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Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kan., delivers the homily during the National Prayer Vigil for Life Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 23, 2025, the evening before the annual the March for Life. In a 44-page complaint filed March 14 at Leavenworth County District Court in Kansas City, Archbishop Naumann alleged that members of the Satanic Grotto, including Michael T. Stewart, president, and vice president, Travis L. Roberts, stole consecrated hosts to use during the black Mass. (OSV News photo/Mihoko Owada)

Kansas archbishop sues Satanists over alleged theft of Eucharist for ‘black mass’

March 20, 2025
By Gina Christian
OSV News
Filed Under: News, World News, Worship & Sacraments

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Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, has filed a motion for the return of the Eucharist, a consecrated host and consecrated wine a Satanic group claims to have stolen, with the archbishop stating that all sacred species are the property of the Catholic Church.

Catholics believe that upon their consecration at Mass, the bread and wine become Jesus Christ — body, blood, soul and divinity — while still retaining the appearances of bread and wine. The Catholic Church teaches in its catechism that the Eucharist is “the source and summit of the Christian life”; through the reception of the Eucharist at holy Communion, Catholics unite themselves to Christ “to form a single body” and then are sent forth “so that they may fulfill God’s will in their daily lives.”

Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, gives Communion to Massgoers at the National Prayer Vigil for Life Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 23, 2025. (OSV News photo/Mihoko Owada)

Court documents obtained by OSV News show Archbishop Naumann on March 14 filed a petition to recover the Eucharist — under state laws governing the return of wrongfully taken or held personal property — in the civil division of the District Court of Leavenworth County, Kan.

The motion names the defendants as Michael T. Stewart and Travis L. Roberts, along with The Grotto Society (also known as The Satanic Grotto), described in the document as a Kansas not-for-profit corporation.

Stewart and Roberts are the president and vice president of the society, a Satanic organization that plans to conduct a “black mass” March 28 on the grounds of the Kansas Statehouse in Topeka.

The motion cites posts made earlier this month by Stewart on the social media platform Reddit in which Stewart — using the handle “xsimon666x” and describing himself as “Simon Satanas” — wrote that his group “already secured a consecrated host” and “wine too” for desecration at the planned March 28 event.

OSV News is awaiting a response from Stewart regarding the circumstances under which he allegedly obtained the consecrated host and wine.

In a post uploaded on or about March 7, the same user said the desecration would be used to “manifest the link between Satan and the capital (sic) building.”

A Facebook event page for the “black mass” stated that the gathering’s intended result was that “God will fall and Kansas will be embraced by the black flame of Lucifer.”

The motion also states that Stewart had confirmed possession “of one or more” consecrated hosts during a March 8 phone call with Gerald “Chuck” Weber Jr., the executive director of the Kansas Catholic Conference. The conference has spearheaded outcry over the “black mass,” calling it an “explicit demonstration of anti-Catholic bigotry” that would be “an insult to not only Catholics but all people of good will.”

Stewart also told Weber of his intention to desecrate the Eucharist under both forms at the March 28 event. In addition, Stewart texted Weber to advise he planned to defy Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly’s decree that the Satanic gathering be moved to the outside of the Capitol building, with Stewart saying he planned to defy the order and “kill Jesus.”

In a Reddit post on or about March 11, The Satanic Grotto listed “Black Mass Components” as including “denounciation (sic) of the Word, denounciation (sic) of Christ, desecration of the Eucharist” and “cooruption (sic) of the Blood.”

The archbishop’s petition to the court states that the Catholic Church “maintains ownership of all Consecrated Hosts and Wine throughout the world,” and that “Archbishop Naumann, as the Archbishop of the Archdiocese, is the proper person to seek recovery of such property within the geographic territory of the Archdiocese.”

The petition states that Stewart, Roberts and their group are neither “an ordained priest of the Catholic Church or an extraordinary minister of the Catholic Church,” and do not have any “consent or authorization from Archbishop Naumann or the Roman Catholic Church to possess any Consecrated Host(s) or any amount of Consecrated Wine.”

Archbishop Naumann also noted in his petition, “The value of Consecrated Hosts and Wine is incalculable because their significance and importance cannot be measured monetarily.”

Immediate restoration of the Eucharist to the archbishop is “directly necessary to secure an important governmental or general public interest” under state law, said the petition.

“In addition, there is a special need for very prompt action due to the immediate danger that Defendants, consistent with the intent of a ‘Black Mass’ and their statements made to date, will desecrate, conceal, or otherwise damage the property at issue,” the petition said.

The archbishop called on the court to require the return of “any and all Consecrated Hosts and any amount of Consecrated Wine in the possession, custody, or control of Defendants.” If the defendants fail to do so within 24 hours of a court order, the petition asks the local county sheriff to take “immediate possession” of the Eucharistic elements and deliver them to Archbishop Naumann.

The petition also asks alternatively for a restraining order by which the defendants “do not conceal, consume, damage, destroy or desecrate” the sacred species in whole or in part, nor remove them from the state of Kansas.

The petition also seeks a hearing, which according to court records has been scheduled for March 20.

The Archdiocese of Kansas City has issued a call to prayer, worship and action ahead of the March 28 “black Mass,” urging the faithful to also contact Gov. Kelly to ban the event. On March 25, the feast of the Annunciation, Archbishop Naumann plans to reconsecrate the state of Kansas to Jesus through the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

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