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Angelus News | June 30, 2023 | Vol. 8 No 13

On the cover: Everywhere you turn, it seems as if everyone is focusing on artificial intelligence — how it can be used, how it should be used, or if it should be used at all. Starting on Page 12, Elise Italiano Ureneck speaks with two Catholics experienced in artificial intelligence on how it could impact everything from education, well-being, and human demise.

On the cover: Everywhere you turn, it seems as if everyone is focusing on artificial intelligence — how it can be used, how it should be used, or if it should be used at all. Starting on Page 12, Elise Italiano Ureneck speaks with two Catholics experienced in artificial intelligence on how it could impact everything from education, well-being, and human demise.

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Tale of two cities<br />

While the LA Dodgers were honoring fake nuns, some 2,000 people<br />

prayed for love, respect, and forgiveness at the cathedral.<br />

BY NATALIE ROMANO<br />

On the day that the Los Angeles<br />

Dodgers honored a group of<br />

fake religious “sisters” and<br />

hundreds gathered outside Dodger<br />

Stadium to pray and protest, some<br />

2,000 Catholics filled the Cathedral<br />

of Our Lady of the Angels in response<br />

to the baseball team’s controversial<br />

decision.<br />

“When God is insulted, when the<br />

beliefs of any of our neighbors are<br />

ridiculed, it diminishes all of us,” said<br />

Archbishop José H. Gomez in his<br />

homily at a noon Mass on <strong>June</strong> 16,<br />

hours ahead of the Dodgers’ annual<br />

“Pride Night.”<br />

Although the Dodgers have hosted<br />

these special game nights for the gay<br />

and lesbian community for more than<br />

10 years, this year the team decided to<br />

mark the event with an award to the<br />

Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a San<br />

Francisco-based activist group that describes<br />

itself as a “leading-edge order<br />

of queer and trans nuns” and routinely<br />

parodies Catholic figures and traditions<br />

with lewd and lascivious public<br />

performances.<br />

“When we reward such acts,” the<br />

archbishop said in his homily at the<br />

Mass, “it hurts our unity as one city<br />

and one nation, as one family under<br />

God.”<br />

The decision to honor the sisters<br />

sparked protests from Catholics<br />

around the country, including a call<br />

from the country’s bishops for Catholics<br />

to make “reparations” for the sisters’<br />

“blasphemies.” National Catholic<br />

groups, most prominently the Catholic<br />

League,<br />

called for<br />

boycotts,<br />

while Catholic<br />

Vote and<br />

Phoenix-based<br />

lay group<br />

Catholics for<br />

Catholics<br />

organized a<br />

prayer and<br />

procession<br />

event outside<br />

of Dodger<br />

Stadium Friday afternoon.<br />

Los Angeles Archbishop José<br />

H. Gomez blesses parishioners<br />

during a special Mass at<br />

the Cathedral of Our Lady<br />

of the Angels on Friday, <strong>June</strong><br />

16, for a celebration of the<br />

solemnity of the Most Sacred<br />

Heart of Jesus ahead of the<br />

Los Angeles Dodgers’ game<br />

and its Pride Night.<br />

| JOHN RUEDA/ARCHDIOCESE<br />

OF LOS ANGELES<br />

The liturgy — and the controversial<br />

game — took place on the same day<br />

the Catholic Church celebrates the<br />

solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of<br />

Jesus.<br />

24 • ANGELUS • <strong>June</strong> <strong>30</strong>, <strong>2023</strong>

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