If Only My Parents Had Known God — Forgiveness, suicide, and the Light of Christ
When Mercy Becomes a Mask: The Truth About Same-Sex Blessings
Something deeply troubling is happening in Germany—and increasingly, elsewhere. Catholic priests are organizing formal blessing ceremonies for same-sex couples: flowers, rings, processions, even vows. These events are placed in liturgical settings that look and feel like weddings. We’re told the intent is pastoral care—compassion, mercy, welcome.
But I have to ask the question that many faithful Catholics are quietly holding in their hearts: Who is really behind this? Is it the Holy Spirit—or something else entirely, cloaked in light?
The Church has always reached out to sinners with mercy. That is not in question. What is in question is whether we’ve started mistaking emotional affirmation for spiritual truth. And once mercy loses clarity, confusion follows—and confusion is the devil’s favorite tool.
I’ve seen this kind of spiritual confusion before. Years ago, I attended an Episcopal funeral for the husband of a Catholic friend. The pastor, fully aware that Catholics were in attendance, stood before us and said, “Here, all are welcome to receive Communion. Come.” It sounded warm. Inclusive. But in that moment of mourning, something pierced my heart. It wasn’t reverence—it was recruitment. It wasn’t mercy—it was manipulation. That moment of grief became a spiritual ambush. Not an invitation to Christ, but a soft seduction into confusion, offered when souls were most tender.
It looked kind.
It felt compassionate.
But it was a spiritual strike—like a serpent at the heel.
And that is exactly what I see happening now with these blessing ceremonies in Germany. They are warm, sentimental, and wrapped in good intentions. But behind the surface lies something far more dangerous: a subtle inversion of mercy itself.
The Church teaches that marriage is the sacred union of one man and one woman, ordered toward life and rooted in Christ (CCC 1601). This teaching is not just tradition—it is truth, revealed by God and confirmed in both nature and grace. It cannot be changed. Not by culture. Not by popular vote. Not even by a Vatican document.
Some try to argue that these are not weddings but simply “pastoral blessings.” The 2023 document Fiducia Supplicans opened the door to this idea, suggesting that individuals in irregular relationships may receive personal blessings—not as approval, but as a prayer for grace and healing. But what we are seeing now are not personal, humble blessings. These are public ceremonies. Processions. Performances. Carefully staged events that blur the line between mercy and celebration. And that line must never be blurred.
Yes, the Church blesses sinners.
We are all sinners.
But she blesses persons, not sinful unions.
And she never blesses in a way that confuses truth.
There’s another truth we must not be afraid to say: same-sex unions cannot become Catholic marriages—not because the Church is being exclusionary, but because it is impossible. Two men or two women, no matter how sincere their affection, cannot bring forth life in the way marriage is designed to do. They cannot become one flesh in the sacramental sense. That’s not cruelty—it’s reality. The Church isn’t denying something from them. She’s simply saying: what you’re asking for is not the thing you think it is.
To call a same-sex relationship “marriage” is to give a sacred name to something it was never meant to describe. It would be to bless an illusion. And the Church, in love, refuses to lie.
Real mercy never affirms sin—it heals the wound. Yet many today believe these ceremonies are harmless acts of kindness. But kindness without truth is not love. It is sentimentality. And sentimentality, unchecked, is often where the enemy hides.
The devil does not always come in rage and violence. Often, he comes with flowers, smiles, and soft words. He imitates the sacred. He speaks gently, seductively. He whispers: This feels good, so it must be right. But not everything that feels good is holy. Sometimes, it’s the serpent in disguise.
So we must ask again: who really benefits from these staged blessings? Who wins when the meaning of marriage is redefined, when confusion is welcomed at the altar, when people are comforted all the way to hell by a smiling priest who believes he’s being merciful?
Not Christ.
Not the Church.
And not the souls who are being deceived.
I say this not in anger, but in love—real love, the kind that risks being misunderstood to speak the truth. And I say this to my brothers and sisters with same-sex attraction: You are loved. You are not excluded. But you are not helped when falsehood is dressed up as compassion. You deserve better than that. You deserve the full truth of the Gospel. You deserve clarity, not confusion. Cross, not performance. Christ, not compromise.
This isn’t just about Germany. It’s about whether the Church still has the courage to be what she was meant to be: the light of the world.
Because if the Church refuses to shine with the light of truth,
Satan is more than willing to imitate it.