rituals.

I can practically guarantee you no one there was bothered by this.

well then apart from the cost of the av gas i guess that's kind of sweet.
But do ministers/ priests no longer visit their flock at home any more ?
 
I am not too troubled by stuff like this. It's only water after all. I am much more troubled by chemicals being dropped by planes on unsuspecting people, which occurs at a frequency of maybe 1,000,000,000,000 to 1, compared to this water, in the name of insect "control".
 
Waste of resources for sure.
In my mind, it's Holy Water for those who believe and water for those who do not. So, hopefully, it's not very offensive for locals who are not Catholic
 
It's water so it's not going to hurt anyone. A church did it so no government entity was involved therefore separation of church and state does not apply. Better than the pesticides normally sprayed from a crop duster. I cannot find one micro speck of outrage inside myself over this. In fact it's a nice gesture of community by the churchgoers.
 
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It might have been more helpful if they had dropped $100.00 bills from the plane.
 
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