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Smoke in this Life not the Next

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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

SMOKE IN THIS LIFE — MAY 5 Virtue: Terror, Purification, and the Fragrance of Truth Fragrance: Chanel No. 5 — the cold, immaculate clarit...

The 7×5 Rule of Life-A Weekly Way of Living the Prayer Christ Taught Us

The 7×5 Rule of Life-A Weekly Way of Living the Prayer Christ Taught Us
“For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory.”

Pentecost Novena-America Unites to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 

Pentecost Novena

Begins May 15

America Unites to the
Sacred Heart of Jesus

America Unites to the Sacred Heart of Jesus


As the United States of America commemorates the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 2026, the USCCB joins this celebration by lifting up the contributions of Catholics and the impact of our faith on the history of this country.


In a historic moment, the U.S. bishops will consecrate the United States to the Sacred Heart of Jesus on June 11, 2026, and invite all to join in this consecration.


Cardinal Raymond Burke wrote the following:


“As we approach the 250th anniversary of our country’s founding, it is fitting that we turn with humble confidence to Almighty God, acknowledging our dependence upon His providence and imploring His divine mercy. It is my earnest hope that every Catholic in America will unite with us in this commitment to prayer throughout the year, asking the Sacred Heart of Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, to renew our hearts and to guide our nation in the way of truth, justice, and peace.”


From Saint Francis of Assisi,


“We have been called to heal wounds,

to unite what has fallen apart,

and to bring home those

who have lost their way.”


 

United States Grace Force United in Prayer:


The United States Grace Force is totally committed to UNITING with our bishops and the entire nation in this historic consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, especially through the "America 250 Prayer." written by Cardinal Raymond Burke (See below).


Please join in these US Grace Force prayer campaigns:


May 15 - May 24 - Pentecost Novena

June 3 - June 12 - Sacred Heart Novena

August 15 - October 7 - 54-Day Novena for Our Nation

October 4 (Feast of St. Francis) - Rosary Coast to Coast, National Rosary Rally


For those who wish to join forces in praying for an abundant outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the USA and throughout the world, you can find the daily prayers at usgraceforce.com, and/or join (enlist) in the US Grace Force and receive each day's prayers in your email.


You can join (enlist) in the US Grace Force by clicking HERE


 

Novena to the Holy Spirit


"We ought to pray and invoke the Holy Spirit, for each of us greatly needs His protection and His help. The more a man is deficient in wisdom, weak in strength, borne down with trouble, prone to sin, so ought he the more fly to Him Who is the never ceasing Fount of Light, Strength, Consolation and Holiness.” (Pope Leo XIII)


The novena in honor of the Holy Spirit is the oldest of all novenas since it was first made at the direction of Our Lord Himself when He sent His apostles back to Jerusalem to await the coming of the Holy Spirit on the first Pentecost. It is still the only novena officially prescribed by the Church. Addressed to the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, it is a powerful plea for the light and strength and love so sorely needed by every Christian.


The Church grants the following indulgence: “Partial indulgence to those who participate in a public novena before the feast of Christmas or Pentecost, or the Immaculate Conception.” (The Enchiridion of Indulgences, Issued by the Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary, 1968, #34)


 

HERE IS WHAT DAY ONE LOOKS LIKE:


FIRST DAY (Friday after Ascension or Friday of 6th Week of Easter)


Holy Spirit! Lord of Light! From Your clear celestial height, Your pure beaming radiance give!


Special Intention


May the Sacred Heart of Jesus reign in our homes and in our nation.


The Holy Spirit


Only one thing is important -- eternal salvation. Only one thing, therefore, is to be feared--sin? Sin is the result of ignorance, weakness, and indifference The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Light, of Strength, and of Love. With His sevenfold gifts He enlightens the mind, strengthens the will, and inflames the heart with love of God. To ensure our salvation we ought to invoke the Divine Spirit daily, for "The Spirit helpeth our infirmity. We know not what we should pray for as we ought. But the Spirit Himself asketh for us."


Prayer


Almighty and eternal God, Who hast vouchsafed to regenerate us by water and the Holy Spirit, and hast given us forgiveness all sins, vouchsafe to send forth from heaven upon us your sevenfold Spirit, the Spirit of Wisdom and Understanding, the Spirit of Counsel and fortitude, the Spirit of Knowledge and Piety, and fill us with the Spirit of Holy Fear. Amen.


Our Father and Hail Mary ONCE. Glory be to the Father SEVEN TIMES.


ACT OF CONSECRATION TO THE HOLY SPIRIT


On my knees I before the great multitude of heavenly witnesses I offer myself, soul and body to You, Eternal Spirit of God. I adore the brightness of Your purity, the unerring keenness of Your justice, and the might of Your love. You are the Strength and Light of my soul. In You I live and move and am. I desire never to grieve You by unfaithfulness to grace and I pray with all my heart to be kept from the smallest sin against You. Mercifully guard my every thought and grant that I may always watch for Your light, and listen to Your voice, and follow Your gracious inspirations. I cling to You and give myself to You and ask You, by Your compassion to watch over me in my weakness. Holding the pierced Feet of Jesus and looking at His Five Wounds, and trusting in His Precious Blood and adoring His opened Side and stricken Heart, I implore You, Adorable Spirit, Helper of my infirmity, to keep me in Your grace that I may never sin against You. Give me grace O Holy Spirit, Spirit of the Father and the Son to say to You always and everywhere, "Speak Lord for Your servant heareth." Amen.


PRAYER FOR THE SEVEN GIFTS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT


O Lord Jesus Christ Who, before ascending into heaven did promise to send the Holy Spirit to finish Your work in the souls of Your Apostles and Disciples, deign to grant the same Holy Spirit to me that He may perfect in my soul, the work of Your grace and Your love. Grant me the Spirit of Wisdom that I may despise the perishable things of this world and aspire only after the things that are eternal, the Spirit of Understanding to enlighten my mind with the light of Your divine truth, the Spirit on Counsel that I may ever choose the surest way of pleasing God and gaining heaven, the Spirit of Fortitude that I may bear my cross with You and that I may overcome with courage all the obstacles that oppose my salvation, the Spirit of Knowledge that I may know God and know myself and grow perfect in the science of the Saints, the Spirit of Piety that I may find the service of God sweet and amiable, and the Spirit of Fear that I may be filled with a loving reverence towards God and may dread in any way to displease Him. Mark me, dear Lord with the sign of Your true disciples, and animate me in all things with Your Spirit. Amen




DAILY PRAYER FOR AMERICA 250


By Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke


O Sacred Heart of Jesus, King of Heaven and Earth,

I place today my nation, the United States of America,

into Your Heart pierced for love of us.


On the 250th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence,

I acknowledge that true liberty is Your gift,

and that our lasting homeland is the eternal Kingdom of God.


Under the mantle of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Patroness of the Americas, and through the intercession of her Immaculate Heart,

bless my homeland anew,

purify her from sin,

and guide her leaders in truth, justice, and peace,

so that she may safeguard all human life,

respect the integrity of marriage and the family,

and honor the practice of religion.


Reign in my home and in my nation.

Draw every heart into communion with You,

that Your truth, love, justice, mercy, and peace may triumph

in America and throughout the world.


Amen.


Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

Smoke in this Life not the Next

Tue, May 12 – The Service of the Holy Face

Virtue: Mercy & Clarity
Cigar: Silky, layered (Sumatra)
Bourbon: Michter’s US1 — clean, thoughtful*
Reflection: “What truth do I name with love.”

The Devotion

Tuesday returns you to the Holy Face—
the Face that reveals truth without violence,
the Face that corrects without crushing,
the Face that holds mercy and clarity
in the same steady gaze.

May 12 carries a sharper grace than last week:
the grace of naming truth with love.

Not truth as a weapon.
Not truth as self‑justification.
Not truth as a way to win.

But truth spoken the way Christ speaks it—
with wounds still visible,
with peace still offered,
with mercy still extended.

The Holy Face today is not stern,
but it is unmistakably clear.
There is no fog in His eyes.
No flattery.
No softening of what must be said
for the sake of a soul’s freedom.

This Tuesday asks:

What truth have I avoided naming
because I feared the cost of love?

Christ does not shame you for hesitating.
He simply stands before you
with the same clarity
that steadied the apostles
when they were still half‑afraid
of their own calling.

His clarity is not harsh.
It is clean.
It is merciful.
It is the kind of clarity
that frees rather than wounds.

Pray today:

“Jesus, let me speak truth
with the same love
that shines from Your Holy Face.”

The Purgatory Line

A story for this Tuesday—
one that cuts straight to the virtue of the day.

A deceased Religious appeared to Blessed Stephen.
His face was sorrowful, his posture bowed.

“I am undergoing my Purgatory here,”
he said,
“because here I sinned by tepidity
and negligence at the Divine Office.”

Not scandal.
Not rebellion.
Not public sin.
Tepidity.
The quiet refusal to give God the love He deserved.
The slow erosion of clarity.
The soft drift into half‑heartedness.

Blessed Stephen prayed the De Profundis for him.
Each night the soul returned—
its features brightening,
its countenance lifting,
its clarity restored.

Finally, after the last prayer,
the soul rose radiant from the choir stall,
expressed gratitude,
and disappeared into glory.

The lesson is exact:

Neglect of truth,
neglect of duty,
neglect of love—
these cloud the soul.
Mercy clears it.

And mercy often comes
through someone willing
to name the truth with love.

The Cigar & Bourbon

Sumatra — silky, layered.
A wrapper that reveals its depth slowly,
like truth spoken patiently.

Michter’s US1 — clean, thoughtful.*
A bourbon that doesn’t shout,
but clarifies the palate
the way Christ clarifies the heart.

Together they form a quiet discipline:
clarity without cruelty,
mercy without softness.

The Question for the Night Smoke

“What truth do I name with love?”

Not:
“What do I want to say?”
but
“What must be said
for the sake of a soul—
including my own?”

Let the smoke rise like a prayer
for every place in your life
where clarity and mercy
must finally meet.


INTRIGUE (1947)

George Raft • June Havoc • Helena Carter

A pre‑Communist Shanghai noir where corruption, loyalty, and buried conscience collide in a city living on borrowed time. Directed by Edwin L. Marin, the film places George Raft in his signature register—controlled, wounded, and morally suspended—while June Havoc delivers a performance of dangerous elegance, and Helena Carter embodies the quiet clarity that forces a man to choose who he will become.

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1947 by United Artists, Intrigue sits at the intersection of:

Post‑war disillusionment — victory has not brought order; the black market thrives in the ruins of empire.
George Raft’s late‑career persona — the stoic man with a compromised past and a conscience waiting to be awakened.
International noir — American crime stories exported into unstable foreign cities where moral lines blur under neon and fog.
Shanghai before the Communist takeover — a Nationalist‑controlled city in collapse, swollen with refugees, profiteers, and foreign opportunists. Authority is weak, corruption is currency, and every transaction has a shadow price.

The world is tight:
airstrips, nightclubs, warehouses, alleys, and the cramped rooms where deals are made and loyalties are broken.
But the moral terrain is wide—
betrayal, conscience, justice, and the cost of choosing truth in a city built on lies.

The cultural backdrop:

  • A global black‑market economy rising from wartime scarcity
  • Americans abroad navigating moral ambiguity
  • Women emerging as power brokers in noir narratives
  • The wounded veteran archetype—displaced, disillusioned, searching for meaning
  • A city on the edge of historical collapse, where survival and integrity rarely align

The film’s power lies in its contrasts:
Raft’s stillness, Havoc’s voltage, Carter’s moral steadiness, and a Shanghai that feels like purgatory—
a place where every soul is tested before the fall.

2. Story Summary

Brad Dunham (George Raft)—a former American pilot disgraced by a court‑martial—now flies contraband into Shanghai’s black‑market underworld.
He demands more money, steals back a shipment, and forces a meeting with the real power behind the operation:

Tamara Baranoff (June Havoc)
Elegant. Calculating.
A woman who runs the city’s illicit trade with charm sharpened into a weapon.

She fires her lieutenant, Ramon, and draws Brad into her orbit.

But Brad encounters another force:

Linda Arnold (Helena Carter)
A humanitarian worker tending to orphans and the displaced.
Her presence exposes the human cost of the black market—and awakens Brad’s buried conscience.

When Brad’s friend, reporter Marc Andrews, uncovers the truth about the smuggling ring, he is murdered.
With his dying breath, he reveals the betrayal:

Tamara’s testimony is what destroyed Brad’s military career.

The masquerade collapses.
Brad distributes Tamara’s hoarded goods to the poor, triggering the final confrontation.
Ramon attempts to kill Brad but shoots Tamara instead.
She dies in the empire she built.
Brad walks away with Linda—
not triumphant, but finally clear.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. Conscience as Compass

Brad’s arc is the slow reawakening of a conscience dulled by disappointment.

The film honors the moment a man chooses integrity over survival.

B. The Truth Beneath Corruption

Shanghai’s black market exposes the real relationships:

who profits, who suffers, who hides behind lies, and who finally steps into the light.

C. The Cost of Betrayal

Tamara’s power is real, but her betrayal is fatal.

The story reveals that corruption always collapses under its own weight.

D. Mercy as Judgment

Linda’s compassion is not softness—it is clarity.

Her presence judges Brad without condemning him, calling him back to the man he was meant to be.

E. Redemption Without Triumph

There is no grand victory—only the quiet dignity of a man who finally chooses truth over advantage.

4. Hospitality Pairing — The Shanghai Night Spread

A neat pour of Michter’s US1* — clean, thoughtful, the drink of a man sorting truth from fog.
A Sumatra‑wrapped cigar — silky, layered, unfolding like the film’s moral tension.
Dark chocolate with sea salt — bitterness and clarity in balance.
A leather‑bound notebook — the place where a man writes the truths he can no longer avoid.

A setting for nights when you want to reflect on conscience, loyalty, and the moment a man decides to stop living in the shadows.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where have I allowed disappointment to dull my conscience.
  • What truth about my past still needs to be faced with clarity.
  • Who in my life calls me back to integrity without shaming me.
  • What corrupt “arrangements” have I tolerated because they were convenient.
  • Where is redemption already beginning, quietly, beneath the surface.



Monday, May 11, 2026

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Theme: Intercession & Responsibility
Cigar: El Cheapo bundle stick — rough, uneven, penitential
Drink: Evan Williams Black — honest, unvarnished, working‑class
Virtue: Intercession & Responsibility

Reflection:
St. John Vianney doesn’t give you a metaphor. He gives you a voice — the cry of souls who can no longer help themselves:

“They suffer… they weep… they demand with urgent cries the help of your prayers… Tell them that since we have been separated from them, we have been here burning in the flames!”

There is nothing sentimental in that. No soft edges. Just the blunt truth that love continues past death — and that responsibility does too.

Tonight’s cheap cigar fits the work. It burns crooked, tastes harsh, flakes ash like it’s shedding its own impatience. It demands attention. It refuses to let you coast. It’s a reminder that purification is not elegant. It is gritty, uneven, and real.

Evan Williams Black does the same work: straightforward, unpretentious, penitential in its own way. A drink that doesn’t pretend to be more than it is — and therefore pairs perfectly with a night meant for the dead, not for your palate.

This is the masculine heart of intercession:

not mystical fireworks,
not emotional theatrics,
but the steady willingness to stand in the gap for those who cannot stand for themselves.

Your smoke becomes a small offering. Your discomfort becomes a small mercy. Your prayer becomes a rope lowered into the fire.

And the souls — forgotten by many, remembered by few — wait for men who will take responsibility for the bonds of love that death could not sever.

If you wish me good, pray for my dead.
If I wish you good, I will pray for yours.

Intercession is the friendship that continues beyond the grave.
Responsibility is the love that refuses to abandon its own.

And purification is walked, not theorized — by them in fire, by you in charity.


Monday Night at the Movies

 🔸 May 2026 – Martyrdom & Eucharistic Mystery
  • May 4 – A Short Film About Love (1988)
  • May 11 – Make Way for Tomorrow (1937)
  • May 18 – Ben-Hur (1959)
  • May 25 – The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)

Martyrdom in May is not a theme but a progression. These four films form a single ascent: a man learns to see rightly, to love faithfully, to surrender vengeance, and finally to offer his life without reserve. A Short Film About Love begins the month by stripping desire of its illusions; it shows how distorted longing must die before any true gift of self can emerge. Make Way for Tomorrow then reveals the quiet crucifixion of fidelity — the kind of daily, hidden sacrifice that forms the backbone of every Eucharistic life. By the time Ben‑Hur arrives, the pattern is unmistakable: the blood of Christ breaks the cycle of retaliation and reorders the heart toward mercy.

The month culminates in The Passion of Joan of Arc, where the interior work becomes visible witness. Joan stands before her judges with nothing left to protect, her face becoming the icon of a soul fully offered. In her, the Eucharistic mystery reaches its final clarity: a life consumed in obedience, a body given up, a will aligned with God’s. The May sequence teaches that martyrdom is not an event but a formation — the slow, disciplined shaping of a man into something that can be placed on the altar and broken for others.


MAY 11 Monday of the Sixth Week of Easter

Rogation Monday-Twilight Zone Day

 

1 Samuel, Chapter 23, Verse 15

While David was in the wilderness of Ziph at Horesh he was AFRAID that Saul had come out to seek his life.

 

David trusted his life to God and did what was righteous.

David a.k.a. Robin Hood[1]

The Philistines are robbing grain at Keilah, so David and his men go attack them.

Even though Saul is after them, David still knows he needs to protect the people for God.

After David defeats the Philistines, Saul learns of David's whereabouts (1-8).

David learns that Saul is coming for him and he starts freaking out.

God informs David that the people will turn him over to Saul this time, which is a hard lesson for David because even though he was acting on the people's behalf, they were willing to stab him in the back (9-13).

Even though Saul is unable to find David, Jonathan finds him no problem. BFFs can be like that. Jonathan encourages David to keep fighting the good fight because one day he will be king of Israel as God intends (14-18).

Saul learns that David is staying in the wilderness of Ziph with his merry men a la Robin Hood. Saul starts chasing through Ziph and a variety of other areas.

Unfortunately for Saul, David is quick as lightning and always avoids danger. At one point, Saul and his men are on one side of a mountain and David and his men are on the other side. Tough luck, Saul.

Saul gets word the Philistines are raiding the land. For once, Saul makes a good decision and goes to defend the Israelites against the Philistines (15-29).

 

We glorify God when we are righteous as he is righteous who makes the rain fall on both the good and the evil.

 

Copilot’s Take

David’s fear in the wilderness of Ziph is not the fear of a man who doubts God, but the fear of a man who knows the weight of his calling. Scripture tells us he was afraid because Saul was seeking his life, yet this fear drives him toward God rather than away from Him. The righteous man does not pretend danger is imaginary; he simply refuses to let danger dethrone the Lord. This is the difference between David and Saul—one fears God, the other fears losing control.

David’s righteousness is revealed most clearly in his decision to defend Keilah. He protects the people even though he knows Saul is hunting him and even though God warns him that the very people he rescues will betray him. This is the hard edge of justice: doing what is right because God is worthy, not because the crowd is loyal. David acts for God’s sake, not for applause, and in doing so he mirrors the God who sends rain on the just and the unjust alike.

Jonathan’s appearance in the wilderness is a reminder that God strengthens His servants through the right friends. Jonathan does not flatter David or distract him; he strengthens his hand in God. True friendship is not sentimental—it is covenantal. It calls a man back to his mission when fear or fatigue threatens to erode his resolve. Jonathan sees what Saul cannot: that God’s hand is on David, and no amount of royal paranoia can change the will of heaven.

Saul, meanwhile, becomes a tragic study in misdirected warfare. He chases David while ignoring the Philistines, fighting the man who threatens his ego instead of the enemy who threatens Israel. When a leader loses the fear of the Lord, he loses the ability to recognize the real enemy. Saul’s obsession blinds him, and his blindness becomes a danger to the very people he was anointed to protect.

Yet even as Saul closes in, God’s providence keeps David just beyond his reach. The image of Saul on one side of the mountain and David on the other is a living parable: evil can surround, pursue, and threaten, but it cannot claim the man who walks in the will of God. David is not lucky—he is kept. God governs the story even when the wilderness feels like chaos.

This chapter becomes a mirror for every age. Evil hunts the righteous, crowds remain fickle, betrayal is common, and leaders often chase the wrong enemy. Yet God continues to form His servants in hidden places, teaching them courage, discernment, justice, and perseverance. David becomes a king in the wilderness long before he becomes king in Jerusalem, because the will of God shapes a man before it crowns him.

In the end, David shows that righteousness is not the absence of fear but the refusal to let fear dictate obedience. The man who fears God more than danger becomes unassailable—not because he is strong, but because he is aligned with the One who governs all things.

Rogationtide Monday

 

Rogation Days are a Roman Catholic "baptism" of the Robigalia, a pagan procession to gain favor from the Robigo, the Roman god of grain. Since the Church had no objection to praying for the harvest, it threw out Robigo while keeping the procession and prayers. Today would be a good day to reflect on what we want to harvest this fall; so like farmers we must till the soil of our soul reflecting this day on our use of our TIME and look at in what ways we may offer our time to Christ to help build a harvest for His Kingdom.

 

Time

 

Consider that Christ was on the cross from noon to 3 p.m. Three hours that must have seemed an eternality to literally buy us back from damnation.

 

Reflect today if you in turn can sacrifice 3 hours a week to give back to the Lord. Yes, time is a precious commodity:

 

Consider:

 

·         Sunday Mass is one hour can you give more?

 

·         Each day has 24 hours.

o   Normally you use 8 hours for sleep-offer your sleep to the Lord.

§  If you wake in the middle of night give an hour to prayer and go back to sleep in the Lord.

o   Normally you use 8 hours to earn your daily bread and a place to sleep.

§  Before you eat your bread and place your head on your “my pillow” thank the Lord.

o   Normally you have 8 hours to bake the bread, make your bed; make sure your fed; wash your head. Exercise and make use of your squatty potty, etc.

o   Brother can you spare some time for the Lord

·         The rosary takes 20 minutes.


Rogation Monday

 

 Rogation Days: Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday before the Ascension are observed as days of solemn supplication and are called Rogation Days. These three Rogation days serve also as preparation for the feast of the ascension, which reminds us that we have the most powerful intercessor in our savior, who is now enthroned at the right hand of the father. Since 1929 many churches in the United States have observed Rogation Sunday as Rural Life Sunday, or Soil Stewardship Sunday. Services on this day examine the religious aspects of rural life. In 1969 the Roman Catholic Church cancelled the Rogation Days. In their place Church authorities instituted days of prayer for human needs, human works, and the fruits of the earth. Local bishops may now set appropriate dates for these observances in their dioceses.

Rogationtide Monday

Rogation Days are a Roman Catholic "baptism" of the Robigalia, a pagan procession to gain favor from the Robigo, the Roman god of grain. Since the Church had no objection to praying for the harvest, it threw out Robigo while keeping the procession and prayers. Today would be a good day to reflect on what we want to harvest this fall; so like farmers we must till the soil of our soul reflecting this day on our use of our TIME and look at in what ways we may offer our time to Christ to help build a harvest for His Kingdom

Catholic Time

Holy Days

 Sunday: The Holy Trinity – Sunday is dedicated to the Holy Trinity. This is entirely fitting as Sunday is the first day of the week and the day when we offer God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit our praise, adoration, and thanksgiving.

Monday: The Angels – Monday is the day in which we remember the angels. Angels are powerful guardians, and each of us is protected by one. Many of the saints had a great devotion to the angels in general and to their guardian angel in particular.

Tuesday: The Apostles – The Catholic Church is apostolic. That is, it is founded on the authority and teaching of the apostles, most especially that of St. Peter to whom Jesus gave the keys of his kingdom. Each bishop is a direct successor of the apostles.

Wednesday: Saint Joseph – Saint Joseph is known as the prince and chief patron of the Church. As the earthly father of Jesus, he had a special role in protecting, providing for, and instructing Jesus during his earthly life. Now that Christ is ascended into heaven, St. Joseph continues his fatherly guardianship of Christ’s body, the Church.

Thursday: The Holy Eucharist – Our Lord instituted the most holy Eucharist on a Thursday, so it is fitting that we remember this greatest of sacraments on this day. The Eucharist is the greatest gift of God to mankind, as it is nothing less than Jesus himself. What gift could be greater?

Friday: The Passion – Jesus was scourged, mocked, and crucified on a Friday. Because of this, the Church has always set aside Fridays of days of penance and sacrifice. While the U.S. sadly does not require abstinence from meat on Fridays, penance is still required in one form or another. This day should always be a day of repentance and a day in which we recall Christ’s complete self-sacrifice to save us from our sins.

Saturday: Our Lady – There are a number of theological reasons Saturdays are dedicated to Our Lady, perhaps the most significant is that on Holy Saturday, when everyone else had abandoned Christ in the tomb, she was faithful to him, confidently waiting for his resurrection on the first day of the week.

Holy Months

January: The Holy Name of Jesus – There is no name more powerful than the name of Jesus. The Catechism sums up the power of this name beautifully: “The name ‘Jesus’ contains all: God and man and the whole economy of creation and salvation. To pray ‘Jesus’ is to invoke him and to call him within us. His name is the only one that contains the presence it signifies. Jesus is the Risen One, and whoever invokes the name of Jesus is welcoming the Son of God who loved him and who gave himself up for him” (CCC #2666)

February: The Holy Family – The Holy Family is an earthly reflection of the Holy Trinity. By meditating on the Holy Family, we can learn the meaning of love, obedience, and true fatherhood and motherhood. We are also reminded that the family is the foundational unit of both society and the Church.

March: St. Joseph – St. Joseph is the icon of God the Father: silent but active and perfectly providing for the needs of all. The Church constantly invokes the protection of St. Joseph, admonishing us to ite ad Joseph, go to Joseph.

April: The Blessed Sacrament – Holy Church is the guardian of

the Holy Eucharist. For two thousand years, she has guarded this treasure, administering it to the faithful and proclaiming that it is nothing less than Jesus himself. We can never be too devoted to the Blessed Sacrament or show it too much honor.

May: The Blessed Virgin Mary – Our Lady has long been associated with the beauty of flowers and the coming of spring. This is fitting because she is both beautiful and the Mother of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the life of the world. In May, the Church remembers our glorious lady with crownings and processions in her honor.

June: The Sacred Heart of Jesus – The Sacred Heart of Jesus is the revelation of God’s immense love for us. It is often depicted as a fiery furnace, pierced and broken, but beating with love. The Sacred Heart is also a profound reminder of the humanity of our Lord, for his heart is not a mere symbol, but a true physical reality.

July: The Precious Blood – The blood of Christ saves us from sin. It is the blood of Christ that gives us the hope of heaven. St. Paul tells us that Jesus reconciled “to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross” (Col. 1:20). Without the blood of Christ shed for us, all would be lost.

August: The Immaculate Heart of Mary – The heart of Mary is a motherly heart, a heart full of love and mercy for her children. The heart of Mary is also the channel through which all the graces of God flow down to us. She is “our life, our sweetness, and our hope.”

September: The Seven Sorrows of Mary – Aside from Jesus, no human being has suffered more than our Blessed Mother. In perfect obedience to the will of God, she consented to her son’s torture, humiliation, and brutal executed for our salvation. As any parent knows, watching one’s child suffer is the greatest suffering of all. She still bears the sufferings of her divine Son in her heart.

October: The Holy Rosary – The rosary is one of the most powerful weapons the Church possesses. We are constantly exhorted by saints, popes, and Our Lord and Our Lady themselves to pray this simple yet profound prayer. Accordingly, Mother Church has set aside a whole month to the promotion of this prayer.

November: The Souls in Purgatory – The souls in purgatory are suffering a great deal, and they cannot pray for themselves. They are our brothers and sisters, and as members of the body of Christ, we must pray and offer sacrifices for those who have gone before us, asking that they may rest in the light of God’s presence.

December: The Immaculate Conception – The Immaculate Conception of Mary is a profound mystery. In the Immaculate Conception, Mary was without sin from the first moment of her conception. She is perfectly united forever to her spouse, the Holy Spirit. Their fruitful union produced a wedding of heaven and earth in the Godman, Jesus Christ. We will meditate on these truths for all eternity.

Time is a Gift

The Church takes seriously the call to sanctify all things, even time. The Catholic significance of days and months is a profound reminder that our lives are finite, and that time should not be squandered. As the Psalmist said, “teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom” (Ps. 90:12). But more than anything, it reminds us that time is a gift from God, and with him and through him, all things are holy, and nothing is without meaning.

Bible in a year Day 310 Rivals for the Heart 

Fr. Mike points out how easy it is to take good things and make idols out of them, setting them up as God's rivals for our hearts. We can discover these rivals by noticing the things we prioritize over spending time with God. The readings are 2 Maccabees 13, Wisdom 15-16, and Proverbs 25:15-17.

 

Twilight Zone Day[2] I think the current rulers of this world are stranger than the twilight zone where everything was strange and surreal, and nothing was ever quite as it seems to be.

“You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, the Twilight Zone!”

Beloved by children, teenagers, and adults alike, the cult classic TV show The Twilight Zone has affected entire generations of people, prompting them to take a closer look at life and various phenomena and take nothing for granted, thanks to its unique combination of science fiction, mystery, and thriller/horror themes. Not to mention how many of today’s well-known actors got their start in it—Burt Reynolds, Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner, to name but a few. How then could this majorly influential show not have its own holiday?

The Twilight Zone was created by acclaimed television producer Rod Sterling in 1959, with the first episode premiering on October 2nd. At the time of its release, it was vastly different from anything else on TV, and it struggled a bit to carve out a niche for itself at the very beginning. In fact, Sterling himself, though respected and adored by many, was famous for being one of Hollywood’s most controversial characters and was often call the “angry young man” of Hollywood for his numerous clashes with television executives and sponsors over issues such as censorship, racism, and war. However, his show soon gained a large, devoted audience. Terry Turner of the Chicago Daily News gave it a rave review, saying, “…Twilight Zone is about the only show on the air that I actually look forward to seeing. It’s the one series that I will let interfere with other plans”. The Twilight Zone ran for five seasons on CBS from 1959 to 1964.

Twilight Zone Day is an annual holiday created to celebrate this thought-provoking television series, where everything was strange and surreal, and nothing was ever quite as it seemed to be.

How to celebrate Twilight Zone Day

There are a number of ways to celebrate Twilight Zone Day, and the one you choose may be connected to how well you know this TV series. Believe it or not, there are still people out there who have never seen it! You could watch some episodes from the classic series, perhaps “To Serve Man”, “It’s a Good Life”, or “The Eye of the Beholder”, episodes that are widely considered some of the very best in the entire series. If you don’t know the series and would like to get a taste of what it was like in a nutshell, you could also watch the 1983 Twilight Zone Movie. If, on the other hand, you know The Twilight Zone very well, you could get together with some other Twilight Zone aficionados and play Twilight board or trivia games. Alternately, you could discuss who you think were the strangest Twilight Zone villains, and what the true reasons were for them being the way they were. And what would a good party be without some tasty drinks? Yes, there are Twilight Zone cocktails!

 

Finally, you can try making Twilight Zone cocktails, by mixing Bacardi White, Dark and 151 Proof Rum, Triple Sec, pineapple and orange juices. Sounds pretty scrumptious, right? And that’s not its only benefit—if you have a few Twilight Zone Cocktails, you may well find yourself transported to a different dimension, too!

Feast of the day:

            Drink: Twilight Zone Cocktails

            Soup:  Chicken-Orzo Soup with 10 Vegetables

Main dish: An Israeli Spread for the Feast of St. James the Just

Dessert: Kunāfah

Armed Forces Week

It is more than one day of honor. It’s an entire week! Join us as we celebrate a week of Military Appreciation Days – May 15 through May 17, 2024 – for each branch of the Armed Forces followed by a special lunch on Armed Forces Day on May 18, 2024.

Starting on Monday, May 13, 2024, all active-duty service members and veterans can enjoy a Free Sandwich on their designated day. These brave men and women have fought for our freedom, and we are proud to honor them. Please join us in this weeklong celebration.

The celebration continues on Armed Forces Day. Join us for a special lunch with Our Heroes on Saturday, May 20 between 11 am and 2 pm. All active-duty service members and veterans will receive a Free Sandwich. And we will have a special live performance of our National Anthem at noon. We look forward to celebrating this special day with Our Heroes!

Armed Forces Day Build Up

 

Every day from now to Armed Forces Day I ask your prayers for each service and all of our defenders.

 

US Army[1]

As priest-chaplains of the Archdiocese for the Military Services we invite you to join with us in prayer. In times of joy and difficulty, in times of fear and doubt, in moments of distress and in times of peace, a simple prayer that comes from the heart becomes the place of your encounter with God’s love, mercy and protection.

Prayer for Troops[2]

Let us pray for our brothers and sisters as they go forth with courage and determination to face the forces of violence, weapons of destruction and hearts filled with hate. 

RESPONSE: THROUGH THE DARKNESS BRING US TO THE LIGHT. 

 For our President and Commander-In-Chief, and our political and military leaders that they may tirelessly seek peaceful settlements to international disputes; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That the Lord may preserve the members of our Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard and Air Force from all harm; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That even in war, we may keep clearly before us the defense of all human rights, especially the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That the families, relatives and friends of our military members may be strengthened in this time of concern and anxiety; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That the Lord may help families with men and women in the armed forces to cope with daily challenges in the absence of their loved ones; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That our homeland will be preserved from violence and terrorism; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That the nations of the world will seek to work together in harmony and peace; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That the hearts of all men and women will be moved to pursue true peace and justice; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That violence may be overcome by peace; that weapons of destruction be transformed into tools of justice, and hate give way to true charity; we pray to the Lord:

Through the Darkness Bring Us to the Light. 

That we may be grateful for and inspired by those veterans who have given their lives for our country and that we may bravely face the challenges ahead; we pray to the Lord: 

Lord God, Almighty Father, creator of mankind and author of peace, as we are ever mindful of the cost paid for the liberty we possess, we ask you to bless the members of our armed forces. Give them courage, hope and strength. May they ever experience your firm support, gentle love and compassionate healing. Be their power and protector, leading them from darkness to light. To you be all glory, honor and praise, now and forever. Amen.

Real Men ask God what they should do[3]

The special need for more frequent Communion is on the part of the men and the older boys. No man can afford to "keep his religion in his wife's name." The man is by nature the head of the family, and the family usually ends up where he leads. He can't expect his family to continue to live a very vital Catholic life unless he sets the example. As an Army captain can't hole-up in some rear line trench and cry out, "Onward, Christian soldiers!” neither can the husband and father expect his wife and children to do much in the Church Militant if he is a non-combatant, "too proud to fight."

An interesting evidence of the power of example of the adult male in encouraging devout religious practice was had in England during World War II. In a certain Catholic orphanage, the larger boys were refusing to obey the Sisters' directives to approach the Communion rail with folded hands. In the neighborhood of the orphanage was a GI camp whose soldiers soon became heroes to the orphan lads. One day a crowd of the GI's came to Mass in the orphanage and went to Communion, of course with hands devoutly folded as is done in our country. When the orphan boys saw Tex and Bill and Tom properly approaching the Communion rail, the troubles of the Sisters with the boys were over. "Example is the school of mankind, and they will learn in no other way."

Patron Saint of Soldiers

 Joan of Arc[4]

Joan sets us an example of a laywoman who refuses to be cowed by threats and intimidations from 'authority,' even legitimate authority abusing its powers. May 14, 2020 (LifeSiteNews) — On May 16, 1920, in a ceremony attended by over 30,000 people — including over a hundred descendants of her family — Pope Benedict XV canonized St. Joan of Arc (c. 1412–1431), the Maid of Orléans.

St. Joan of Arc is remarkable in so many ways. I would like to draw attention to a few aspects of her life and character that hold pointed lessons for us today.

First, as a young woman, Joan practiced a deep, humble, and serious piety. The age-old practices of the Catholic faith were enough to take her to the heights of sanctity and the gift of herself for her country and her Lord. She listened to the Lord’s voice as He spoke to her through the saints and through circumstances, and she obeyed His will unflinchingly. St. Michael the Archangel addressed her as “Jehanne the Maid, Child of God,” for this is what she was and always remained. Instead of allowing herself to be distracted by worldly motivations, she followed the path God set for her, in spite of its difficulty. She is, in other words, the exact antithesis of churchmen today who would water down the demands of God’s law, the necessity of self-denial in adhering to it, and the supernatural motives that should sustain us.

Second, Joan boldly stepped into a public role at God’s behest, but without losing her femininity. She did not wage war with the soldiers, but simply led them in formation. She would not, in principle, kill or wound anyone. There is not the remotest chance that she would ever condone women fighting in the military and being trained to kill — the absurdity of actual or potential nurturers of life taking it voluntarily. In this, she is an example of true Christian womanhood: strong and courageous, willing to stick her neck out, willing to lead (as she herself was willing to be led by her Master), but not stupidly trying to be a man. She did not think equality with maleness as something to be grasped but emptied herself and became a servant. In this way she provided an example of being true to her identity and vocation that is resoundingly necessary for both women and men to heed in a world that has become confused about how many sexes there are and who belongs to which “division” of the human race. (And it is indeed a division — but it need not be an opposition or antagonism, in the way that both male chauvinism and feminism imagine it to be, each feeding off the other. Real difference makes possible a deeper communion and cooperation than uniformity and replaceability, even as, in the Church, the priest’s role as mediator is seen to be essentially different from that of the laity, since he acts on their behalf in persona Christi capitis, in the person of Christ the Head of the Church. In a similar way, the husband in a family has the calling to imitate and represent the headship of Christ. As St. Paul explained so well, one cannot have a functional organic body if it’s made up only of arms or hands or eyes or, for that matter, heads. Real difference and distinction, when embraced in a spirit of servanthood, confer a mutual benefit that far exceeds what one could obtain independently. Hierarchy and unity are correlative, not opposed, as democracy falsely assumes.)

Third, Joan is a model of the virtues of chastity and purity. Feminists like to point out that she donned a man’s clothing at a time when this was considered immoral. Yet all historians are agreed that the reason Joan wore a man’s clothing during her public service, and later in prison, was to protect herself against the danger of rape from the soldiers and enemies among whom she had to dwell. The ordinary women’s clothing of the time offered no such defense, and she would not have had the leisure or the talent to create a new and better fashion de novo. She complained to the tribunal that an English lord had attempted to violate her in prison. Like St. Maria Goretti, St. Joan prized the gift of her virginity and defended it. She knew her worth and her dignity as a woman and a human being.

Fourth, Joan was condemned by an ecclesiastical kangaroo court presided over by a corrupt bishop, Pierre Cauchon, with the complicity of corrupt clergy. As everyone knows who has read Joan’s life, she was falsely charged with heresy and condemned to be burnt at the stake. The trial was later re-evaluated by the Church and found to be gravely defective and irregular on numerous counts — indeed, not to mince words, it was a wicked sham, an excuse for murdering an inconvenient and too popular figure who could not be readily controlled by those in power. We live today in a world in which most of episcopacy is corrupt on several levels — doctrinally, through failing to teach the Catholic Faith in its integrity, if not positively adhering to modernist views, or morally, due to practicing sexual abuse, or covering it up, or tolerating its existence, or liturgically, by refusing to model right worship or to correct impious deviations, or, indeed, all three at once. Joan sets us an example of a laywoman who refuses to be cowed by threats and intimidations from “authority,” even legitimate authority abusing its powers, and who would rather die for a right conscience than falsely admit to wrongdoing. She ought to be recognized as the patron saint of those who have been victimized by the Church’s hierarchy.

St. Joan of Arc, the Maid of Orléans,

patroness of France,

pray for us.

THIS WE BELIEVE

PRAYERS AND TEACHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Prayer After Mass

Lord Jesus Christ, take all my freedom, 
my memory, my understanding, and my will. 
All that I have and cherish
you have given me. 
I surrender it all to be guided by Your will. 
Your grace and Your love
are enough for me. 
Give me these, Lord Jesus, 
and I ask for nothing more. Amen.

 Around the Corner

·         Eat waffles and Pray for the assistance of the Angels

·         Religion in the Home for Preschool: May

·         Nationally Military Appreciate Month

·         Monday: Litany of Humility

·         Three Chilly Saints

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: End Sex Trafficking, Slavery

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Make reparations to the Holy Face

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan


MAKE WAY FOR TOMORROW (1937)

Victor Moore • Beulah Bondi • Fay Bainter

A domestic tragedy where aging, duty, and quiet heartbreak collide with the era’s most uncomfortable truth: families often fail the people who raised them. Directed by Leo McCarey, the film strips away sentimentality and exposes the moral cost of convenience. Victor Moore and Beulah Bondi give performances of devastating restraint—two ordinary people whose love is stronger than the world’s indifference.

Sources: walmart.com

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1937 by Paramount Pictures, Make Way for Tomorrow stands at the crossroads of:

Post‑Depression realism — the economic wounds of the 1930s still raw, with aging parents often displaced by financial collapse.
McCarey’s moral seriousness — the same year he won an Oscar for The Awful Truth, he quietly made the film he considered his best.
The rise of social‑problem cinema — stories about poverty, aging, and the fragility of the American family.
The shift from sentimental elder portrayals — no soft lighting, no comforting illusions, just the truth of what happens when love outlasts resources.

The world is small: living rooms, boarding houses, train stations, and the polite suffocation of middle‑class respectability.

But the moral terrain is vast—duty, gratitude, sacrifice, and the quiet heroism of two people who refuse to stop loving each other even as their children retreat.

The cultural backdrop:

  • The elderly as economic burdens in a recovering nation
  • Adult children torn between compassion and convenience
  • Marriage as a lifelong covenant tested by poverty
  • The American home as both sanctuary and battleground
  • The growing fear of institutionalizing aging parents

The film’s power lies in its restraint: Bondi’s trembling dignity, Moore’s gentle optimism, and the slow, unbearable realization that love is not enough to keep them together.

2. Story Summary

Barkley and Lucy Cooper (Victor Moore and Beulah Bondi) lose their home to foreclosure after fifty years of marriage. Their five adult children gather—not to solve the problem, but to distribute the inconvenience.

No one will take both parents.

So the couple is separated:

  • Lucy goes to live with her son George and his socially anxious wife Anita.
  • Barkley goes to his daughter Cora, who treats him as a disruption to her routines.

The separation becomes a slow unraveling:

  • Lucy’s presence embarrasses Anita’s social circle.
  • Barkley’s cough becomes an excuse to send him away to California.
  • Phone calls between the couple become their only refuge.
  • Their children speak of them with polite cruelty—“practicality,” “space,” “timing.”

Then comes the luminous final day:

A reunion.
A borrowed afternoon.
A walk through the city like young lovers.
A dinner where strangers treat them with more kindness than their own children.
A dance.
A promise to meet again.

And then the train pulls away.

The ending is quiet, devastating, and morally unanswerable.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. Fidelity as a Lifelong Vow

Barkley and Lucy’s marriage is the film’s moral center—steady, tender, unbroken even by poverty or separation.

Their love is a covenant, not a convenience.

B. The Sin of Polite Neglect

The children are not villains—they are busy, embarrassed, self‑protective.

The film exposes the spiritual danger of “reasonable” selfishness.

C. The Dignity of the Elderly

Lucy’s line—“The only fun left is pretending”—reveals the inner world of those who feel themselves becoming invisible.

The film insists on their humanity.

D. The Judgment of Ordinary Choices

No one commits a dramatic betrayal.

Instead, the tragedy emerges from small decisions: postponements, excuses, rearrangements, “just for now.”

The moral cost accumulates quietly.

E. Love Without Rescue

There is no miracle, no reversal, no sentimental salvation.

Only the truth that love can be deep, faithful, and still powerless against the world’s indifference.

4. Hospitality Pairing — The Last‑Day Supper

A warm cup of black tea — simple, comforting, the drink of long marriages
A slice of apple pie — American sweetness with a bitter edge
A wool blanket — the texture of shared years and quiet endurance
A small table set for two — intimacy in a world that has no room for them
A setting for nights when you want to honor memory, fidelity, and the cost of loving to the end.

5. Reflection Prompts

Where have I mistaken convenience for compassion?
Whom have I quietly pushed to the margins of my life?
What promises have I allowed circumstances to erode?
How do I honor the elders whose sacrifices built my world?
Where is love asking me to stay faithful even when the world says “be practical”?


“Make Way for Tomorrow” and the Catholic Art of Dying Well

A Film Review and Spiritual Reflection

There are films that entertain, films that instruct, and films that quietly wound. Leo McCarey’s Make Way for Tomorrow (1937) belongs to the last category—a story so gentle in its telling and so brutal in its implications that it lingers like a bruise. Orson Welles famously said it would “make a stone cry.” What he didn’t say is that it also exposes the spiritual poverty of a culture that has forgotten how to accompany the dying.

Viewed through a Catholic lens, Make Way for Tomorrow becomes more than a social drama. It becomes a meditation on the conditions necessary for a holy death, and a warning about what happens when those conditions collapse.

I. The Plot as a Parable of Abandonment

The story is simple:
Barkley and Lucy Cooper, an elderly couple who lose their home, are forced to separate and live with different adult children. Their presence is inconvenient. Their needs are embarrassing. Their love for each other is treated as a logistical problem.

The film’s final act—two old people savoring their last hours together before being separated forever—plays like a secular Stations of the Cross. There is no villain, only a society that has normalized the quiet disposal of its elders.

Catholic tradition has a name for this: the sin of abandonment.

II. What the Film Reveals About the Modern Deathbed

The Coopers are not dying in the literal sense, but they are undergoing a slow social death:

  • They are displaced from their home.
  • They are separated from each other.
  • They are tolerated, not loved.
  • They are managed, not accompanied.

This is precisely the opposite of the Catholic vision of dying well.

The Church teaches that the final season of life requires four things:

  1. Presence
  2. Sacraments
  3. Reconciliation
  4. Hope

The Coopers receive none of these. Their tragedy is not poverty—it is isolation.

III. The Catholic Counter‑Vision: How One Should Die

The Church does not romanticize death. It prepares for it.

A Catholic death is built on four pillars:

1. Die Reconciled

The Coopers are never given the chance to “put their house in order.” Their children are too busy protecting their own comfort to notice the spiritual needs of their parents.

Catholic dignity demands the opposite:
Confession, Anointing, and Viaticum are not luxuries. They are the final provisions for the journey.

2. Die Accompanied

The film’s emotional violence comes from the couple’s forced separation. Catholic tradition insists that no one should die alone—not physically, not emotionally, not spiritually.

The Coopers’ loneliness is the film’s indictment of modernity.

3. Die Surrendered

Bark and Lucy accept their fate with a heartbreaking gentleness. Their surrender is not Christian surrender—it is resignation. They are not offering their suffering; they are simply enduring it.

The Church invites something deeper:
the conscious offering of one’s final suffering for the salvation of others.

4. Die in Hope

The film ends without hope. There is no eschatology, no promise, no horizon. Just a train pulling away.

Catholic dignity insists that death is not a train to nowhere but a passage into the Father’s house.

IV. The Film’s Prophetic Warning

Make Way for Tomorrow was released in 1937, but it reads like a prophecy of the 21st century:

  • Nursing homes replacing family care
  • Adult children overwhelmed by busyness
  • Elders treated as burdens
  • Death sanitized, outsourced, and hidden

The film is not about cruelty. It is about the quiet erosion of duty.

Catholic tradition calls this erosion by its true name:
the breakdown of the Fourth Commandment.

V. What the Film Teaches Catholics Today

The film forces a question:
Where will we die, and who will be there?

The Catholic answer is not sentimental. It is architectural:

  • Die where the sacraments can reach you.
  • Die where love is present.
  • Die where you are not alone.
  • Die in a place shaped by prayer.

This may be a home.
It may be a hospice room turned into a chapel.
It may be a hospital bed surrounded by family praying the Litany of the Saints.

The location matters less than the communion.

VI. The Final Scene as a Secular Memento Mori

The last moments of the film—Bark boarding the train, Lucy waving goodbye—are devastating because they feel unfinished. There is no blessing, no prayer, no ritual, no promise of reunion.

It is a death without the vocabulary of hope.

Catholicism supplies the missing language:

  • “Go forth, Christian soul.”
  • “May the angels lead you into paradise.”
  • “May the martyrs receive you at your coming.”

The Church refuses to let anyone die the way the Coopers are left:
unaccompanied, unblessed, and unseen.

VII. Conclusion: The Film as a Call to Conversion

Make Way for Tomorrow is not merely a critique of family dynamics. It is a call to recover the Catholic art of dying well.

It asks us:

  • Will we accompany our elders?
  • Will we prepare for our own death?
  • Will we build homes where dying is not a crisis but a sacrament?

The Coopers’ tragedy is that they die socially before they die physically.
The Catholic answer is to ensure that no one dies spiritually before they die bodily.

The film shows what happens when a society forgets the dignity of the elderly.
The Church shows what happens when we remember.

Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
Home of Mary's Vineyard