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Euthanasia Bill Rapporteur Attends Mass, Takes Offense at Anti-Euthanasia Homily

"One does not care for life by giving death," Father François Yambressinga, parish priest of La Madeleine in Châteaudun, said during his July 5 homily, before the French National Assembly's final vote on legalizing euthanasia tomorrow. He urged the faithful to "pray for life" and to "pray for parliamentarians so that they do not do just anything."

Among the congregation was Philippe Vigier, the bill's general rapporteur. He is also the mayor of Châteaudun and a member of the National Assembly for Les Démocrates.

Vigier attended the Mass because it was part of the town's annual Foire aux Laines medieval festival. Civic officials appear in costume. He sat in the front row dressed as the fifteenth-century military commander Jean de Dunois.

Afterward, Vigier told L'Écho Républicain that he felt personally targeted and "deeply hurt" by the homily. "The priest appealed to the congregation while I had no opportunity to respond. That is unacceptable," he said.

According to witnesses cited by the newspaper, Vigier confronted the priest after Mass, insisting that "it was neither the place nor the time" to discuss assisted dying because the event was part of a medieval festival.

The Diocese of Chartres rejected the accusation, noting that the priest never mentioned Vigier by name and did not even know he was the bill's rapporteur.

He "simply did his job, like every priest in France," diocesan spokeswoman said. "He reminded the faithful that the Church opposes every form of euthanasia and assisted suicide while calling for the development of palliative care. That is hardly news."

She added that Father François, "who is gentleness itself," had no intention of singling out Vigier personally.

The Bishop of Chartres, Philippe Christory, also wrote to Vigier, reaffirming the Church's teaching and explaining that a priest has both the right and the duty to preach it from the pulpit. According to the diocese, the bishop also declined Vigier's request for a public apology.

Picture: AI, #newsVzvlpijvrz
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During the Mass on July 5, at the Church of the Madeleine in Châteaudun, Father François Yambressinga condemned the proposed law on assistance in dying in his homily, while Deputy-Mayor Philippe Vigier, co-general rapporteur of the bill, was seated in the front row. The elected official, who said he felt "personally attacked," then spoke with the priest after the celebration. The latter is supported by the Bishop of Chartres.

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CatMuse

I’m sure he would find the act perpetrated against his wishes far more offensive. However, you can’t fix stupid!

P. O'B

Even accounting for the town's medieval festival, I wonder if that picture is AI. Are any French churches that full?

In Catholic grammar and high school, I was taught about the benefits of separation of church and state. Now I realize it was false. It has led to many moral problems throughout the Christian world.

Let’s see what the good Priest has to say in his homilies about sodomy and sodomites.

The total separation of church and state is a progressive lie. That has led to preach and pray but keep it private or in parishes alone.

The arrogance of Mayor Vigier is appalling. In the past heretics would protest outside the Church. This guy expects the priest to alter Church teaching to avoid offending his “royal” dignity…

Robert B

It's old and sick people who are being "personally targeted" by this.