In Vatican, actors perform a "biblical dance" in front of the altar

Ordinary Catholic believers expressed concern and internal protest, as they cannot understand what these movements before the Lord's altar meant.
On August 2, 2025, in Vatican, in front of the open altar specially set up for the Youth Jubilee, before the start of the mass led by Archbishop Luis Argüello, the Spanish delegation presented a dance performance accompanied by the reading of biblical texts.
Officially, the event was positioned as a "spiritual animation" before the mass. However, the choreography performed by women and men evoked associations not with Christian reverence, but with pagan rituals.
Ordinary Catholic believers, writes tribunechretienne.com, expressed concern and internal protest: what did these movements before the Lord's altar mean? Why was the sacred space, where the Eucharist, the Sacrament of Christ's Presence, is celebrated, used as a stage for a performance?
Although the organizers stated their intention to "illustrate" biblical images, the format itself gave many the feeling of replacing prayer with aesthetics, depth with external effect, mass with theatrical performance. As observers note, such a mixing of prayer and spectacle blurs the line between cult and culture, between altar and stage.
"What we saw was not blasphemy, but a gentle drift, one that dilutes the sacred into the sensible, that slides from worship toward culture, without anyone knowing where one ends and the other begins.... The altar is the place of sacrifice, not a stage for bodily expression. It is not a setting, but a threshold. Where the mystery of salvation is renewed, where the bread becomes Body, where Christ gives himself. This is why the Church has always surrounded the altar with reserve, respect, and sacred silence," writes tribunechretienne.com.
It was highlighted that "The Church must not rush into them, but emerge from them. It does not have to seduce, it must sanctify. It is holiness that attracts, not staging."
The publication emphasizes: "Young people do not need shows, they thirst for truth, for silence, for beauty rooted in faith, not in entertainment."
Earlier, the UOJ wrote that in Spain, Catholic nuns danced in the altar before the throne.

