Maryland: "We are the Church. We are the living stones." Fr. Samuel Giese, the pastor of a Catholic parish in Bethesda, Maryland, reacted about a fire at North Bethesda United Methodist Church early Saturday morning.
St. Jane Frances de Chantal Parish was the most heavily damaged of three Bethesda churches hit by vandalism over the weekend. A video posted on the parish's YouTube channel appears to show flames near the church's tabernacle. Authorities believe the three incidents are connected.
The fire caused minor damages to headstones at nearby Wildwood Baptist Church.
A fire was reported early Sunday morning inside St. Jane Frances de Chantal, located about a mile from the Methodist church. Because of the heavy damage, Sunday Masses were moved to the parish school's gymnasium.
Father Samuel Giese, the pastor, spoke about the attack at the start of the parish’s live-streamed 10 a.m. Sunday Mass.
“Last night our church was vandalized. People broke in. They overturned statues. They tore down the Stations of the Cross. They desecrated the tabernacle, and they tried to set the church on fire,” Giese said.
“I believe that this is because of the Church's stand on the issue of life — when it begins and that it should be protected — and that this is one of the manifestations of the deep divisions right now within our country, that there are those who believe that we do not have even the right to practice our faith.”
“I’m sorry to share this news with you. However, this is the important thing to remember,” he said. “We are the Church. We are the living stones. We are the Body of Christ. We are the ones who have been nourished by God, consecrated by God.
“We are ones called by God to be the light … to the world, and the salt of the earth.” You can watch the pastor’s full statement in the video below. There is footage of the fire in the sanctuary at the beginning of the video.