
Someone’s going to be saying a lot of Hail Marys for this blunder.
Brooklyn Catholic officials are fuming at the leaders of a local Williamsburg church for allowing a bawdy music video by pop star Sabrina Carpenter to be filmed inside their 160-year-old house of worship.
Bishop Robert Brennan said he was “appalled” that the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church on Havermeyer Street approved the shoot for the song “Feather,” which features the singer and actress prancing in a booty-showing black dress among candy-colored coffins and a neon cross.
The music video, which has amassed more than 2 million views on YouTube since being uploaded on Halloween, includes scenes of men killing each other as they fight over Carpenter, who eventually attends their funerals inside the church.
One of the coffins in the video notably contains the words, “RIP Bitch,” with other decorations from the music video sprawled across the altar.
The diocese has since slammed the church for allowing the music video to be shot the way it was inside the building, the Catholic News Agency reports.
“[Brooklyn Bishop Robert Brennan] is appalled at what was filmed at Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Brooklyn,” the diocese said in a statement.
“The parish did not follow diocesan policy regarding the filming on Church property, which includes a review of the scenes and script.”
The diocese noted that the church leaders were allegedly misled by the production company, saying they “failed to accurately represent the video content.”
The diocese said Brennan “is taking this matter seriously and will be looking into it further.”
Neither representatives from the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church or the Freenjoy production company immediately responded to The Post’s request for comment.
The Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary parish was first established in 1863 and has served as the home of New York’s Lithuanian Catholics ever since.
The church notably welcomed Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda in 2022 when he vowed support to Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, the diocesan newspaper The Tablet reports.