Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jan 29, 2022 / 10:50 am (CNA).
The city of Louisville, Ky., is paying a local police officer a $75,000 settlement after he was suspended for praying outside an abortion clinic, according to the firm representing him.
Officer Matthew Schrenger was off-duty when he stopped to pray with his father on the public sidewalk outside the EMW Women’s Surgical Center nearly a year ago, on Feb. 20, according to the Thomas More Society. Schrenger arrived in the early morning, before the abortion provider opened, as part of 40 Days for Life, an international grassroots campaign dedicated to ending abortion through prayer and fasting.
Matt Heffron, senior counsel for the Thomas More Society, previously said that Schrenger, a 13-year police veteran, was praying the rosary, according to the local Fox affiliate, WDRB News.
For his actions, Schrenger was suspended for more than four months with pay, stripped of his police powers, and placed under investigation, a Jan. 27 press release by the Thomas More Society read.
According to a letter last June obtained by WDRB News, the Louisville Metro Police Department expressed concern that Schrenger wore his full uniform while participating in “protest activity,” but acknowledged that he attempted to cover it up with his coat.
Surveillance video obtained by WDRB showed Schrenger praying and walking outside of the clinic for an estimated 45 minutes and carrying a “pray to end abortion” sign at one point, the outlet reported.
The settlement comes three months after Schrenger sued the city’s mayor, police chief, and police department in a federal lawsuit filed by the Thomas More Society with Blaine Blood, a Louisville attorney, in October.
Schrenger’s attorney, Heffron, called the city’s actions against the 13-year police veteran “a significant and inexcusable violation of a loyal officer’s Constitutional rights.”
“The unfair discipline revealed undeniably content-based discrimination against Officer Schrenger’s personal pro-life views and violated his First Amendment rights,” Heffron said. “He did not engage in any political protest on duty – he prayed quietly. Yet Officer Schrenger was punished for this peaceful, private behavior.”
He accused the police department of a double standard.
“The treatment of Officer Schreger was particularly galling considering other Louisville police officers previously had marched, while on-duty and in uniform, in political protests that apparently were approved by the police department,” he said. “He was treated very differently than other officers who had undeniably engaged in true political protest and activism while participating in LGBT and Black Lives Matter demonstrations.”
According to the Thomas More Society, open-records requests showed that those other officers faced no suspension or any kind of discipline whatsoever.
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CNA Staff, Aug 2, 2024 / 17:51 pm (CNA).
Pope Francis this week said he is “united in prayer” with those participating in a conference for Catholics who identify as LGBT taking place this… […]
A scene from the trailer promoting Liberty University’s campus ministry production of “Scaremare.” / Scaremare on YouTube
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Oct 29, 2022 / 10:55 am (CNA).
This October some churches and ministries in the United States are once again hosting Christian versions of haunted houses, and nonbelievers and believers alike are lining up for some rather existential spine-tingling for the first time since the pandemic.
Popular among evangelical Protestant churches in the South, these “judgment houses” typically stage dramatic representations depicting what happens after people die, leaving visitors to ponder whether they themselves are headed for heaven or hell, and presumably, to act accordingly.
Is this a good way to save souls? Some Catholics experts in evangelization who spoke to CNA have reservations.
A different way to evangelize
The late Jerry Falwell, the Baptist televangelist, and founder of Liberty University, in Lynchburg, Virginia, is credited with hosting the first judgment house in 1972, “Scaremare.”
Scaremare is still going strong in Lynchburg, where the university’s campus ministry stages a production every year around Halloween that draws people from all over the region attracted by the lure of “fun-house rooms and scenes of death in order to confront people with the question ‘What happens after I die?’”
The performance does not disappoint those looking for the sort of adrenaline surge a horror movie produces. As many as 4,000 visitors a night witness gruesome death scenes including a massacre at a movie theater and a camper who is mauled by a wild animal.
According to Josh Coldren, the director of the 2022 production of Scaremare, the scenes are intended to make people think about their fears and their mortality.
“We talk about how everyone faces death, but how there is hope beyond our fears and hope beyond death, and that hope is in Jesus Christ,” Coldren told CNA.
According to Scaremare’s website, over 26,000 people who visited over the years “have made decisions for Christ over the past two decades. Ironically, this House of Death points to the Way of Life!”
While judgment houses can function as memento mori, efficacious reminders of the inevitability of death, some judgment houses, also known as “Hell Houses,” have become controversial for taking the idea to an extreme. Graphic scenes such as abortions, extramarital sex, and drug use are sometimes depicted along with the consequence of these actions as the sinners are shown condemned to spend eternity in hell.
Scaremare doesn’t get into these issues or talk about hell at all, Coldren told CNA.
“We don’t have a scene of hell, and we stay away from demons. We believe those things are real, we just make sure we stay away from them,” Coldren said.
Tom Hudgins, is the owner of Judgement House, a company based in Seminole, Florida, that provides scripts to churches to stage dramas. Before COVID, he told CNA, they helped as many as 350 churches at a time hold Judgement Houses. They are slowly getting back to business, he said, and about 50 participating churches are listed on their website.
Hudgins explained to CNA that, unlike more extreme Hell House productions, his scripts never talk about social issues. Small groups of visitors walk through scenes meant to encourage self-reflection. Each production begins with death, by a car crash or cancer, for example, and then the audience sees what happens after death.
“They see what hell would be like, but they also see what heaven will be like, and everyone can make their own decisions,” Hudgins said.
A scene from a production of a Judgement House script. Decaturville Pentecostal Church YouTube
Bonnie Gilliland, the dramatic director at Morningside Baptist Church in Tallahassee, Florida, is staging a play with the help of Judgement House this October. She told CNA that the productions are a way of sharing the Gospel.
“We include a lot of scripture, it’s very biblically based,” she said.
Gilliland explained that this year’s production isn’t just for nonbelievers – it’s meant to give the regular churchgoer a wake-up call.
“The current drama gives people an opportunity to understand and examine whether they have a relationship with Jesus Christ because it’s more than just going to church, it’s about accepting Jesus as your savior and receiving the gift of eternal life,” Gilliland said.
Kelly Armstrong, the director of the judgment house at New Harmony Baptist Church in Albertville, Alabama, told CNA that past productions have depicted scenes of car wrecks, overdoses, and abuse.
Visitors see “how people make decisions that affect their eternity,” he said. “It brings our church together, and makes people think.”
Catholic criticism of “hell houses”
Judgment houses have not found favor among Catholic churches in the United States, and two experts in evangelization and pastoral care told CNA that they don’t think talking about hell attracts people to the Church.
Sherry Weddell is the founder of the Catherine of Siena Institute, an apostolate that helps evangelize Catholic parishes to turn pew-sitters into “intentional missionary disciples.” She told CNA that she advises any Catholics considering introducing hell-related themes to their Halloween decorations or celebrations, to rethink that idea.
“If you live in an area that has a significant number of young adults, especially parents of young children, or in an area that is highly secularized like urban areas of the East or West coasts, many will find it offensive or off-putting. And there is a real chance that sensitive and young children could be upset by it which would fuel their parents’ unhappiness with the sponsoring Catholic community,” Weddell explained.
“You could upset people who might otherwise have been open to attending an Advent or Christmas event at your parish or just open to a friendship with a Catholic like you.
“Instead of building or strengthening bridges of trust, you could be shattering or weakening whatever trust may already exist. There are creative, positive, child and parent-friendly alternatives such as “trunk-or-treating,” costume parties, and community of light events that foster both long-standing relationships and fun,” Weddell said.
Monsignor Stephen Rossetti, the chief exorcist for the Archdiocese of Washington, and a psychologist and researcher at the Catholic University of America, told CNA that the threat of hell isn’t effective in this day and age.
“People today are not convinced or influenced by threats of hell. The Church just really stopped doing that because it just doesn’t work. You know, you can do all the hellfire and damnation sermons you want, but people just kind of yawn, “ Rossetti said.
“We’re trying to emphasize God’s love and God’s mercy, which I think is much more to the point, frankly. And also more of a message that’s needed in our day. And I think that started with Pope John XXIII at Vatican II. He said, today what the message needs to be is of God’s mercy and compassion and God’s love.
“This is what attracts people, and this is sort of the core of our message. God loves us and God has saved us out of his love and compassion in Jesus,” he said.
Some photographs of Nicaraguan Bishop Rolando Álvarez disseminated by the dictatorship of Nicaragua in November 2023. / Credit: Ministry of the Interior of Nicaragua
ACI Prensa Staff, Nov 30, 2023 / 09:30 am (CNA).
In response to demands for pr… […]
6 Comments
God bless Officer Schrenger and the Thomas More Society for fighting back.
I would say the Louisville PD got off easy.
This kind of thing — being fired for exercising your Constitutional and human rights — never used to happen in the country where I grew up (America).
We should all stand up like Officer Schrenger and speak out before our country descends into utter barbarisms. Herod had babies slaughtered and is still remembered with horror in our time…Biden and Planned Parenthood and others like them promote the mass slaughter of human babies up until a moment before a healthy live birth…and they are free and encouraged to do so. It’s time we speak up for life…all life with no reservations. If we do not cry out against these slaughters of human babies then we are complicit in their deaths. Silence means consent.
The most telling thing is that the Louisville police department apparently approved the officers’ actions who marched for “woke” causes, ie., BLM and LGBTQ. Maybe supporters of pro-life should find a way to use the alphabet to represent their beliefs.
Kudos to the Thomas More Society for supporting Officer Schrenger. Actions like this are why I’m happy I’ve been contributing to the Thomas More Society in recent years.
Nice!! I am just sorry he didnt win a much larger award, which would have served as a starker warning that the city not do this again to others. Bravo to the Thomas More Society as well for taking up these causes. I have donated to this organization for some time, as should all Catholics who are horrified at the injustices which are now routinely happening in our society. This case of Officer Schrenger is only one of many such injustices. Another case they have taken up is of the videographer in California who taped Planned parenthood ghouls taking about what they planned to do with the money they would earn off of dismembered babies. This videographer is charged with MANY crimes just for taping them, by a BLUE state which do doubt no longer recognizes freedom of speech. Disgusting. Donate to the Thomas More Society. Ditto, donate to politicians who are running for office and represent your moral point of view, whether or not they are the reps for your particular state. If you are politically outnumbered where you live and swim in a sea of blue, provide your financial support to candidates or organizations elsewhere! Silencing opposing points of view is NOT acceptable! Don’t let the George Soros types decide how the rest of us will live just because they have the cash to BUY elections!!!
God bless Officer Schrenger and the Thomas More Society for fighting back.
I would say the Louisville PD got off easy.
This kind of thing — being fired for exercising your Constitutional and human rights — never used to happen in the country where I grew up (America).
We should all stand up like Officer Schrenger and speak out before our country descends into utter barbarisms. Herod had babies slaughtered and is still remembered with horror in our time…Biden and Planned Parenthood and others like them promote the mass slaughter of human babies up until a moment before a healthy live birth…and they are free and encouraged to do so. It’s time we speak up for life…all life with no reservations. If we do not cry out against these slaughters of human babies then we are complicit in their deaths. Silence means consent.
Bravo to Officer Schrenger and bravo to the Thomas More Society for fighting this in court.
Gilberta
The most telling thing is that the Louisville police department apparently approved the officers’ actions who marched for “woke” causes, ie., BLM and LGBTQ. Maybe supporters of pro-life should find a way to use the alphabet to represent their beliefs.
Kudos to the Thomas More Society for supporting Officer Schrenger. Actions like this are why I’m happy I’ve been contributing to the Thomas More Society in recent years.
Nice!! I am just sorry he didnt win a much larger award, which would have served as a starker warning that the city not do this again to others. Bravo to the Thomas More Society as well for taking up these causes. I have donated to this organization for some time, as should all Catholics who are horrified at the injustices which are now routinely happening in our society. This case of Officer Schrenger is only one of many such injustices. Another case they have taken up is of the videographer in California who taped Planned parenthood ghouls taking about what they planned to do with the money they would earn off of dismembered babies. This videographer is charged with MANY crimes just for taping them, by a BLUE state which do doubt no longer recognizes freedom of speech. Disgusting. Donate to the Thomas More Society. Ditto, donate to politicians who are running for office and represent your moral point of view, whether or not they are the reps for your particular state. If you are politically outnumbered where you live and swim in a sea of blue, provide your financial support to candidates or organizations elsewhere! Silencing opposing points of view is NOT acceptable! Don’t let the George Soros types decide how the rest of us will live just because they have the cash to BUY elections!!!