This blog is based on references in the Bible to fear. God wills that we “BE NOT AFRAID”. Vincit qui se vincit" is a Latin phrase meaning "He conquers who conquers himself." Many theologians state that the eighth deadly sin is fear. It is fear and its natural animal reaction to fight or flight that is the root cause of our failings to create a Kingdom of God on earth. This blog is dedicated to Mary the Mother of God. "
(Smoke in This Life — The Day for the Ones Who Carry Long Memory)
(Schoop‑Aligned Section: Early Ascent for Souls Who Need Mercy to Rewrite Their Story)
Virtue: Mercy & Memory Cigar: Silky, layered (Sumatra) Bourbon: Michter’s US*1 – clean, thoughtful Reflection: “What story do I carry into spring?”
Better to Smoke in This Life Than the Next — Holy Face Tuesday
Holy Face Tuesday belongs to the ones who remember too much.
The ones who carry old stories like stones in their pockets.
The ones who can recall every failure, every wound, every moment they wish they could rewrite.
They believe in God.
They trust the light.
But they still flinch when they see their own reflection.
That’s why Cathedral Rock is the right mountain for today —
a place where the wind carves memory into stone,
where the climb is steady,
and where a man can finally face what he’s been avoiding.
A Sumatra fits the day:
silky, layered, patient.
A cigar that unfolds slowly,
like a story being retold with mercy instead of shame.
Michter’s US1* mirrors it:
clean, thoughtful, honest.
A bourbon that doesn’t overwhelm the senses
but invites a man to sit still long enough
to let God rewrite the narrative he’s been carrying.
π₯ Purgatory Story — The Man Who Carried the Wrong Story About Himself
(Schoop‑Aligned Section: Early Ascent for Souls Who Need Their Memory Healed)
There was a man in Purgatory who walked with his head down,
not because he was ashamed of God,
but because he was ashamed of himself.
He remembered every sin in perfect detail.
Every failure.
Every moment he disappointed someone he loved.
He carried these memories like a ledger,
believing he would one day have to present them to God
as proof of why he didn’t belong in the light.
One morning, an angel approached him and asked,
“Why do you walk as though you are still guilty?”
The man answered,
“Because I remember everything I’ve done.”
The angel placed a hand on his shoulder and said,
“Then remember this as well —
God has already forgiven what you refuse to forget.”
The man looked up,
and for the first time,
he saw his own face in the light.
Not condemned.
Not accused.
Simply loved.
And that single moment of recognition
lifted him one step higher.
π Reflection
“What story do I carry into spring?”
Holy Face Tuesday is not for the proud.
It is for the remembering.
The ones who need mercy to touch their past
so they can walk freely into their future.
Today, pray for the ones who carry heavy stories —
not with correction,
but with compassion.
Not with pressure,
but with presence.
Because resurrection is not just about rising.
It is about remembering rightly.
It is about letting God tell the story
you’ve been telling wrong.
Life with Father (1947)
A Technicolor domestic comedy where order, ritual, and stubborn paternal pride collide—and where a man discovers that the grace he resists is the grace that holds his home together.
Sources: imdb.com
π¬ Production Snapshot
Studio: Warner Bros. Director: Michael Curtiz Release: 1947 Screenplay: Donald Ogden Stewart & Clarence Day Jr. (adaptation of the long‑running Broadway play) Stars: William Powell (Clarence Day Sr.), Irene Dunne (Vinnie Day), Elizabeth Taylor (Mary), Jimmy Lydon (Clarence Jr.) Genre: Comedy / Family / Domestic Americana Notable: One of the era’s most successful Technicolor comedies, capturing the rituals, tensions, and moral humor of a late‑19th‑century New York household with Powell at his most majestically exasperated.
π§ Story Summary
Clarence Day Sr. runs his household like a general—precise, principled, and convinced that order is the highest virtue.
His wife, Vinnie, runs it like a quiet providence—gentle, strategic, and always three steps ahead of her husband’s thunder.
Into this world comes Mary (Elizabeth Taylor), luminous and earnest, visiting the Day family and sparking a tender romance with Clarence Jr.
But the true engine of the story is a single revelation:
Clarence Sr. has never been baptized.
To him, this is nonsense.
To Vinnie, it is a crisis.
To the household, it becomes a theological earthquake.
As the family scrambles to “save” the patriarch’s soul, Clarence battles everything from unexpected bills to unexpected emotions. His insistence on control slowly unravels, revealing a man who loves deeply but fears vulnerability even more.
By the end, the house remains intact—but the father at its center has been softened, humbled, and quietly transformed.
Not by force.
Not by argument.
But by love that refuses to yield.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in 1947, the film reflects:
Postwar America’s longing for stability, ritual, and family-centered storytelling
A nostalgic look at 1880s New York—orderly, bustling, and morally earnest
The height of Technicolor domestic cinema, where color itself conveyed warmth and idealism
Michael Curtiz’s mastery of rhythm, timing, and emotional clarity
A cultural fascination with fatherhood as both authority and comedy
It stands alongside films like Cheaper by the Dozen and Meet Me in St. Louis as a portrait of American family life shaped by ritual, affection, and gentle moral instruction.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. Baptism and the Reluctant Convert
Clarence’s refusal to be baptized is not rebellion—it’s pride disguised as principle.
Insight:
Grace often enters through the door we guard the most fiercely.
2. Vinnie and the Mercy That Moves Mountains
Vinnie’s love is patient, strategic, and unwavering.
She never humiliates Clarence—she simply outmaneuvers his stubbornness with tenderness.
Insight:
Mercy is not weakness; it is the quiet strength that reforms a household.
3. Order vs. Peace
Clarence believes order creates peace.
The film gently insists the opposite: peace creates order.
Insight:
A home is not held together by rules but by relationship.
4. The Father as Icon and Idol
Clarence’s authority is admirable—until it becomes absolute.
His arc is the softening of an idol into an icon:
from self-sufficiency to receptivity.
Insight:
Fatherhood matures when pride yields to grace.
5. Young Love as Renewal
The budding romance between Mary and Clarence Jr. mirrors the renewal happening in the household itself.
Insight:
New love often reveals old truths.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink: “The Patriarch’s Peace”
A warm, dignified, late‑19th‑century–inspired cocktail:
Rye whiskey
A touch of Madeira
Dash of orange bitters
Stirred, served in a small glass—no flourish, no nonsense
Symbolism:
Rye = Clarence’s strength and structure
Madeira = Vinnie’s warmth and quiet sweetness
Bitters = the sting of pride giving way to humility
Small glass = the modesty he learns to embrace
Snack: Buttered Tea Cakes
A simple Victorian household treat.
Symbolism:
Softness overcoming rigidity.
Sweetness grounding authority.
A reminder that homes are built on gentleness, not thunder.
Atmosphere
Warm lamplight
A tidy table (Clarence would insist)
A sense of domestic ritual
Soft classical music or parlor piano
A space where affection and order coexist without conflict.
πͺ Reflection Prompt
Where in your life do you cling to control—
not because it is needed,
but because it feels safer than surrender?
Who is the Vinnie in your world—
the one whose quiet mercy reshapes you more than argument ever could?
And what “baptism” still waits for you—
the step of grace you resist
because it asks you to be seen,
softened,
and changed?
(Schoop‑Aligned Section: Early Ascent for Souls Who Do Not Yet Trust the Light)
Virtue: Invitation & Openness Cigar: Mild, maternal (Connecticut Shade) Bourbon: Woodford Reserve – balanced, classic Reflection: “Who needs my patience as they learn to see?”
Better to Smoke in This Life Than the Next — Easter Monday
Easter Monday is the day for the ones who aren’t sure yet.
The ones who stand at the edge of belief but can’t quite step in.
The ones who want the light but don’t trust it.
The ones who have been burned by religion, by people, by life.
Bell Rock is the right mountain for them —
open, accessible, welcoming, no gate, no test, no proving ground.
Just a path that says, “Come as far as you can today.”
A Connecticut Shade fits the day:
gentle, maternal, patient.
A cigar that doesn’t demand anything from a man —
it simply keeps him company while he decides whether he wants to rise.
Woodford Reserve is the same way:
steady, balanced, familiar.
A bourbon that doesn’t overwhelm,
but quietly says, “You’re safe here.”
π₯ Purgatory Story — The Man Who Didn’t Believe the Light Was for Him
(Schoop‑Aligned Section: Early Ascent for Souls Who Doubt Their Worthiness)
There was a man in Purgatory who stayed near the shadows,
not because he loved the dark,
but because he didn’t believe the light belonged to him.
Whenever the dawn began to rise,
he stepped back.
Whenever grace approached,
he turned away.
Whenever an angel called his name,
he assumed it was meant for someone holier.
One morning, an angel found him sitting alone and asked,
“Why do you hide from the light?”
The man answered,
“I don’t deserve it.”
The angel knelt beside him and said,
“The light does not shine because you deserve it.
It shines because God is good.”
The man looked up —
just once —
and that was enough.
The light reached him,
wrapped him,
lifted him.
He didn’t rise because he believed.
He rose because he allowed himself to be found.
π Reflection
“Who needs my patience as they learn to see?”
Easter Monday is not for the triumphant.
It is for the hesitant.
The wounded.
The skeptical.
The ones who need a gentle path and a gentle companion.
Today, pray for the unbelievers —
not with pressure,
but with presence.
Not with arguments,
but with mercy.
Because sometimes the first step toward God
is simply believing the light might actually be for you.
The Man With the Golden Arm (1955)
A mid‑century drama where addiction, loyalty, and wounded love collide—and where a man fights not only the needle, but the gravity of the world that profits from his fall.
Sources: imdb.com
π¬ Production Snapshot
Studio: United Artists Director: Otto Preminger Release: 1955 Screenplay: Walter Newman & Lewis Meltzer, based on the novel by Nelson Algren Stars: Frank Sinatra (Frankie Machine), Kim Novak (Molly), Eleanor Parker (Zosh), Darren McGavin (Louie) Genre: Drama / Romance / Social Realism Notable: One of the first major Hollywood films to confront heroin addiction head‑on. Saul Bass’s jagged, iconic title design visually encodes the film’s central torment: a man trapped in the grip of his own arm.
π§ Story Summary
Frankie Machine returns to Chicago after a stint in rehab, determined to rebuild his life.
He has a gift—he’s a brilliant drummer—and he dreams of joining a real band, leaving behind the card‑dealing racket that once fed his habit.
But the world he returns to is a trap disguised as home.
Zosh, his wife, claims to be paralyzed and uses her supposed fragility to bind Frankie to her. Louie, the local dealer, lurks in the shadows, waiting for Frankie’s resolve to crack. Molly, the woman who truly loves him, offers tenderness, honesty, and a future—if he can stay clean long enough to reach it.
Pressure mounts.
Old debts resurface.
Temptation circles.
And when Frankie relapses, the film plunges into one of the most harrowing withdrawal sequences of the era.
A sudden death—accidental, chaotic—forces Frankie and Molly into flight.
But running only exposes the truth: Frankie must face his addiction, his guilt, and the manipulations that have kept him enslaved.
The film closes not with triumph, but with a fragile, hard‑won clarity:
freedom begins when a man stops lying to himself.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in 1955, the film reflects:
Hollywood’s first serious attempts to portray drug addiction without euphemism
Postwar anxieties about masculinity, purpose, and economic entrapment
The rise of jazz as a symbol of both freedom and chaos
Otto Preminger’s crusade against the Production Code’s moral restrictions
Saul Bass’s revolution in graphic design—turning movie titles into psychological landscapes
It stands alongside films like A Hatful of Rain and Requiem for a Heavyweight as a portrait of men crushed between desire and despair.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. Addiction as Bondage
Frankie’s arm is both instrument and chain.
His slavery is not glamorous—it is humiliating, isolating, and spiritually corrosive.
Insight:
Sin is not merely a choice; it becomes a captivity that requires grace, truth, and community to break.
2. Zosh and the False Mercy of Manipulation
Zosh’s “paralysis” is a lie used to control.
She offers comfort that suffocates, pity that imprisons.
Insight:
Mercy without truth becomes a weapon.
Love that manipulates is not love.
3. Molly and the Costly Mercy of Accompaniment
Molly does not excuse Frankie’s sin, nor does she abandon him.
She walks with him through the valley—without illusions.
Insight:
True mercy is costly.
It stands beside the sinner without enabling the sin.
4. Withdrawal as Purgation
Frankie’s detox scene is a cinematic purgatory:
sweat, shaking, darkness, and the slow burning away of illusion.
Insight:
Conversion often feels like death before it feels like resurrection.
5. The Drummer’s Dream
Frankie’s longing to play music is his longing for vocation—
for a life ordered toward beauty rather than destruction.
Insight:
Grace often begins as a small, stubborn desire for the good.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink: “The Broken Rhythm”
A jazz‑era cocktail with sharp edges and a warm center:
Bourbon
Dry vermouth
Dash of Angostura
Stirred, served over a single cube
Symbolism:
Bourbon = Frankie’s rawness
Vermouth = Molly’s steadying presence
Bitters = the pain of withdrawal
Single cube = the fragile clarity he fights to keep
Snack: Salted Pretzels
A barroom staple from Frankie’s world.
Symbolism:
Twisted, salted, humble—like the path of recovery itself.
Atmosphere
Dim light.
A small table.
Jazz on vinyl—Bernstein’s score if possible.
A space where honesty can breathe.
πͺ Reflection Prompt
Where in your life do you feel the tug of an old chain—
a habit, a fear, a lie—that still claims authority over you?
Who is your Molly—
the person who tells you the truth without abandoning you?
And what is the “music” you were made to play—
the vocation that addiction, fear, or shame has tried to silence?
Better to Smoke in This Life Than the Next — Easter Edition
Easter is the day a man discovers that resurrection is not an idea — it’s an intervention.
It’s the moment when God reaches into the place you thought was permanently sealed and says, “Stand. You are not meant to remain where you fell.”
Mercy doesn’t erase wounds.
It transforms them.
It turns scars into testimony and broken places into doorways.
A Cameroon wrapper fits the day — warm, aromatic, luminous.
It burns like dawn breaking through the last shadows of night.
A cigar that reminds you: Light wins. Every time.
Angel’s Envy rises on the palate the way the Alleluia rises after its long silence —
not loud, but lifted.
Not forceful, but unmistakably alive.
π₯ Purgatory Story — The Man Who Forgot He Was Allowed to Rise
(Schoop‑Aligned Section: Early Ascent — Souls Encouraged by Angels)
There was a man in Purgatory who knelt for so long he forgot why he was kneeling.
He believed humility meant staying low forever.
He believed penance meant never standing again.
He believed God wanted him bowed, not restored.
One morning, an angel approached him and asked,
“Why do you remain on the ground?”
The man answered,
“I thought this was where I belonged.”
The angel lifted him by the shoulders and said,
“Penance teaches you to kneel.
Resurrection teaches you to stand.”
The man rose —
and when he did, the entire landscape brightened,
as though heaven had been waiting for him to remember
that redemption is not complete until a man stands again.
π Reflection
“Where does mercy meet my wounds?”
Easter is not the denial of wounds.
It is the healing of them.
It is the place where mercy touches the exact spot that hurt the most
and says, “This is where we begin again.”
Men in Her Life (1931)
A pre‑Code drama where fallen wealth, counterfeit nobility, and unexpected virtue collide—and where a woman discovers that salvation sometimes arrives in the rough hands of a man the world calls unworthy.
Sources: imdb.com
π¬ Production Snapshot
Studio: Columbia Pictures Director: William Beaudine Release: 1931 Screenplay: Dorothy Howell (adaptation), based on Men in Her Life by Warner Fabian Stars: Lois Moran (Julia Cavanaugh), Charles Bickford (Flashy Madden), Victor Varconi (Count Ivan Karloff), Don Dillaway (Dick Webster) Genre: Pre‑Code drama / social melodrama Notable: A compact Columbia B‑picture that exposes class hypocrisy, seduction, and the fragile dignity of a woman trying to rebuild her life. A story where the “gentleman” is a fraud and the “criminal” is the only man with a conscience.
π§ Story Summary
Julia Cavanaugh once belonged to New York’s privileged world—until her family fortune collapses.
Now burdened by debt and social shame, she becomes vulnerable to the wrong kind of attention.
Enter Count Ivan Karloff, a suave European aristocrat who seduces her with charm, flattery, and the illusion of security.
But when he discovers she is penniless, he abandons her without hesitation.
Into this wreckage steps Flashy Madden, a retired bootlegger with rough manners and a surprisingly tender moral core.
He offers to pay her debts—not for romance, but because he wants to become “a gentleman,” and he believes Julia can teach him.
Julia accepts, believing she is simply helping a man refine his manners.
But Flashy’s affection for her is real, deep, and quietly sacrificial.
Meanwhile, Julia is courted by Dick Webster, the senator’s son—a respectable match that promises stability.
Everything collapses when the Count returns to blackmail Julia.
Flashy confronts him.
A struggle.
A gunshot.
The Count falls.
Flashy is arrested and refuses to speak, determined to protect Julia’s reputation.
But Julia steps forward, risking everything—her engagement, her social standing, her future—to tell the truth.
The film closes with a sense of moral clarity:
the world’s “gentlemen” are not always good,
and the world’s “criminals” are not always lost.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in 1931, the film reflects:
The Pre‑Code fascination with fallen women and social hypocrisy
America’s anxiety about class mobility during the Depression
The romanticization of the bootlegger as a folk hero
Columbia’s early‑’30s pattern of stories where virtue hides in unexpected places
A cultural moment when women’s financial vulnerability was a moral battleground
It sits comfortably beside films like The Good Bad Girl, Anybody’s Woman, and Secrets of a Secretary—stories where the world’s glitter hides rot, and the rough‑edged outsider carries the only real integrity.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. The Counterfeit Aristocrat
The Count embodies the world’s false promises:
elegance without virtue, charm without loyalty, refinement without conscience.
Catholic insight: Sin often arrives dressed as sophistication.
2. The Bootlegger as the Unexpected Just Man
Flashy Madden is unpolished, uneducated, and morally ambiguous—but he is loyal, sacrificial, and truthful.
Catholic insight: God often raises the lowly to shame the proud.
The film becomes a parable of the Good Thief:
a sinner with a clean heart.
3. Debt as a Spiritual Symbol
Julia’s financial ruin mirrors her interior vulnerability.
Insight:
Debt = the weight of past choices
Her temptation to “marry out of it” reflects the human desire to seek salvation through worldly alliances rather than truth.
4. The Mock Proposal Scene
Flashy asks Julia to help him find the words to propose to “someone.”
She doesn’t realize he means her.
Insight: Grace often speaks indirectly before it speaks plainly.
5. Truth as Purification
Julia’s courtroom testimony is her confessional moment:
public, humiliating, costly—and cleansing.
Catholic insight:
Truth spoken at personal cost becomes a path to redemption.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink: “The Rough Gentleman”
A pre‑Code‑era cocktail that mirrors Flashy’s arc:
A psychological‑Gothic drama where fear, wounded memory, and the architecture of the soul collide—and where love must confront not evil, but the terror a man carries inside himself.
Sources: imdb.com
π¬ Production Snapshot
Studio: Universal Pictures Director: Fritz Lang Release: 1947 Screenplay: Silvia Richards (adaptation), based on Museum Piece No. 13 by Rufus King Stars: Joan Bennett (Celia Lamphere), Michael Redgrave (Mark Lamphere), Anne Revere (Caroline), Barbara O’Neil (Miss Robey) Genre: Gothic noir / psychological thriller Notable: A late‑period Lang film blending expressionist shadows, Freudian psychology, and Bluebeard myth. A meditation on marriage, trauma, and the hidden rooms of the human heart.
π§ Story Summary
The film opens with a whirlwind romance in Mexico:
Celia Barrett, a wealthy and self‑possessed New Yorker, meets the enigmatic architect Mark Lamphere.
He is brilliant, magnetic, and strangely fragile beneath the surface.
They marry quickly.
Too quickly.
When Celia arrives at Mark’s estate, she discovers a world of shadows and secrets:
A son who fears his father
A housekeeper who watches too closely
A secretary who hides half her face
And most unsettling of all— a private wing of rooms meticulously recreating famous murders of women.
One room remains locked.
Mark will not speak of it.
No one will.
As Celia’s fear grows, she begins to suspect that Mark’s obsession is not academic but personal—that the locked room is a prophecy of her own death.
But the truth is deeper and more tragic:
Mark is not a killer.
He is a man haunted by a childhood wound so profound that it has shaped his entire adult life.
The climax is not a battle but a revelation:
Celia enters the forbidden room, confronts the wound at its source, and forces Mark to face the memory he has spent a lifetime avoiding.
The film ends not with triumph but with a fragile, hard‑won reconciliation—
a marriage rebuilt on truth rather than illusion.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in the late 1940s, the film reflects:
Post‑war anxieties about masculinity and psychological instability
Hollywood’s fascination with Freudian analysis
The Gothic revival in American cinema
Lang’s own preoccupation with guilt, fate, and the architecture of the mind
It is a spiritual cousin to Rebecca, Gaslight, and Suspicion, but more expressionist, more symbolic, more interior.
Lang turns the house into a psyche:
every corridor a memory, every locked door a wound.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. The Wound Beneath the Sin
Mark’s danger is not malice but unhealed trauma.
Catholic moral theology insists that to heal a person, you must descend beneath the symptom to the wound.
Celia does exactly this.
She refuses to treat Mark as a monster; she treats him as a man in bondage.
2. Marriage as a Descent into Mystery
The film dramatizes a truth the Church teaches:
marriage reveals the beloved’s hidden rooms.
Some are beautiful.
Some are terrifying.
All require courage, patience, and grace.
3. Fear as a False Prophet
Celia’s fear tells her to flee.
But fear is not the voice of God.
She chooses discernment instead—
a clear‑eyed courage that neither denies danger nor surrenders to it.
4. Mercy as a Form of Truth‑Telling
Celia’s mercy is not softness.
It is the willingness to name the wound, confront the darkness, and call Mark back to himself.
This is the Catholic pattern:
truth without cruelty, mercy without naivety.
5. The Locked Room as a Spiritual Symbol
Every soul has a room it refuses to open.
The film becomes a parable of confession, healing, and the painful grace of revelation.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink
A deep, smoky red—Syrah or a dark Rioja.
Something with shadows and warmth.
Snack
Dark bread with salted butter, or a simple charcuterie plate.
Food that feels elemental, grounding, steady.
Atmosphere
Low light—one candle or a single lamp
A quiet room with long shadows
A sense of entering a mystery rather than solving a puzzle
A space where hidden things can come into the light without fear.
πͺ Reflection Prompt
What is the “locked room” in your own life—the memory, fear, or wound you avoid?
Who in your orbit carries a hidden sorrow that looks like anger, distance, or danger?
And what would it look like to enter that room—
not recklessly, not naively—
but with the courage of Celia Lamphere:
a courage that sees the wound, names it, and brings light where darkness has lived too long?
Conversion is not a gentle thing.
It is not a warm breeze or a soft awakening.
Conversion is a kind of dying —
the death of illusions,
the death of self‑protection,
the death of the man you were trying to be without God.
Only after that death does resurrection begin its slow work.
Good Friday is the day a man admits: “Something in me must die if something truer is going to live.”
π¨ Cigar: A Dark, Uneven Maduro
A Maduro belongs to a day like this.
It burns hot, bitter, stubborn.
It refuses to be elegant.
It forces you to sit with the taste of sacrifice.
This is not a cigar for celebration.
It is a cigar for honesty.
π₯ Bourbon: The Heavy Pour
Tonight calls for weight —
oak, char, fire in the chest.
A bourbon that doesn’t comfort but clarifies.
A bourbon that reminds you that strength is not the absence of pain,
but the willingness to walk through it without running.
π₯ Purgatory Story: The Man Who Tried to Rise Without Dying
There was a man in Purgatory who kept trying to climb upward.
He pushed, strained, reached —
but every time he rose a little, he fell back again.
Frustrated, he cried out,
“Why can’t I ascend? I’m trying with everything I have!”
An angel appeared and said,
“You are trying to rise without letting go of what is weighing you down.”
The man looked at his hands.
He was gripping old fears, old sins, old identities —
the very things he thought he needed to survive.
The angel continued,
“Resurrection is not achieved by effort.
It begins with surrender.
You cannot rise until you allow something in you to die.”
The man closed his eyes, opened his hands,
and let the old burdens fall.
Only then did he feel himself lifted —
not by his strength,
but by grace.
π Reflection: “What in me must die so that I can rise?”
Good Friday is not about guilt.
It is about truth.
It is the day you stop pretending you can resurrect yourself.
It is the day you let God dismantle what cannot enter Easter with you.
Conversion often feels like death before it feels like resurrection —
but every man who has walked through the shadows knows: the dying is real,
but so is the rising.
Conversion often feels like death before it feels like resurrection.
People Will Talk (1951)
A romantic‑philosophical drama where compassion, courage, and moral imagination confront the smallness of gossip and the cruelty of institutional judgment.
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Release: 1951
Screenplay: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Stars: Cary Grant (Dr. Noah Praetorius), Jeanne Crain (Deborah Higgins), Finlay Currie (Shunderson), Hume Cronyn (Prof. Elwell)
Genre: Romantic drama / social satire
Notable: One of Grant’s most unusual roles—gentle, principled, almost pastoral. Mankiewicz blends romance, ethics, and satire into a film that feels startlingly modern in its defense of human dignity.
π§ Story Summary
The film begins with a crisis of fear and shame:
Deborah Higgins, a young student, collapses under the weight of an unplanned pregnancy and the terror of public disgrace.
Enter Dr. Noah Praetorius—Cary Grant at his warmest.
He treats her not as a scandal but as a soul.
What follows is a quiet, luminous drama:
a doctor who refuses to humiliate the vulnerable
a woman learning to trust again
a mysterious guardian (Shunderson) whose silence carries the weight of a redeemed past
an academic rival, Prof. Elwell, determined to destroy Praetorius through rumor, suspicion, and bureaucratic cruelty
The investigation into Praetorius’s life becomes a moral trial:
Is compassion itself suspicious?
Is mercy a threat to the system?
The climax is not explosive but revelatory:
Praetorius dismantles his accuser not with anger but with truth, humor, and a disarming gentleness that exposes the poverty of Elwell’s soul.
The film ends in hope—marriage, new life, and the triumph of dignity over gossip.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in post‑war America, the film pushes against the era’s moral rigidity:
It treats unwed pregnancy with tenderness rather than condemnation.
It critiques institutions that value rules over persons.
It elevates compassion as a form of intellectual and moral courage.
Mankiewicz, fresh from All About Eve, uses his trademark wit to expose the absurdity of judgmental systems.
Grant, meanwhile, plays Praetorius almost like a secular saint—calm, humorous, unflappable.
The film anticipates later debates about medical ethics, privacy, and the dignity of the patient.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. Mercy as the Highest Form of Truth
Praetorius embodies the Gospel’s moral imagination:
truth without cruelty, clarity without condemnation.
He sees Deborah not as a “case” but as a daughter of God.
His mercy is not indulgence—it is justice rightly ordered.
2. Gossip as a Spiritual Disease
The title is a warning:
“People will talk.”
Gossip becomes the film’s antagonist—
a force that wounds reputations, distorts truth, and replaces charity with suspicion.
Catholic tradition names this sin clearly: detraction and calumny.
3. The Dignity of the Wounded
Deborah’s fear is not of her condition but of judgment.
The film insists that dignity is not lost through weakness;
it is lost when others refuse to see Christ in the vulnerable.
4. The Mystery of Shunderson: Redemption in Silence
Shunderson is a living parable:
a man with a dark past who has become a guardian of life.
His loyalty echoes the Church’s teaching that grace can transform even the most wounded histories.
5. The Physician as Moral Steward
Praetorius models the vocation of healing as a spiritual calling:
to protect, to uplift, to restore.
Snack
Honey‑Butter Scones
Warm, comforting, simple—echoing the film’s insistence that kindness is never complicated.
Atmosphere
Soft lamplight
A tidy room with a single vase of flowers
Light classical strings or a quiet jazz trio
A sense of calm clarity:
a space where no one is judged and everyone is seen
πͺ Reflection Prompt
Where in your life are you tempted to let “what people will say” shape your decisions?
Who in your orbit needs the kind of mercy that restores dignity rather than measures fault?
And what would it look like, today, to practice Praetorius’s gentle courage—
to defend the vulnerable,
to silence gossip with truth,
and to let compassion become your most persuasive argument?
Some days aren’t elegant. Some days aren’t curated. Some days you smoke what you can afford and drink what you have. These days are important—they remind you that formation isn’t built on luxury but on willingness.
π¨ Cigar: The $1 Stick
A cheap cigar is a spiritual tool.
It burns unevenly.
It tastes a little harsh.
It forces you to slow down, adjust, adapt, and accept imperfection.
It’s the perfect cigar for a man who knows he’s still being shaped.
π₯ Bourbon: Whatever’s on Hand
Tonight isn’t about refinement.
It’s about honesty.
A simple pour—no pretense, no performance—pairs with the $1 cigar like a confession pairs with a kneeler. It’s the kind of bourbon that reminds you: grace doesn’t require top shelf.
π Page Two of Schoop – The Movement
Page Two (summarized) is where the book shifts from surface-level observation to interior confrontation. It’s the moment the narrator stops describing the world and starts admitting what the world has done to him.
It’s the pivot from “Here’s what I see”
to “Here’s what I carry.”
That’s the energy of April 2.
π₯ Purgatory Story: The Man Who Tried to Skip the Hard Parts
There was a man in Purgatory who kept asking the angels for the “advanced path,” the shortcut, the refined route. He wanted the polished lessons without the rough edges.
One day an angel handed him a small, crooked branch and said,
“Carve this.”
The man protested.
“It’s warped. It’s cheap. It’s not worthy of the work.”
The angel replied,
“Neither were you when God began carving.”
So the man sat down, took the crooked branch, and began shaping it.
And as he worked, he realized the truth: Holiness begins with what’s in your hands, not what you wish you had.
When he finished, the branch had become straight—not because it was perfect, but because he had finally learned to work with imperfection.
π Reflection: “What part of me needs to be humbled before it can be renewed?”
Today is not about excellence.
It’s about honesty.
It’s about letting the roughness of a $1 cigar and a simple bourbon expose the places where pride still hides.
It’s about accepting the crooked branch in your hands and carving anyway.
Bulldog Drummond Comes Back (1937)
A kidnapping‑revenge thriller where loyalty, courage, and moral clarity collide in the shadows of pre‑war London.
Notable: A brisk, stylish entry in the Drummond series, blending gentleman‑adventurer charm with psychological menace. Barrymore’s performance adds gravitas and theatrical intelligence.
What follows is a cat‑and‑mouse pilgrimage through London:
cryptic clues delivered with icy elegance
traps designed to humiliate or break Drummond
a psychological duel between a grieving widow and a relentless hero
the police, led by Barrymore’s sardonic Inspector, always one step behind
Drummond is forced to confront not only danger but the moral shadow of his own past victories.
Every clue is a judgment.
Every step is a reckoning.
The climax brings justice — but not triumph.
The victory is real, yet tinged with the sorrow of a world where violence always leaves a residue.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released in the late 1930s, the film reflects a world sliding toward war: men of action, women of resolve, and villains shaped by grief rather than ideology.
The Drummond series embodied the British ideal of the gentleman‑hero — brave, witty, loyal — yet this entry complicates that ideal by showing the cost of heroism.
Barrymore’s presence elevates the film into something more theatrical and psychological:
a meditation on justice, guilt, and the thin line between righteousness and obsession.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
1. Justice Without Mercy Becomes Vengeance
Irena Soldanis is not a cartoon villain.
She is a widow.
Her grief has curdled into cruelty.
The film becomes a meditation on the Gospel truth: “The measure you give will be the measure you get.”
Her pursuit of vengeance mirrors the spiritual danger of nursing old wounds until they become weapons.
2. The Hero’s Temptation: Self‑Righteousness
Drummond is brave — but not blameless.
His past actions, however justified, have consequences.
The film quietly asks: What does it mean to be responsible for the unintended suffering your victories create?
This is the moral maturity of the Christian life:
courage tempered by humility.
3. Loyalty as a Virtue of the Will
Drummond’s companions — Algy, Tenny, and the Inspector — embody steadfastness.
Their loyalty is not sentimental; it is chosen, tested, and costly.
It echoes the fidelity of covenant love: to stand with another even when the path is dark.
4. Evil as a Wound, Not a Monster
The film refuses to dehumanize its antagonist.
This is profoundly Catholic: sin wounds, but does not erase the image of God.
Irena’s tragedy is not that she is wicked,
but that she cannot imagine a world where mercy is possible.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink
Earl Grey with Bergamot
Refined, aromatic, slightly sharp — the taste of London fog and clipped British resolve.
Snack
Shortbread & Blackberry Jam
Buttery stability with a dark, tart center — mirroring the film’s blend of charm and menace.
Atmosphere
A dim lamp or low firelight
A leather chair or blanket — something “club‑room” in tone
Soft classical strings or a 1930s radio playlist
A sense of brisk clarity: a world where wit is a weapon and loyalty is a shield
πͺ Reflection Prompt
Where in your life are you tempted to repay hurt with hurt?
What past victory — professional, relational, or spiritual — still carries a shadow you haven’t acknowledged?
And what would it look like, in this season, to let mercy interrupt the cycle, so that justice becomes healing rather than harm?
The video emphasizes that Matthew 25 makes our judgment hinge on how faithfully we practice the works of mercy, and it highlights that one of the most neglected of these is caring for “the most forgotten souls.” Eric Genuis—a classical pianist, composer, and missionary—shares how his ministry brings Christ’s presence to people who are abandoned, overlooked, or hidden from society. He describes performing in prisons, rehab centers, and places marked by deep suffering, where beauty, dignity, and personal presence become a form of mercy. The hosts stress that these forgotten souls are not only materially poor but spiritually starved for hope, human connection, and the assurance that God has not forgotten them. The video calls viewers to rediscover this neglected work of mercy and to take seriously Christ’s warning that we will be judged by how we treat “the least of these.” youtu.be
Lush and blooming vistas beckon us to take to the road and
to explore. As we itch to go out and travel more in springtime, let us reflect
on the mixed blessings. Interconnected communities and beautiful scenery are
often coupled with air pollution, consumption of scarce petroleum, congestion,
excessive mobility, and noise.
The
first nineteen days of the month fall during the season of Lent which is represented by the liturgical color
violet or purple — a symbol of penance, mortification and the sorrow of a
contrite heart.
April
20th is Easter Sunday and the beginning of the Easter season. The liturgical color is white — the color of
light, a symbol of joy, purity and innocence (absolute or restored).
As
our Lenten journey comes to a close we prepare to follow Christ all the way to
the cross and to witness His glorious Resurrection. Hopefully we have
sacrificed and prayed so that we are now able to more fully reap the fruits of
a well spent Lent. After our solemn commemoration of the last days and death of
Our Lord we will spend the remainder of the month of April celebrating. As
Spring breaks forth even nature will join us as buds and blooms begin to
surface and we spend this month basking in the joy of the Resurrection. We
continue throughout the entire month our cry, "Christ is risen, Christ is
truly risen."
The
Feast of Divine Mercy offers us the opportunity to begin again as though we
were newly baptized. The unfathomable mercy of God is made manifest today if we
but accept His most gracious offer. Easter is the feast of feasts, the
unalloyed joy and gladness of all Christians. This truly is "the day that
the Lord has made." From Sunday to Sunday, from year to year, the Easters
of this earth will lead us to that blessed day on which Christ has promised
that He will come again with glory to take us with Him into the kingdom of His
Father.
·Masters Golf Tournament--April
6-12--Tee up for the granddaddy of all golf tournaments. The Masters Tournament kicks
off the first of 4 major championships, with plenty of betting odds. Head to
Augusta, GA!
·Scarborough
Renaissance Festival--April 4-May 25th--Travel
back to the 16th century at the Scarborough Renaissance Festival. This annual
fest in Waxahachie, TX, kicks off the first weekend in April, drawing crowds
upwards of 200,000 to view some 200 performances.
·Coachella--April
10-12 & 17-19--Get your music fill at the annual Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. The annual
2-weekend, 3-day fest kicks off in Indio, CA, with more than 150 performances.
·Boston Marathon--April
20--Show your Boston pride and find something for everyone to enjoy. The
annual Boston Marathon kicks
off with a fitness expo featuring more than 200 exhibitors, followed by a 5K
set to draw an estimated 10,000 participants as well as a relay challenge --
all topped by the grand celebration of city spirit.
·King’s
Day in Amsterdam--April 27--Enjoy a ride
along Amsterdam’s canals, and
don your brightest orange, for the Netherlands’ annual King’s Day. The national
holiday celebrates the Dutch royal house (and current King Willem-Alexander)
with plenty of “orange madness,” in keeping with the Dutch national colors.
·New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival--April
23-May 3--Love jazz? Join fellow music lovers at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Held every year since
1970, the annual Jazz Fest, as it’s called, showcases nearly every music genre,
from blues to R&B, and everything else in between. It’s all performed
across 12 stages during the last weekend in April.
My father was trained by my grandfather, a quiet man who built radios and understood the world through wires, signals, and discipline (1922). When my father entered the Navy, that apprenticeship became something far more dangerous. He became a ghost diver during WWII—one of the men who slipped into black water ahead of an invasion, setting beacons so others could find their way. Twenty‑three missions. Half his team never came home.
He carried that weight for the rest of his life.
War carved him into a man of silence, hardness, and unpredictable edges. But beneath all of that lived a fierce devotion, a loyalty that never broke, and a faith held together by St. Jude—the patron saint of impossible causes. He never talked about what he saw. He never explained why he prayed the way he did. But every son knows when his father is carrying ghosts.
I grew up in the shadow of that kind of courage and that kind of wound.
This program—this rhythm of cigars, bourbon, virtues, and purgatory stories—is not nostalgia. It’s not indulgence. It’s a way of taking the raw material of a man’s life and turning it into formation. It’s a way of honoring the men who carried burdens they never named. It’s a way of teaching sons and brothers how to walk forward without repeating the silence that broke our fathers.
It’s a field manual for men who want to rise without pretending they’re unscarred.
It’s a pilgrimage for those who know that holiness is not softness, and strength is not cruelty.
It’s a way of saying: We carry what they carried, but we carry it differently.
This program exists because my father walked through darkness so others could find their way.
Now it’s my turn to set the beacons.
Better to Smoke in This Life Than the Next
Wed, Apr 1 – Reflection: The Service of the Shadows
πΏ Virtue: Renewal & Wonder
April begins in the half‑light — the old calendar’s shadows still lingering, the new season already stirring. It’s the strange middle ground where a man stands between what he’s leaving and what he’s becoming.
Renewal doesn’t erase the shadows.
It rises through them.
π¨ Cigar: Bright, playful (Candela)
A Candela on a shadow‑day is a contradiction on purpose.
Green leaf in a dim room.
Spring wrapped in Lenten smoke.
A reminder that God slips delight into places we expect only austerity.
It’s the cigar that whispers: “Even here, life begins again.”
Cavehill carries that early‑spring mischief — the kind of brightness that catches you off guard.
It’s the taste of a door cracking open.
A bourbon that says: “You survived the winter. Now rise.”
π₯ Purgatory Story: The Man Who Mistook Shadows for the End
There was a man in Purgatory who walked through a long corridor of shadows.
He assumed it was punishment.
He assumed it was the end of his story.
He assumed God had placed him there to remind him of everything he had failed to become.
One evening, an angel approached him carrying a single candle.
The man asked, “Why bring light into a place meant for darkness?”
The angel replied,
“This is not a place of endings. This is the hallway before dawn.”
The man looked again.
The shadows were not closing in —
they were stretching forward, pointing toward a distant glow he had never noticed.
He realized he had mistaken preparation for abandonment.
He had mistaken silence for judgment.
He had mistaken shadows for death.
And when he finally stepped toward the faint light,
the corridor brightened behind him as well —
because the shadows had only ever been waiting for him to move.
π Reflection: “What joy rises with the season?”
Today is the day you let the shadows be shadows —
not threats, not verdicts, not tombs.
They are simply the last traces of winter giving way to resurrection.
Joy doesn’t always arrive with trumpets.
Sometimes it arrives as a green cigar wrapper,
a crisp bourbon,
a single candle in a dim room,
or the courage to take one step toward the light.
Learn about government programs that make it easier to purchase a home.
Government-backed home loans and mortgage assistance
If you are looking to buy a home, a government-backed home loan or a mortgage assistance program could help.
Homeownership vouchers for first-time home buyers
If you have a low income and want to buy your first home, the Housing Choice Voucher homeownership program could help. It may also help you pay monthly housing expenses.
Real estate and federal lands for sale by the government
Government agencies sell real estate and federal lands either by auction or offer. Federal agencies acquire these properties through foreclosure, forfeiture, or failed banks.
Section 32 Homeownership is offered to first-time homebuyers who are at or below 80% Area Median Income (AMI) , and who will use the home as their primary residence. The purchase price will be the current (within 6 months of purchase) appraised value of the home. Eligible properties must pass a Housing Quality Standards (HQS) Inspection. Homeownership, financial fitness and hands-on maintenance classes are also required. Some program benefits may include:
20% discount off home appraisal value
Guidance through the homeownership process
Possible grant for down payment and closing costs
Possible additional subsidies
One-year home warranty
Lower monthly payment
For more information about the Section 32 Homeownership Program, call 602-534-4584.
·Phoenix Home & Garden’s Garden Tour April 20
oThe pages of PHOENIX’s sister publication come to life as patrons enjoy exclusive access to a curated selection of the Valley’s most enchanting home gardens during this annual self-guided tour. Attendees will also have the unique opportunity to mingle with Phoenix Home & Garden’s editorial staff as well as architects and designers featured in the magazine. VIP, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; GA, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $85-$125, Various Valley locations, phgmag.com
·Spirit Hour: Scotch in Honor of last Bishop of Scottland
Theme: Re‑Humanization, Re‑Entry, and the Courage to Walk Forward Changed
Route: ValparaΓso → At Sea → Arica → Entering Peru → Matarani / Arequipa Corridor
✨ Wednesday, April 1 | ValparaΓso, Chile — Feast of Holy Fools’ Day
Title: The Grace That Refuses to Be Cynical Ritual: Smile at something small—on purpose—and let it soften one guarded place in you. Scripture: 1 Corinthians 1:27 Meal: Fresh fruit, warm bread, local honey Reflection: “God often begins renewal in the places we’ve written off as naΓ―ve.” Hospitality Arc: Offer someone a moment of lightness; remind them that joy is not foolishness but courage.
π Thursday, April 2 | Sailing North Along Chile
Title: The Coastline That Stretches You Ritual: Stand at the railing and trace the horizon with your eyes, naming one place where God is lengthening your capacity. Scripture: Isaiah 54:2 Meal: Grilled chicken or fish, quinoa, lemon water Reflection: “Growth often feels like stretch before it feels like strength.” Hospitality Arc: Encourage someone who feels overwhelmed; remind them that stretching is not breaking.
π️ Friday, April 3 | Off Antofagasta — Desert Coast of Chile
Title: The Desert That Tells the Truth Ritual: Hold a stone or dry object and name one truth you’ve avoided but are now ready to face. Scripture: Psalm 51:6 Meal: Lentil stew, flatbread, herbal tea
Reflection: “Honesty is the doorway through which God rebuilds us.” Hospitality Arc: Share one honest thing about your journey with someone who has earned your trust.
π Saturday, April 4 | Arica, Chile — Gateway to the North
Title: The City That Lives on the Edge Ritual: Step onto land and feel the ground beneath you; name one place where God is grounding you again. Scripture: Jeremiah 6:16 Meal: Local fruit, cheese, warm empanadas Reflection: “Edges are where God often clarifies direction.” Hospitality Arc: Ask someone where they feel most grounded right now—and listen without correcting.
π΅πͺ Sunday, April 5 | Crossing into Peru — At Sea
Title: The Border That Blesses Ritual: As the ship crosses into Peru, place your hand over your heart and bless the version of you that is emerging. Scripture: Numbers 6:24–26 Meal: Light broth, crackers, ginger tea Reflection: “Every border crossed in grace becomes a blessing carried forward.” Hospitality Arc: Offer a blessing—simple, sincere—to someone who looks like they need one.
⛰️ Monday, April 6 | Approaching Matarani — Peru
Title: The Mountains That Lift Your Eyes Ritual: Look toward the rising Andes and name one hope you thought was dead but now stirs again. Scripture: Psalm 121:1–2 Meal: Roasted vegetables, rice, mint water Reflection: “Hope often returns quietly, like a mountain appearing through morning haze.” Hospitality Arc: Ask someone what hope is returning for them; honor their answer with reverence.
π️ Tuesday, April 7 | Matarani / Arequipa Region — Peru
Title: The City Built from Ash and Light Ritual: Hold something white or pale (stone, cloth, paper) and name one place where God is making beauty from your ashes. Scripture: Isaiah 61:3 Meal: Soft cheese, olives, warm bread, tea Reflection: “God builds new cities in us from the very places that once felt ruined.” Hospitality Arc: Share with someone one beauty God is forming in you that you didn’t expect.
APRIL 1 Wednesday of Holy Week
First
Wednesday-Passover-All Fools Day-Full Pink Moon
Even though I walk in the
dark valley I fear no evil; for you are at my side.
One does wonder; what was the evil that the
Israelites did, in the sight of the Lord?
Answer: Baal was the name of the supreme god worshiped in ancient Canaan
and Phoenicia. The practice of Baal worship infiltrated Jewish religious life
during the time of the Judges (Judges 3:7), became widespread in Israel during
the reign of Ahab (1 Kings 16:31-33) and also affected Judah (2 Chronicles
28:1-2). The word baal means “lord”; the plural is baalim. In
general, Baal was a fertility god who was believed to enable the earth to
produce crops and people to produce children. Different regions worshiped Baal
in different ways, and Baal proved to be a highly adaptable god. Various
locales emphasized one or another of his attributes and developed special
“denominations” of Baalism. Baal of Peor (Numbers 25:3) and Baal-Berith (Judges
8:33) are two examples of such localized deities.
According to Canaanite mythology, Baal was the son of El, the chief god,
and Asherah, the goddess of the sea. Baal was considered the most powerful of
all gods, eclipsing El, who was seen as rather weak and ineffective.
In various
battles Baal defeated Yamm, the god of the sea, and Mot, the god of death and
the underworld. Baal’s sisters/consorts were Ashtoreth, a fertility goddess
associated with the stars, and Anath, a goddess of love and war. The Canaanites
worshiped Baal as the sun god and as the storm god—he is usually depicted
holding a lightning bolt—who defeated enemies and produced crops. They also
worshiped him as a fertility god who provided children. Baal worship was rooted
in sensuality and involved ritualistic prostitution in the temples. At times,
appeasing Baal required human sacrifice, usually the firstborn of the one
making the sacrifice (Jeremiah 19:5). The priests of Baal appealed to their god
in rites of wild abandon which included loud, ecstatic cries and self-inflicted
injury (1 Kings 18:28).[1]
Copilot’s
Take
Israel’s collapse in Judges 6 did not begin with military defeat but with
misplaced worship. The people “did what was evil in the sight of the Lord,” and
Scripture immediately names the cause: Baal. The Canaanite cult promised
prosperity, fertility, and control, but its rituals hollowed out the soul of a
nation. Idolatry always begins as a spiritual shortcut—an attempt to secure
life on our own terms—and it always ends in fear. Thus Israel hid in caves, not
because Midian was strong, but because their worship had already weakened them
from within.
The Catechism teaches that idolatry is not limited to statues; it is the
divinizing of anything that is not God—power, pleasure, autonomy, the state, or
even the self. When a culture organizes its moral life around these false
centers, it inevitably sacrifices the vulnerable to preserve the illusion of
control. Baalism demanded ritual prostitution and, at times, the death of the
firstborn. The pattern is consistent: when a society worships the wrong god,
children become expendable. The altar always consumes the smallest bodies
first.
Modern culture does not invoke Baal by name, yet the spiritual
architecture is hauntingly familiar. The logic of abortion mirrors the logic of
ancient idolatry: prosperity secured through the elimination of the
inconvenient, freedom purchased at the cost of the innocent, fear elevated
above trust in God. The Church does not claim that abortion is literally Baal
worship, but it does recognize the same moral pattern—an idolatry of autonomy
that demands human sacrifice. When a society treats children as obstacles to
adult desire, it reenacts the oldest lie in Scripture: that life is ours to
control rather than God’s to receive.
Holy Week exposes the full contrast. The false gods demand the death of
the innocent; the true God offers Himself instead. Baal consumes children;
Christ becomes the Lamb. Idolatry feeds on fear; the Cross casts out fear. In
the dark valley of cultural confusion, the Psalmist’s words become our anchor:
“Even though I walk in the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for You are at my
side.” Fidelity, not fear, is the mark of God’s people. Worship, not panic, is
the path to freedom.
On this Wednesday of Holy Week—under the Passover’s memory, the fool’s
warning, and the Pink Moon’s reminder of spring—Scripture invites us to choose
our altar. Israel hid in caves because they feared the powers they had
empowered. Disciples stand at the foot of the Cross because they trust the God
who conquers death. Every generation must decide whether it will worship the
gods of fear or the God who saves. The choice shapes not only our rituals but
our children, our culture, and our future.
GRANT, we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that we, who are continually
afflicted through our excesses, may be delivered by the passion of Thy only-
begotten Son.
EPISTLE.
Isaias Ixii. 11, 12; Ixiii. 1-7
Thus,
saith the Lord God: Tell the daughter of Sion Be hold thy Savior cometh: behold
His reward is with Him, and His work before Him. And they shall call them, The
holy people, the redeemed of the Lord. But thou shalt be called: A city sought
after, and not forsaken.
Who is this that cometh from Edom, with dyed
garments from Bosra, this beautiful one in His robe, walking in the greatness
of His strength?
I, that
speak justice, and am a defender to save.
Why then is thy apparel red, and thy garments like
theirs that tread in the wine press?
I have
trodden the wine- press alone, and of the gentile, there is not a man with Me:
I have trampled on them in My indignation, and have trodden them down in My
wrath, and their blood is sprinkled upon My garments, and I have stained all My
apparel. For the day of vengeance is in My heart, the year of My redemption is
come. I looked about, and there was none to help: I sought, and there was none
to give aid: and My own arm hath saved for Me, and My indignation itself hath
helped Me. And I have trodden down the peoples in My wrath, and have made them
drunk in My indignation, and have brought down their strength to the earth. I
will remember the tender mercies of the Lord, the praise of the Lord for all
the things that the Lord our God hath bestowed upon us.
Instead
of the gospel the Church reads to-day:
THE PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST,
According to St. Luke xxii. and xxiii.
At that time: The feast of unleavened bread, which is called the Pasch,
was at hand. And the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might put
Jesus to death: but they feared the people. And Satan entered into Judas who
was surnamed Iscariot, one of the twelve. And he went and discoursed with the
chief priests and the magistrates, how he might betray Him to them. And they
were glad and covenanted to give him money. And he promised. And he sought
opportunity to betray Him in the absence of the multitude. And the day of the
unleavened bread came, on which it was necessary that the Pasch should be
killed. And He sent Peter and John, saying: Go and prepare for us the Pasch,
that we may eat.
But they said, where wilt Thou that we prepare?
And He said to them: Behold, as you go into the city, there shall meetyou a man carrying a pitcher of water: follow him
into the house where he entereth in: and you shall say to the goodman of the
house:
The Master saith to thee: Where is the guest-chamber, where I may eat the
Pasch with My disciples?
And he will show you a large dining-room furnished: and there prepare.
And they going, found as He had said to them, and made ready the Pasch. And
when the hour was come, He sat down, and the twelve apostles with Him. And He
said to them: With desire I have desired to eat this Pasch with you before I
suffer. For I say to you, that from this time I will not eat it, till it be
fulfilled in the kingdom of God. And having taken the chalice He gave thanks,
and said: Take, and divide it among you. For I say to you, that I will not
drink of the fruit of the vine, till the kingdom of God come. And taking bread,
He gave thanks, and brake: and gave to them, saying: This is My body which is
given for you. Do this for a commemoration of Me. In like manner the chalice also,
after He had supped, saying: This is the chalice, the New Testament in My
blood, which shall be shed for you. But yet behold, the hand of him that
betrayeth Me is with Me on the table. And the Son of man indeed goeth,
according to that which is determined: but yet wo to that man by whom He shall
be betrayed. And they began to inquire among themselves which of them it was
that should do this thing. And there was also a strife amongst them, which of
them should seem to be greater. And He said to them: The kings of the gentile’s
lord it over them: and they that have power over them, are called beneficent.
But you not so: but he that is the greater among you, let him become as the
younger: and he that is the leader, as he that serveth.
For which is greater, he that sitteth at table, or
he that serveth? Is not he that sitteth at table?
but I am in the midst of you, as He that serveth: and you are they who
have continued with Me in My temptations: and I dispose to you, as My Father
hath disposed to Me, a kingdom: that you may eat and drink at My table in My
kingdom: and may sit upon thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel. And the
Lord said: Simon, Simon, behold Satan hath desired to have you that he may sift
you as wheat. But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not: and thou
being once converted, confirm thy brethren. Who said to Him: Lord, I am ready
to go with Thee both into prison and to death. And He said: I say to thee,
Peter, the cock shall not crow this day, till thou thrice deniest that thou
knowest Me. And He said to them:
When I sent you without purse and scrip and shoes,
did you want anything?
But they said: Nothing.
Then said He unto them: But now he that hath a
purse, let him take it, and likewise a scrip: and he that hath not, let him
sell his coat, and buy a sword. For I say to you, that this that is written,
must yet be fulfilled in Me: And with the wicked was He reckoned. For the
things concerning Me have an end. But they said: Lord, be hold here are two
swords. And He said to them: It is enough. And going out He went according to
His custom to the Mount of Olives. And His disciples also followed Him. And
when He was come to the place, He said to them: Pray, lest ye enter into
temptation. And He was withdrawn away from them a stone’s cast: and kneeling
down He prayed: saying: Father, if Thou wilt, remove this chalice from Me: but
yet not My will, but Thine be done. And there appeared to Him an angel from
heaven strengthening Him. And being in an agony, He prayed the longer. And His
sweat became as drops of blood trickling down upon the ground. And when He rose
up from prayer, and was come to His disciples, He found them sleeping for
sorrow. And He said to them:
Why sleep you?
arise, pray, lest you enter into temptation. As He was yet speaking,
behold a multitude: and he that was called Judas, one of the twelve, went
before them, and drew near to Jesus for to kiss Him. And Jesus said to him:
Judas, dost thou betray the Son of man with a kiss?
And they that were about Him, seeing what would follow, said to Him:
Lord, shall we strike with the sword?
And one of them struck the servant of the high priest and cut off his
right ear. But Jesus answering, said: Suffer ye thus far. And when He had
touched his ear, He healed him. And Jesus said to the chief priests, and
magistrates of the temple, and the ancients that were come unto Him:
Are you come out, as it were against a thief, with
swords and clubs?
When I was daily with you in the temple, you did not stretch forth your
hands against Me: but this is your hour, and the power of darkness.
And
apprehending Him, they led Him to the high priest’s house. But Peter followed
afar off. And when they had kindled a fire in the midst of the hall, and were
sitting about it, Peter was in the midst of them. Whom when a certain servant
maid had seen him sitting at the light, and had earnestly beheld him, she said:
This man also was with Him. But he denied Him, saying: Woman, I know Him not.
And after a little while another seeing him, said: Thou also art one of them.
But Peter said: O man, I am not. And after the space as it were of one hour,
another certain man affirmed, saying: Of a truth this man was also with Him:
for he is also a Galilean. And Peter said: Man, I know not what thou sayest.
And immediately as he was yet speaking, the cock crew. And the Lord turning
looked on Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, as He had said:
Before the cock crow, thou shalt deny Me thrice. And Peter going out wept
bitterly. And the men that held Him, mocked Him, and struck Him. And they
blindfolded Him, and smote His face. And they asked Him, saying:
Prophesy, who is it that struck Thee?
And blaspheming, many other things they said against Him. And as soon as
it was day, the ancients of the people, and the chief priests, and scribes came
together, and they brought Him into their council, saying: If Thou be the
Christ, tell us. And He said to them: If I shall tell you, you will not believe
Me. And if I shall also ask you, you will not answer Me, nor let Me go. But
hereafter the Son of man shall be sitting on the right hand of the power of
God. Then said they all:
Art Thou then the Son of God?
Who said: You say that I AM And they said:
What need we any farther testimony?
For we ourselves have heard it from His own mouth. And the whole
multitude of them rising up, led Him to Pilate. And they began to accuse Him,
saying: We have found this man perverting our nation, and forbidding to give
tribute to Cesar, and saying that He is Christ the King. And Pilate asked Him,
saying:
Art Thou the King of the Jews?
But He answering, said: Thou sayest it.
And Pilate said to the chief
priests and to the multitudes: I find no cause in this man. But they were more
earnest, saying: He stirreth up the people, teaching throughout all Judea,
beginning from Galilee to this place. But Pilate hearing Galilee, asked if the
man were of Galilee. And when he understood that He was of Herod’s jurisdiction
he sent Him away to Herod, who was also himself at Jerusalem in those days. And
Herod seeing Jesus was very glad, for he was desirous of a long time to see
Him, because he had heard many things of Him: and he hoped to see some sign
wrought by Him. And he questioned Him in many words. But He answered him
nothing. And the chief priests and the scribes stood by, earnestly accusing Him.
And Herod with his army set Him at naught: and mocked Him, putting on Him a
white garment, and sent Him back to Pilate. And Herod and Pilate were made
friends that same day: for before they were enemies one to another. And Pilate
calling together the chief priests, and the magistrates, and the people, said
to them: You have presented unto me this man, as one that perverteth the
people, and behold I, having examined Him before you, find no cause in this man
in those things wherein you accuse Him. No, for Herod neither. For I sent you
to him, and behold, nothing worthy of death is done to Him. I will chastise Him
therefore, and release Him. Now of necessity he was to release unto them one
upon the feast-day. But the whole multitude together cried out, saying: Away
with this man, and release unto us Barabbas, who for a certain sedition made in
the city, and for a murder, was cast into prison. And Pilate again spoke to
them, desiring to release Jesus. But they cried again, saying: Crucify Him,
crucify Him. And he said to them the third time:
Why, what evil hath this man done?
I find no cause of death in Him: I will chastise Him therefore, and let
Him go. But they were instant with loud voices requiring that He might be
crucified: and their voices prevailed. And Pilate gave sentence that it should
be as they required. And he released unto them him who for murder and sedition
had been cast into prison, whom they had desired: but Jesus he delivered up to
their will. And as they led Him away, they laid hold of one Simon of Cyrene,
coming from the country: and they laid the cross on him to carry after Jesus.
And there followed Him a great multitude of people, and of women who bewailed
and lamented Him. But Jesus turning to them, said: Daughters of Jerusalem, weep
not over Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. For behold the day
shall come wherein they will say: Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that
have not borne, and the paps that have not given suck. Then shall they begin to
say to the mountains, fall upon us: and to the hills, Cover us.
For if in the green wood they do these things, what
shall be done in the dry?
And there were also two other malefactors led with Him to be put to
death.
And when they were come to the place which is called Calvary, they
crucified Him there: and the robbers, one on the right hand, and the other on
the left. And Jesus said: Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.
But they dividing His garments, cast lots. And the people stood beholding, and
the rulers with them derided Him, saying: He saved others, let Him save
Himself, if He be Christ, the elect of God. And the soldiers also mocked Him,
coming to Him, and offering Him vinegar, and saying: If Thou be the King of the
Jews, save Thyself. And there was also a superscription written over Him in
letters of Greek, and Latin, and Hebrew: THIS is THE KING OF THE JEWS. And one
of these robbers who were hanged, blasphemed Him, saying: If Thou be Christ,
save Thyself, and us. But the other answering, rebuked him, saying:
Neither dost thou fear God, seeing thou art under
the same condemnation?
And we indeed justly, for we receive the due reward of our deeds: but
this man hath done no evil. And he said to Jesus: Lord, remember me when Thou
shalt come into Thy kingdom. And Jesus said to him: Amen I say to thee, this
day thou shalt be with Me in paradise. And it was almost the sixth hour: and
there was darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour. And the sun was
darkened, and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst. And Jesus crying
with a loud voice, said: Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit. And saying
this, He gave up the ghost. [All kneel]. Now the centurion seeing what was
done, glorified God, saying: Indeed, this was a just man. And all the multitude
of them that were come together to that sight, and saw the things that were done,
returned striking their breasts. And all His acquaintance, and the women that
had followed Him from Galilee, stood afar off beholding these things. And
behold there was a man named Joseph, who was a counsellor, a good and a just
man (the same had not consented to their counsel and doings), of Arimathea, a
city of Judea, who also himself looked for the kingdom of God. This man went to
Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus. And taking Him down, he wrapped Him in
fine linen, and laid Him in a sepulcher that was hewed in stone, wherein never
yet any man had been laid.
INSTRUCTIONS ON TENEBRAE
The
prayers and chants sung by the choir on the evenings of Wednesday, Thursday,
and Friday of this week are called, Tenebrae. The Church thereby expresses her
grief over the passion and death of Our Savior, and over the sins which were
the cause thereof, in order to move the sinner to return to God.
Why are these matins called Tenebrae?
Because
they are usually said in the evening, and because, also, they are mournful, and
call us to sorrow.
Why is this service held at night?
In
memory:
1.Of the
evening when Christ was by force taken prisoner, like a murderer.
2.Of the
darkness which lasted three hours at His crucifixion.
3.Of the
spiritual darkness, confusion, and grief which prevailed in the minds of His
disciples during Our Savior’s passion.
4.Of the
darkness which overspread mankind while Jesus was suffering for them.
What is meant by extinguishing, one after another,
the twelve lights on the triangular candlestick, and finally all the rest?
The
twelve lights signify the twelve apostles, and the extinguishing of them is to
represent how, one after another, they deserted Jesus. The putting out of all
the lights reminds us of the darkness which prevailed upon the earth at the
death of Jesus, of the blindness of the Jews, and of the gradual extinguishment
of belief in Him.
What is the meaning of the last light, which is
hidden for a while, and then brought forth again when all is ended?
It
signifies Christ, whose body was buried in the grave, from which He soon after
arose by His own power, and thereby showed Himself more clearly than before to
be the Light of the world.
What is signified by the noise made at the end of;
Tenebrae, while the last light is hidden?
It signifies the earthquake at the death of Jesus.
The
account of Christ's Passion according to St. Luke during the daily Mass; and
the nocturnal office of Tenebrae, a sustained reflection on the treachery of
Judas, the privation of holiness, and the need for conversion. Tenebrae
consists of the divine office of Matins and Lauds for Maundy Thursday. It is
generally held on the night of "Spy Wednesday" of Holy Week,
so-called because it is believed to be the night on which Judas Iscariot
betrayed our Lord. The service thus explores the nature of Judas' betrayal, the
mental anguish of our suffering Lord, and the desecration of what was once holy
and beautiful. Its ceremonies include the use of a "hearse," a
triangular candelabrum that holds fifteen candles which are successively
extinguished during the liturgy until the entire church is enveloped in
darkness. Only one candle remains lit at the end, which is hidden by the
Epistle side of the altar before the Miserere is chanted. The service concludes
with a banging noise, followed by silence. The extinction of the fourteen
candles calls to mind the fourteen holy men mentioned in the Bible who, from
the foundation of the world to the very threshold of Christ's coming, were
slain by their own wicked brethren. The hiding of the fifteenth candle, on the
other hand, signifies the murder and resurrection of Christ Himself, while the
banging noise commemorates the confusion of nature when its Creator died (Mt.
27.51).
Up to
1955 the three consecutive Tenebrae services for Holy Thursday, Good Friday and
Holy Saturday, including the typical ceremonies such as the extinguishing of
candles, and each of these three services anticipated on the previous day, were
widely celebrated as an integral part of the liturgy of Holy Week in churches
with a sufficient number of clergy wherever the Roman rite was followed. A rich
tradition of music composed for these central occasions had developed. From
1956 to 1970 the practice largely declined:
The 1955
papal document restored the celebration of Matins and Lauds of Holy Thursday,
Good Friday and Holy Saturday to their original timing as
·morning services, with only a little allowance for
anticipating any of them on the evening before. On these three days attention
shifted from what became morning services to the services that were now to be
held in the afternoon or evening. Communal celebration of Matins and Lauds
became limited generally to communities that observed the full Divine Office in
congregational form. Matins and Lauds, having lost their exceptional character,
provided composers with little incentive to produce new music for them and
there was no demand for grand performances of the existing music earlier
composed for Tenebrae.
·The Roman Breviary, as updated in 1961, did not
mention any specific Tenebrae ceremonies to accompany the no longer anticipated
Matins and Lauds of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday.
·Finally, in the wake of the Second Vatican Council,
Matins and Lauds throughout the year were completely reformed. Matins, for
instance, no longer had the nine psalms and Lauds the five psalms that
determined the number of candles extinguished in the Tenebrae celebration.
Read:
“Out of love he chose ‘to empty himself’ and make himself our brother; out of
love he shared our condition, that of every man and every woman.” (Pope
Benedict XVI, General Audience, April 8, 2009)
Reflect:
Watch a video reflection on the day’s readings.
Pray:
Pray in thanksgiving for the challenges that were presented to you during this
Lenten season and the spiritual growth you experienced.
Act:
Before embarking on these next three days of the Triduum, remember that in the
end, God wins the day. Our long fast is followed by the greatest of feasts.
Before long, we will be sharing Easter joy!
·Wednesday, the supper and anointing in Bethany at
the home of Simon the leper. (Mt 26:6-13; Mk 14:3-9; Jn 12:1-8) Mark’s account
is just after he says that it was two days before Passover.
·The Bible doesn't say what the Lord did on the
Wednesday of Passion Week. Scholars speculate that after two exhausting days in
Jerusalem, Jesus and his disciples spent this day resting in Bethany in
anticipation of Passover. Just a short time previously, Jesus had revealed to
the disciples, and the world,that he had power over death
by raising Lazarus from thegrave. After seeing this
incredible miracle, many people in Bethany believed that Jesus was the Son of
God and put their faith in him. Also, in Bethany just a few nights earlier,
Lazarus' sister Mary had lovingly anointed the feet of Jesus with expensive
perfume.
First Wednesday-St. Joseph-Do a Rosary and Communion
These words were spoken
to Sister on the eve of St. Joseph’s feast day, March 18, 1958:
·My
child, I desire a day to be set aside to honor my fatherhood.
·The
privilege of being chosen by God to be the Virgin-Father of His Son was mine
alone, and no honor, excluding that bestowed upon my Holy Spouse, was ever, or
will ever, be as sublime or as high as this.
·The Holy
Trinity desires thus to honor me that in my unique fatherhood all fatherhood
might be blessed.
·Dear
child, I was king in the little home of Nazareth, for I sheltered within it the
Prince of Peace and the Queen of Heaven. To me they looked for protection and
sustenance, and I did not fail them.
·I
received from them the deepest love and reverence, for in me they saw Him Whose
place I took over them.
·So, the
head of the family must be loved, obeyed, and respected, and in return be a
true father and protector to those under his care.
·In
honoring in a special way my fatherhood, you also honor Jesus and Mary. The
Divine Trinity has placed into our keeping the peace of the world.
·The
imitation of the Holy Family, my child, of the virtues we practiced in our
little home at Nazareth is the way for all souls to that peace which comes from
God alone and which none other can give.
St. Joseph appeared to
Sister again to explain the First Wednesday devotion God wishes to establish in
his honor. Sister states:
His requests were
similar to those of Our Lady and the First Saturday. The Sacred Hearts of
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph have been chosen by the Most Holy Trinity to bring
peace to the world; hence, their request for special love and honor, also, in
particular, reparation and imitation.
These are the words of
St. Joseph as recorded on March 30, 1958:
“I am the protector of
the Church and the home, as I was the protector of Christ and His Mother while
I lived upon earth. Jesus and Mary desire that my pure heart, so long hidden
and unknown, be now honored in a special way.
·Let my children honor my most pure heart in a
special manner on the First Wednesday of the month by reciting the Joyful
Mysteries of the rosary in memory of my life with Jesus and Mary and the
love I bore them, the sorrow I suffered with them.
·Let them receive Holy Communion in union with
the love with which I received the Savior for the first time and each time I
held Him in my arms.
Those who honor me in
this way will be consoled by my presence at their death, and I myself will
conduct them safely into the presence of Jesus and Mary.
I will come again, little child of
my most pure heart. Until then, continue in patience and humility, which is so
pleasing to God.”
Passover (Hebrew: Χ€Χ‘Χ) is a
seven-day Jewish festival which celebrates the Israelites fleeing from Egypt
about 3300 years ago.Passover is called
such because the Israelites marked their door frames with a sign.It is believed because of this sign God
passed over their houses during the plague of the firstborn. The Israelites
were servants from the days of Jacob until Moses.They lived through famine in most of
Mesopotamia, including Israel.The
Israelites built store cities for grain in Egypt (possibly, the pyramids).After 210 years of servitude in Egypt, the
Israelites had become 'servant-minded' and did not believe that they could
flee.They fled via the Wilderness of
Sinai, where they resided for forty years.
Passover
Facts
·Traditionally, in accordance
with Biblical Law, all Orthodox Jews remove all leaven bread, cakes,
flour-containing products, and flour-derived products from the Jewish home in
the weeks before Passover.
These products
include beer, whiskey, flour, and all patisseries produce. Any products remaining on the Eve of Passover
are given away to non-Jews, sold or burnt.
·On Passover, Jews are to eat
only unleavened bread (Matzah), baked from flour and water and prepared (mixed
and baked) within eighteen minutes.
Unleavened bread symbolizes Israelites leaving Egypt in such haste they
could not wait for their bread dough to rise.
·On the first day of Passover, it
is customary to hold a Seder Night celebration with family and friends. During this celebration, the Haggadah is
typically read and sang. The Haggadah includes telling the story of fleeing of
the Israelite slaves from Egypt, the fact that their dough could not rise due
to the hurried exit, blessings over Matzah, and songs of praise and happiness.
·Traditionally, for Seder a plate
is prepared containing the following: an egg - symbolizing the Chaggigah
sacrifice; a shankbone, symbolizing
Passover Lamb; salt water, symbolizing
the tears of the Israelite slaves; a
bitter herb, symbolizing the bitterness of enslavement; charoset (a mixture of ground apple,
cinnamon, wine and sugar) signifying the cement used in the building
works; a vegetable to be dipped in the
salt water.
·The first and seventh days of
Passover are considered festivals in which work is not permitted. The
intermediate days are Chol Hamoed in which families typically go on hikes and
tours or visit friends.
Passover
Top Events and Things to Do
·Attend a Seder dinner or learn
how to make your own Seder.
·Make Matzahs. You can watch how to make Matzahs on youtube.
·Watch a movie that depicts
Passover. Our picks: The Ten
Commandments (1956) and The Prince of Egypt (1998).
All fool’s
Day-One
Fool makes a hundred: Farmer’s Almanac-
April Fools' Day is a
light-hearted comedic day of cheer, practical jokes and hoaxes. April
Fools' Day has been observed for centuries although its origins remain unclear.
It has been suggested that in ancient Roman and Hindu cultures, the day
originally marked ‘New Year’s Day’. Although in 1582, Pope Gregory XIII
issued the Gregorian calendar which moved New Year’s Day from April 1st to
January 1st. It is believed that those who continued to celebrate New
Year’s Day on April 1st were referred to as fools, leading to the
concept of April 1st representing All Fools’ Day. It has also been
suggested that April Fools' Day is related to the vernal equinox, the beginning
of spring, when
Mother Nature plays sudden weather tricks on people. The custom of April Fools'
was brought from Britain to the US centuries ago. Both kids and adults in North
America and many European countries including the United Kingdom, Ireland,
Poland, Finland, Iceland, and North American countries have developed
traditional customs to celebrate the day. These typically include fooling
another person and yelling April fools. Note: Today is the start of Assyrian New Year.
Bible in a
year Day 273 The
Lord's Work
Fr. Mike continues
discussing the call of Nehemiah and how we should approach the work the Lord
calls us to do. He explains why all work is divine participation in God’s
Kingdom on earth and encourages us to remember our service to God and to
others, keeping our focus on serving and loving in the realm of our influence.
Today’s readings are Nehemiah 3, Zechariah 14, and Proverbs 20:23-26.
1805 –
Four virtues play a pivotal role and accordingly are called “cardinal”; all the
others are grouped around them. They are: prudence, justice, fortitude,
and temperance. “If anyone loves righteousness, [Wisdom’s] labors are
virtues; for she teaches temperance and prudence, justice, and courage.”
1806
– Prudence is the virtue that disposes practical reason to
discern our true good in every circumstance and to choose the right means of
achieving it; “the prudent man looks where he is going.”… Prudence is “right
reason in action,” writes St. Thomas Aquinas, following Aristotle. It is
not to be confused with timidity or fear, nor with duplicity or dissimulation.
1807
– Justice
is the moral virtue that consists in the constant and
firm will to give their due to God and neighbor. Justice toward God is called
the “virtue of religion.” … The just man, often mentioned in the Sacred
Scriptures, is distinguished by habitual right thinking and the uprightness of
his conduct toward his neighbor. “You shall not be partial to the poor or defer
to the great, but in righteousness shall you judge your neighbor.”
1808
– Fortitude is the moral virtue that ensures firmness in
difficulties and constancy in the pursuit of the good…The virtue of fortitude
enables one to conquer fear, even fear of death, and to face trials and
persecutions. It disposes one even to renounce and sacrifice his life in
defense of a just cause. “The Lord is my strength and my song.” “In the
world you have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.”
1809
–Temperance is the moral virtue that moderates the
attraction of pleasures and provides balance in the use of created goods. It
ensures the will’s mastery over instincts and keeps desires within the limits
of what is honorable… “Do not follow your inclination and strength, walking
according to the desires of your heart.” Temperance is often praised in
the Old Testament: “Do not follow your base desires, but restrain your
appetites.” In the New Testament it is called “moderation” or “sobriety.”
We ought “to live sober, upright, and godly lives in this world.”
To
live well is nothing other than to love God with all one’s heart, with all
one’s soul and with all one’s efforts; from this it comes about that love is
kept whole and uncorrupted (through temperance). No misfortune can disturb it
(and this is fortitude). It obeys only [God] (and this is justice), and is
careful in discerning things, so as not to be surprised by deceit or trickery
(and this is prudence).
A wartime espionage romance where loyalty, identity, and desire collide in the shadows of Stockholm.
π¬ Production Snapshot
Studio: London Film Productions Director: Victor Saville Release: 1937 Screenplay: Arthur Wimperis & Lajos BΓrΓ³ Stars: Vivien Leigh, Conrad Veidt, Anthony Bushell Genre: Spy thriller / romantic espionage drama Notable: A pre‑war film that blends glamour with moral ambiguity. Beneath its polished surface lies a meditation on divided loyalties, hidden identities, and the cost of loving someone whose truth you cannot fully know.
π§ Story Summary
Set in neutral Stockholm during World War I, the film follows Madeleine Goddard (Vivien Leigh), a fashionable boutique owner who is secretly a French intelligence agent. Her shop becomes a crossroads of coded messages, whispered alliances, and elegant deception.
Enter Baron Karl von Marwitz (Conrad Veidt), a charming German officer with secrets of his own.
Their attraction is immediate — and dangerous.
As their romance deepens, both continue their covert missions:
Madeleine smuggles information through her fashion house
Karl manipulates intelligence networks with quiet precision
Each suspects the other
Each hides behind charm, wit, and half‑truths
The tension builds as their loyalties pull them in opposite directions.
When the truth finally surfaces, love and duty collide.
The ending is bittersweet: two souls drawn together, yet separated by the kingdoms they serve.
π° Historical & Cultural Context
Released just two years before WWII, the film reflects Europe’s growing anxiety about espionage, shifting alliances, and the fragility of peace.
Vivien Leigh was on the cusp of international stardom; Conrad Veidt, already a master of morally complex roles, brings gravity and melancholy.
The film’s elegance masks a deeper unease: the sense that truth is always provisional in a world built on coded messages.
Stockholm’s neutrality becomes a metaphor for the human heart caught between competing loyalties.
✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances
The Mask as a Spiritual Condition
Both Madeleine and Karl live behind carefully crafted personas.
Their duplicity is professional — but it becomes personal.
The film becomes a meditation on the spiritual cost of living without transparency.
Love in a Divided Heart
Their romance is real, but their truths are not.
They long for intimacy but cannot offer honesty.
It echoes the Gospel’s warning: “No one can serve two masters.”
The Temptation of Neutrality
Stockholm’s neutrality mirrors the human desire to avoid choosing sides.
But the film insists: Neutrality is itself a choice — and often a costly one.
The Tragic Nobility of Sacrifice
Karl’s final decisions carry the weight of a man who sees clearly and chooses duty over desire.
Madeleine’s sorrow becomes a quiet echo of the soul’s longing for a unity it cannot yet claim.
π· Hospitality Pairing
Drink
Black Tea with Lemon
Clean, sharp, elegant — the taste of a room where secrets are spoken softly.
Snack
Dark Chocolate with Sea Salt
Bittersweet, refined, and slightly dangerous — like the romance at the film’s center.
Atmosphere
A single candle, evoking the salons and shadowed corners of wartime Stockholm
Soft classical strings or salon jazz
A sense of poised tension — beauty layered over danger
πͺ Reflection Prompt
Where in your life do you feel the pull of divided loyalties — the desire to be fully known and yet the instinct to hide?
What mask do you wear for the sake of peace, and what would it cost to set it down?
And in this season of discernment, what truth is asking to be spoken so that love can become honest, whole, and free?