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Why Catholics Should Condemn this Viral Eucharistic Miracle


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This is a warning to my fellow Catholics against a satanic deception.

In one of the most widely shared scenes of a recent Netflix miniseries (whose title I shall withhold to avoid causing further harm to souls already deceived by it) a crippled girl in a wheelchair is suddenly healed during what appears to be a Catholic Mass.

As a result, the congregation rejoices, believing it to be a miracle. But what they do not know is that the “sacred species” used by their priest is tainted with the blood of Satan himself.

The priest administering the “sacrament”, once old and frail, had drunk the same blood earlier, which made him young and vigorous again.

Therefore, the supposed “miracle” is not divine, but preternatural, born of demonic power. It is a sacrilegious imitation of the Holy Eucharist, a blasphemy that mocks the true grace of God present only in the valid Sacraments of the Church.

Catholics must beware. Scenes like these are not entertainment; they are a direct assault on our faith, a deception meant to confuse and desensitize viewers. Watching or recommending such content only helps advance Satan’s mission, which is to make evil appear sacred, and to mock what is truly holy.

About the Creator of the Series

When a Catholic abandons belief in the Sacraments, he cuts himself off from the source of grace. His virtues weaken, his mind darkens, and soon he begins to oppose the very faith he once professed. This is what seems to have happened to the creator of this series. He was raised Catholic, an altar boy for years, but later an atheist who claims to have found truth in science and skepticism. His series reflects this tragic loss of faith.

In his work, a Catholic priest, deceived by Satan, brings evil directly into the Church. What follows is a terrifying corruption of the Sacred: the Mass becomes a stage for demonic worship, and the faithful unknowingly participate in grave sin. Some parishioners are blindly obedient to their priest, unaware of their participation in evil. Others choose to cover up his scandal. A few resist the darkness, even at the cost of their lives.

What the TV Series promotes

The story ends with the destruction of an entire Catholic community, an image of what happens when Satan enters where grace once abounded. To make matters worse, one of the characters utters the divine name “I am who I am” in a blasphemous manner, turning it into a declaration of human pride and self-deification.

The series attacks the Catholic faith repeatedly: promoting Islam over Christianity, portraying science and faith as enemies, denying life after death, and painting Catholics as racists and hypocrites. It leaves viewers with the impression that the Church is corrupt beyond hope, while implying that true freedom lies in rejecting religion altogether.

This miraculous scene is not a reflection on faith. It is an inversion of it. It glorifies rebellion, mocks the priesthood, and replaces the true Eucharistic miracle with a demonic counterfeit. By watching, recommending, or even speaking lightly of this show, one risks helping to spread its poison.

Let us instead uphold the true devotion to the Holy Eucharist, the Holy Sacrifice of the Altar, where Christ Himself, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, comes to us in love, not deceit. May the faithful be reminded that no imitation, no matter how beautiful or emotional on screen, can ever equal the reality of the Blessed Sacrament.

“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!” — Isaiah 5:20

For recommended movies, read all the entries here.

The post Why Catholics Should Condemn this Viral Eucharistic Miracle first appeared on EPISTLES.

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