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Smoke in this Life not the Next

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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next Tue, Apr 14 – Holy Face Tuesday Virtue: Light & Simplicity Cigar: Clean, focused (Connecticut)...

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

 

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Cheap Smoke Night – The Lowest Region

Virtue: Atonement & Honesty
Cigar: Harsh, unrefined (bundle stick)
Whiskey: Bottom-shelf bourbon – sharp, corrective
Reflection: “What fire do I choose now so I do not face the greater one later?”

The Lowest Region of Purgatory

St. Frances of Rome teaches that the lowest region of Purgatory is not Hell, though the fire is just as fierce. It is the place where souls who confessed mortal sins but did not complete their penance undergo purification. They died in God’s friendship, but with the temporal weight of their sins still clinging to them.

She describes this region as:

  • A vast burning sea, where the fire is total and unrelenting.
  • A temporary state, because salvation is certain, but purification is necessary.
  • A place of intelligent flame, where every burn corresponds to what was left unhealed.
  • A region marked by the old tradition of “seven years per sin,” not as a stopwatch, but as a symbol of the gravity of forgiven guilt still needing cleansing.
  • The first of three ascending regions, each drawing the soul closer to the light of God.

Nothing here is wasted.
Nothing here is arbitrary.
The fire is mercy finishing its work.

Cheap Smoke and Chosen Fire

A harsh cigar and a bottom-shelf bourbon preach the same penitential sermon: a man can choose small fires now—discipline, honesty, penance, self-denial—or he can carry his unfinished business into the fire that God Himself must apply.

Cheap smoke night is not about indulgence.
It is about clarity.

The roughness in your throat is a reminder that purification always costs something. Better to pay in small coins now than in great sums later.

The Holy Face and the Lowest Region

The Holy Face confronts a man with the truth he avoids. The lowest region of Purgatory is where God confronts the truths we avoided in life—truths we confessed but never repaired, admitted but never atoned for, regretted but never amended.

Purgatory removes every ambiguity we refused to surrender.
The wise man begins that surrender now.

What part of your own unfinished penance do you want tomorrow night’s entry to sharpen?


THE OLD DARK HOUSE (1932)
Boris Karloff, Charles Laughton & Melvyn Douglas
A storm‑lashed, pre‑Code chamber horror where stranded travelers seek refuge in a decaying mansion ruled by a family of spiritual rot—grotesque, darkly comic, and lit with flashes of unexpected humanity.

Sources: imdb.com ar.inspiredpencil.com

1. Production & Historical Setting

Directed by James Whale in 1932, the film stands at the crossroads of early Universal horror and the sly, subversive tone Whale perfected in Frankenstein. It adapts J.B. Priestley’s novel Benighted, retaining its blend of satire, dread, and class commentary. ar.inspiredpencil.com
Boris Karloff, fresh from his breakout as the Monster, plays Morgan, the mute brute whose physicality dominates the film. Melvyn Douglas brings urbane steadiness, while Charles Laughton, in his first American role, adds warmth and grounded humanity. The house itself—rain‑battered, candlelit, and crumbling—becomes a character, a visual sermon on what happens when a family seals itself off from truth.

2. Story Summary

A violent storm forces a group of travelers—Philip and Margaret Waverton, their friend Penderel, and later the boisterous Sir William Porterhouse and his companion Gladys—into the Femm family mansion. Inside they encounter:

  • Horace Femm, nervous, brittle, terrified of the house’s secrets.
  • Rebecca Femm, a shrill moral tyrant whose piety masks cruelty.
  • Morgan (Karloff), the drunken, dangerous servant whose presence suggests the house’s long decay.
  • Saul, the mad, fire‑obsessed brother hidden upstairs, the true threat waiting in the dark.

As the night unfolds, the travelers confront the Femms’ madness, Morgan’s violence, and Saul’s deranged theology of destruction. Dawn arrives only after courage, restraint, and sacrifice hold the line against the house’s generational evil.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. A House Without Light
The Femm mansion is a parable of what happens when a household rejects truth: fear becomes the ruling spirit, and every room hides a distortion of virtue.

B. Vice as Enslavement
Morgan’s drunken brutality is not monstrous in the supernatural sense—it is the flesh ungoverned, appetite without discipline, a warning about what happens when strength is severed from moral order.

C. The Courage of the Steady Man
Melvyn Douglas’s Penderel becomes the film’s moral center: calm under pressure, willing to confront danger, and able to protect the vulnerable without bravado. His steadiness is the antidote to the house’s chaos.

D. Dawn as Deliverance
The survivors step into the morning not triumphant but sobered. Evil has been restrained, not conquered. The film quietly affirms that sometimes spiritual victory is simply refusing to be swallowed by the darkness around you.

4. Hospitality Pairing

Storm‑Night Vigil Table

  • Hot toddy with lemon and clove — warmth against the storm, a drink that steadies the nerves rather than inflames them.
  • Dark rye bread with salted butter — simple, grounding, the opposite of the Femm family’s decayed excess.
  • A single candle — not for mood but for symbolism: one flame held against a house full of shadows.
  • A small stone or piece of wood on the table — a tactile reminder of solidity and endurance when the world feels unstable.

A setting for nights when you feel the wind rising and need to remember that courage is often quiet.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where in my life have I allowed fear to become the governing spirit of a room, a relationship, or a habit?
  • What appetites in me resemble Morgan—strong, mute, and dangerous when ungoverned?
  • Which parts of my interior “house” have I locked away rather than brought into the light?
  • How do I respond when confronted with another person’s chaos—with steadiness or with panic?
  • What does dawn look like in my current season—what small act of courage would move me toward it?

.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Tue, Apr 21 – Holy Face Tuesday

Virtue: Witness & Clarity
Cigar: Bold, expressive (Habano Maduro)
Bourbon: High West Double Rye – spirited, daring
Reflection: “What gospel do I live aloud?”

The Ordered Fire of St. Frances of Rome

St. Frances of Rome saw Purgatory as the final architecture of mercy—a realm where God completes the purification we resisted or delayed in life. Her vision is striking for its structure: three ascending levels, each ordered, purposeful, and filled with the certainty of salvation. Nothing is chaotic. Nothing is wasted. Every flame is intelligent.

  • The Lowest Region is a vast burning sea for souls who confessed grave sins but never fully atoned. Tradition speaks of “seven years per sin,” not as a stopwatch but as a symbol of the weight of forgiven guilt still needing purification.
  • The Intermediate Region contains three crucibles: a dungeon of ice for coldness toward God, a boiling cauldron for sins of passion, and a molten-metal pond for greed and attachment.
  • The Upper Region is quieter, a place of longing rather than torment, where the soul aches for the God it now loves without obstruction.

Angels descend into every level. They do not shorten the purification, but they steady the soul so it can endure the fire that frees it.

Witness and the Holy Face

A bold Habano Maduro and a spirited rye preach the same Tuesday sermon: your life is already a witness. The only question is what it witnesses to. Clarity is not merely speaking truth; it is living truth in a way that leaves no ambiguity about whom you serve.

Purgatory is the place where God removes every ambiguity we refused to surrender in life. The wise man clears it now.

The Holy Face confronts you with the unavoidable question:
What gospel does my life proclaim—without my words ever needing to speak?



THIS IS THE NIGHT (1932)
Cary Grant, Thelma Todd & Roland Young
A Paris‑to‑Venice pre‑Code farce of jealousy, invented lovers, and the fragile male ego—sparkling, mischievous, and quietly revealing about the masks people wear.

Sources: imdb.com imdb.com

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1932 and directed by Frank Tuttle, the film belongs to Paramount’s polished pre‑Code cycle, where marital deception and sexual innuendo were treated with breezy sophistication. Cary Grant appears in his screen debut—not yet the urbane figure he would become, but a jealous, hot‑blooded javelin thrower whose insecurity fuels the plot. imdb.com
Thelma Todd, at the height of her comic allure, plays the wife caught between affection and fear of confrontation. Roland Young, with his dry, hesitant charm, becomes the accidental moral center of the story. The film’s Paris‑and‑Venice settings, elegant interiors, and light orchestral scoring give it the feel of a continental holiday where everyone is pretending to be someone else.

2. Story Summary

When Olympic athlete Stephen (Cary Grant) returns home early and suspects his wife Claire (Thelma Todd) of infidelity, her friends scramble to protect her reputation. They invent a fictitious lover and recruit the mild‑mannered Gerald (Roland Young) to play the part.
The lie expands as the group travels to Venice, where:

  • Gerald’s awkward decency makes him more believable than intended.
  • Claire’s guilt and fear of Stephen’s temper deepen the tension.
  • Stephen’s jealousy grows, revealing his insecurity rather than strength.
  • The glamorous Colette (Lili Damita) complicates the charade with her own flirtations.

The farce unravels in a cascade of misunderstandings until the truth emerges—not through moral heroism but through the collapse of everyone’s carefully maintained illusions.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. Jealousy as a Distorting Force
Stephen’s suspicion shows how jealousy warps perception, turning love into surveillance and affection into fear. His strength as an athlete contrasts with his weakness of character.

B. The Fragility of Appearances
The entire plot depends on maintaining a fiction. Each character participates in the lie to avoid discomfort, revealing how easily people choose illusion over truth when the truth threatens their pride.

C. Grace Through Embarrassment
The film’s comedy becomes a gentle moral teacher: truth often enters not through solemn revelation but through humiliation, exposure, and the collapse of our self‑protective stories.

4. Hospitality Pairing

Continental Mischief Table

  • A French 75—effervescent, elegant, and slightly dangerous, matching the film’s flirtatious tone.
  • Gougères or light cheese puffs—airy, insubstantial, delightful, like the plot’s comic deceptions.
  • A small travel token on the table (a postcard, a luggage tag) to echo the Paris‑to‑Venice escapade.
  • Soft lamplight to evoke the film’s blend of glamour and secrecy.

A setting for evenings when life feels tangled and you need levity without losing honesty.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where am I tempted to maintain a fiction rather than face a difficult truth?
  • How does jealousy—mine or another’s—distort what I believe about people I love?
  • What masks do I wear to avoid embarrassment or conflict?
  • When truth threatens my pride, do I reach for clarity or for another layer of disguise?
  • What would it look like to let truth enter gently, even if it unsettles the story I prefer?



Monday, April 20, 2026


Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Mon, Apr 20 – Earth Day (observed)

Virtue: Stewardship & Reverence
Cigar: Earthy, rooted (Sumatra)
Bourbon: Wilderness Trail – grounded, clean
Reflection: “How do I tend the garden of mercy?”

The Hour That Rose from the Earth (Short, Sharp, True)
St. Magdalen de Pazzi once saw the soul of a deceased sister rise from the earth during prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. She appeared wrapped in purifying fire, yet beneath the flames shone a robe of dazzling white, the sign that grace had already claimed her. She knelt for one final hour of silent adoration before the Hidden God. When that hour was complete, she rose and ascended to Heaven.

Purgatory is not punishment for its own sake.
It is the completion of love, the final cleansing of what grace has already begun.
It is the soul returning to right order—adoration before ascent.

National “Weed Day” — A Necessary Clarification

April 20 is widely associated with marijuana culture, but your ritual framework is not about recreational intoxication. It is about purification, stewardship, and symbolic smoke—the rising of the soul toward God, not the dulling of the mind. The contrast actually strengthens the entry:

  • One kind of smoke numbs.
  • The other kind of smoke awakens.
  • One escapes responsibility.
  • The other accepts purification.
  • One drifts.
  • The other ascends.

Your Sumatra cigar becomes the counter‑sign:
rooted, disciplined, earthy, reverent—a smoke that teaches rather than distracts.

An earthy Sumatra and a clean Wilderness Trail bourbon preach the same truth:
Stewardship begins in humility,
reverence begins in purification,
and every garden—soil or soul—must be tended
in this life and not the next.

Monday Night at the Movies

🔸 April 2026 – Resurrection & Marian Vision
  • Apr 6 – King of Kings (1927)
  • Apr 13 – Lady for a Day (1933)
  • Apr 20 – The Song of Bernadette (1943)
  • Apr 27 – The Keys of the Kingdom (1944)

Across these four films, Resurrection appears not only as an event but as a pattern: Christ rises, dignity rises, vision rises, vocation risesKing of Kings opens the month with the Resurrection as cosmic rupture — light breaking into darkness, Magdalene restored, and Mary standing as the quiet axis of fidelity. One week later, Lady for a Day translates that same rising into human terms: a woman the world overlooks is lifted into honor, revealing a Marian truth that the lowly are never invisible to God. What Christ does in glory, grace echoes in the lives of the poor.

The movement deepens with The Song of Bernadette, where Marian vision becomes the lens through which Resurrection continues in history. Heaven touches earth through humility, purity, and suffering — the same virtues that shaped Mary’s own discipleship. And the month concludes with The Keys of the Kingdom, where Resurrection becomes mission: a long obedience marked by Marian endurance, hidden fruitfulness, and the quiet courage to love in obscurity. Together, these films trace a single arc — from the empty tomb to the human heart, from glory revealed to glory lived — showing how the light of Easter becomes the shape of a life.

The Song of Bernadette (1943)
Jennifer Jones & William Eythe

A luminous meditation on innocence, suffering, and the quiet ferocity of grace. This is not a film about spectacle but about truth borne silently, a peasant girl whose purity unsettles the powerful and consoles the broken. Bernadette’s visions do not elevate her socially—they crucify her gently, shaping her into a vessel of obedience, humility, and hidden sanctity.

🎬 Production Snapshot

Studio: 20th Century Fox
Director: Henry King
Release: 1943
Screenplay: George Seaton (from Franz Werfel’s novel)
Stars:

  • Jennifer Jones (Bernadette Soubirous)
  • William Eythe (Antoine Nicolau)
  • Charles Bickford (Father Peyramale)
  • Vincent Price (Prosecutor Vital Dutour)
  • Gladys Cooper (Sister Marie Thérèse Vauzous)
    Genre: Religious Drama / Hagiographic Epic
    Notable: Jennifer Jones won the Academy Award for Best Actress; Alfred Newman’s score remains one of Hollywood’s great sacred compositions.

🧭 Story Summary

Bernadette Soubirous is a poor, asthmatic miller’s daughter in Lourdes, unnoticed and unremarkable—until she sees a Lady in the grotto at Massabielle. What follows is not triumph but trial:

  • The civil authorities interrogate her.
  • The clergy doubt her.
  • The crowds overwhelm her.
  • The jealous resent her.
  • The sick cling to her.

Yet Bernadette remains steady, gentle, and unshaken. She does not argue, embellish, or defend herself. She simply repeats what she saw: “I saw her. I saw the Lady.”

The spring emerges. The healings begin. The world descends on Lourdes. But Bernadette’s path bends not toward glory but toward the convent, where hidden suffering becomes her final vocation. Her physical pain—kept secret for years—reveals the depth of her sanctity. She dies young, unseen by the world, but radiant in the eyes of Heaven.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

Released during World War II, the film offered a wounded world a vision of:

  • Innocence resisting brutality
  • Faith surviving interrogation
  • Suffering transfigured into meaning
  • A poor girl becoming a global sign of hope

Hollywood rarely treats sanctity with reverence; this film does. It stands as one of the great religious epics of the studio era, alongside The Keys of the Kingdom and A Man for All Seasons.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

  1. Purity as Strength
    Bernadette’s simplicity disarms every worldly power.
    Insight: Holiness is not naivety—it is clarity.

  2. Suffering as Hidden Vocation
    Her final illness reveals the depth of her offering.
    Insight: The holiest sacrifices are often unseen.

  3. Authority Purified by Humility
    Father Peyramale’s skepticism becomes reverence.
    Insight: True authority bows before truth.

  4. The Poor as Bearers of Revelation
    Heaven chooses the lowly, not the learned.
    Insight: God’s logic overturns human hierarchies.

  5. Miracle as Invitation, Not Proof
    The spring heals bodies, but Bernadette’s life heals souls.
    Insight: Signs point beyond themselves.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink: “The Grotto Candle”
A quiet, contemplative drink:

  • Light Irish whiskey
  • Warm water
  • Honey
  • A thin slice of lemon

Symbolism:
Warmth = consolation
Honey = gentleness
Lemon = purity cutting through doubt

Snack: Simple Almond Biscuit
The food of pilgrimage—plain, sustaining, humble.

Atmosphere:
Dim light, a single candle, a bowl of water on the table—Lourdes reduced to essence.

🪞 Reflection Prompt

Where is God asking you to accept a hidden vocation—quiet, unseen, but radiant with obedience?


Sunday, April 19, 2026

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Sun, Apr 19 – Guidance & Tenderness
Virtue: Guidance & Tenderness
Cigar: Gentle, pastoral (Natural)
Bourbon: Larceny Small Batch – soft, enduring
Reflection: “Whose voice do I follow?”

The saint, praying before the Blessed Sacrament, saw the soul of a departed sister rise from the earth—still captive in Purgatory, wrapped in flames yet clothed in a robe of dazzling whiteness that shielded her from the full force of the fire. She remained an entire hour at the foot of the altar, adoring the hidden God with a humility so deep it became annihilation. Her suffering purified; her whiteness protected; her adoration revealed the direction of her desire.




 Therese’s Corner Try Fillet of Flounder in Tomato Sauce

·         Bicycle Day

o   At one time my interesting brother was going to ride his bike from Phoenix to California-The mountains stopped him. That was when he was fit and had 24-inch thighs, and a 24-inch waist.

·         Bucket Item trip: Elephant Walk Experience

·         Catholic Activity: Easter Breakfast Picnic

·         30 Days with St. Joseph Day 30

·         Autism Acceptance Month

·         Spirit hour:  Amaretto


APRIL 19 Third Sunday of Easter 

Judges, Chapter 14, Verse 11

Out of their FEAR of him, they brought thirty men to be his companions.

 

This verse is about Sampson the strongman of the bible, who struck fear into the hearts of the pagan Philistines.

 

Nevertheless, how different was Sampson from his pagan neighbors?

 

Justyn Rees has an interesting, shortened tale of the tragedy of Sampson that is available online that is a quick thought-provoking read in his book entitled, “Old Story New”.[1]

 

Sampson who was born endowed with great physical strength started out following God but failed to continue walking in the spirit of He that Is. John Maxwell[2] points out that like Gideon many men fail toward the end of their life because they dilute the vision God had given them and have become too comfortable with their success and lack the self-control to overcome their weaknesses. John’s advice to leaders is to be self-disciplined using a quote from Plato, “The first and best victory is to conquer self.” John points out a five-step plan to develop self-discipline in your life.

 

1.      Develop and follow your priorities. Time is a precious commodity, do what’s important first and release yourself from the rest.

2.      Make a disciplined lifestyle your goal. Set up systems and routines to ensure you feed the mind, body, spirit and love of your neighbor daily.

3.      Challenge your excuses. We all make them; push the envelope.

4.      Remove rewards until you finish the job. Eat your vegetables first.

5.      Stay focused on results. Focus on the outcomes and not the difficulties in accomplishing it; envision the change.

Our model for transformation: Jesus went up to the mountain to pray, and he spent the night in prayer to God. (Luke 6:12)

 

Copilot’s Take

Samson’s story exposes the danger of confronting external enemies while leaving interior enemies untouched. The Philistines feared him, but Samson never feared his own appetites, and that imbalance hollowed out his vocation. The Catechism names this dynamic plainly: evil gains its foothold not through force but through disordered freedom—when a man stops guarding his heart, stops ordering his desires, and stops listening to God. Samson’s strength made him impressive, but his lack of discipline made him vulnerable, and the result was a life that began in promise and ended in captivity.

The Church’s vision of confronting evil is the opposite of Samson’s trajectory. Fortitude is not aggression but “firmness in difficulties and constancy in the pursuit of the good” (CCC 1808). Temperance is not repression but the interior mastery that makes a man trustworthy with power (CCC 1809). And the battle itself is not fought with charisma or force but with vigilance, humility, and prayer (CCC 2846–2849). Evil is resisted by a man who has learned to govern himself, because only such a man can stand firm when temptation presses on his weakest point.

This is why Christ’s pattern matters so sharply here. Before choosing the Twelve, before confronting demons, before walking into conflict, He “went up the mountain to pray, and spent the night in prayer to God.” His authority flowed from obedience; His clarity flowed from communion; His courage flowed from a will aligned with the Father. Where Samson acted from impulse, Jesus acted from union. Where Samson’s strength made him feared, Jesus’ holiness made Him untouchable. The difference is not power but discipline—an interior life strong enough to withstand the enemy’s pressure.

Maxwell’s five disciplines fit naturally inside this Christian frame: ordered priorities, daily routines of virtue, the refusal to hide behind excuses, delayed gratification, and a focus on the fruit rather than the friction. These are not self-help techniques; they are the modern expression of asceticism—the training that makes a man capable of confronting evil without becoming its instrument. Samson shows what happens when a man neglects this work. Christ shows what happens when a man embraces it.

ON KEEPING THE LORD'S DAY HOLY[3]

CHAPTER III

DIES ECCLESIAE

The Eucharistic Assembly:
Heart of Sunday

The Sunday Eucharist

34. It is true that, in itself, the Sunday Eucharist is no different from the Eucharist celebrated on other days, nor can it be separated from liturgical and sacramental life as a whole. By its very nature, the Eucharist is an epiphany of the Church; and this is most powerfully expressed when the diocesan community gathers in prayer with its Pastor: "The Church appears with special clarity when the holy People of God, all of them, are actively and fully sharing in the same liturgical celebrations — especially when it is the same Eucharist — sharing one prayer at one altar, at which the Bishop is presiding, surrounded by his presbyters and his ministers". This relationship with the Bishop and with the entire Church community is inherent in every Eucharistic celebration, even when the Bishop does not preside, regardless of the day of the week on which it is celebrated. The mention of the Bishop in the Eucharistic Prayer is the indication of this.

But because of its special solemnity and the obligatory presence of the community, and because it is celebrated "on the day when Christ conquered death and gave us a share in his immortal life",(44) the Sunday Eucharist expresses with greater emphasis its inherent ecclesial dimension. It becomes the paradigm for other Eucharistic celebrations. Each community, gathering all its members for the "breaking of the bread", becomes the place where the mystery of the Church is concretely made present. In celebrating the Eucharist, the community opens itself to communion with the universal Church, imploring the Father to "remember the Church throughout the world" and make her grow in the unity of all the faithful with the Pope and with the Pastors of the particular Churches, until love is brought to perfection.

Third Sunday of Easter[4]An exhortation on how Christ's flock is to conduct itself and an oblique allusion to the Ascension.

 

Easter Patronage of St. Joseph

EPISTLE. Gen. xlix. 23-26.

JOSEPH is a growing son, a growing son and comely to behold: the daughters run to and fro upon the wall. But they that held darts provoked him, and quarreled with him, and envied him. His bow rested upon the strong, and the bands of his arms and his hands were loosed, by the hands of the mighty one of Jacob: thence he came forth a pastor, the stone of Israel. The God of thy father shall be thy helper, and the Almighty shall bless thee with the blessings of heaven above, with the blessings of the deep that lieth beneath, with the blessings of the breasts and of the womb. The blessings of thy father are strengthened with the blessings of his fathers: until the desire of the everlasting hills should come; may they be upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of the Nazarite among his brethren.

GOSPEL. Luke iii. 21-23.

At that time: It came to pass when all the people were baptized, that Jesus also being baptized and praying, heaven was opened: and the Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape as a dove upon Him: and a voice came from heaven: Thou art My beloved Son, in Thee I am well pleased. And Jesus Himself was beginning about the age of thirty years, being (as it was supposed) the son of Joseph.

WHAT WE ARE TO BELIEVE CONCERNING THE EVANGELICAL COUNSELS

In what does the perfection of the Christian life consist?

In the perfection of love (Col. iii. 14). The more a man separates himself from the world, and unites himself with God, the more perfect he will be. We can attain to the perfection of the Christian life by means of certain excellent practices known as the evangelical counsels which Jesus Christ lays before us, and to which He calls us, without directly commanding us to adopt them. So that the difference between the commandments and the evangelical counsels consists in this: that the commandments bind us by an indispensable obligation, but the evangelical counsels do not. The evangelical counsels are:

1.       Voluntary poverty. By voluntary poverty is understood a free-will renunciation of the riches and goods of this world in order to follow Jesus Christ in His poverty.

2.       Perpetual chastity. By perpetual chastity we understand a free-will, life-long abstinence, not only from everything that is contrary to purity, but also abstinence from marriage, in order to live only for God and His holy service in virginal purity.

3.       Entire obedience under a spiritual director. By entire obedience we are to understand a voluntary renunciation of one’s own will in order to follow the will and command of a superior whom one chooses for himself.

In practicing the evangelical counsels there are three points to be observed, in order that they may serve, or help to eternal salvation:

·         They must be practiced with a pure intention, seeking thereby nothing else than to please God and to praise His holy name.

·         With great humility, in no way giving ourselves preference over others.

·         By great fidelity in observing not only what one has vowed, but also what is commanded. Also, one should live diligently and strictly according to the commandments, otherwise the practicing of the evangelical counsels will be of no avail.

Bible in a year Day 289 Wise Influences

Fr. Mike contextualizes our readings from 1 Maccabees today which covers the beginning of Roman rule over the Jewish people. Additionally, he emphasizes the wisdom from Sirach about surrounding ourselves with influences that lead us closer to God and help us grow in holiness. Today’s readings are 1 Maccabees 8, Sirach 22-23, and Proverbs 22:26-29.

THIS WE BELIEVE

PRAYERS AND TEACHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Angel of God[5]

Angel of God, 

my guardian dear,

to whom God’s love commits me here,

ever this day be at my side,
to light and guard, to rule and guide. 
Amen.

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: Conversion of Sinners

·         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




 THE GLASS KEY (1935)

George Raft, Claire Dodd & Edward Arnold
A hard‑edged political underworld tale of loyalty, corruption, and the cost of keeping faith in a crooked city

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1935 and directed by Frank Tuttle, this adaptation of Dashiell Hammett’s 1931 novel stands at the hinge between the early‑’30s gangster cycle and the emerging grammar of film noir. imdb.com
Paramount shaped it as a prestige crime picture: sharp suits, smoky interiors, and the clipped, unsentimental dialogue that defined Hammett’s world.
George Raft’s casting is crucial—his controlled stillness becomes the film’s moral center. Edward Arnold brings political heft as the ward boss Paul Madvig, while Claire Dodd embodies the polished, dangerous glamour of Depression‑era high society.
Shot in crisp black‑and‑white, the film uses shadows, alleys, and back‑room offices as moral landscapes, signaling the noir sensibility that would fully bloom a decade later.

2. Story Summary

Political boss Paul Madvig throws his weight behind a reform candidate, hoping to secure legitimacy and a marriage alliance with the candidate’s daughter, Janet Henry (Claire Dodd).
When her brother is found murdered, suspicion falls on Madvig, and the city’s rival factions move in for the kill.

Ed Beaumont (George Raft), Madvig’s trusted fixer, becomes the film’s pivot point. He navigates double‑crosses, gang pressure, and a brutal beating as he pretends to betray Madvig in order to expose the real killer.
Inside this world:

  • Janet Henry’s poise masks calculation and divided loyalties.
  • Madvig’s paternal warmth collides with his appetite for power.
  • Beaumont’s loyalty is tested at every turn, revealing a man who survives by thinking faster than everyone else.

The resolution is pure Hammett: truth dragged into daylight through strategy, endurance, and a refusal to be intimidated. Beaumont restores order not by idealism but by clarity—seeing people exactly as they are.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. Loyalty Under Pressure
The film treats loyalty as a moral crucible. Beaumont’s fidelity is not sentimental; it is chosen, tested, and nearly broken. His endurance becomes a commentary on integrity in a corrupt system.

B. Power as a Corrupting Gravity
Madvig’s political machine shows how affection, ambition, and self‑interest intertwine. The film exposes the spiritual cost of power—how easily it blinds, isolates, and distorts judgment.

C. Truth as a Violent Light
Hammett’s world insists that truth is never gentle. It arrives through confrontation, exposure, and the stripping away of illusions. Beaumont’s clarity becomes a kind of secular grace—painful, necessary, and purifying.

4. Hospitality Pairing

Ward‑Boss Supper Table

  • A stiff rye whiskey—unadorned, sharp, and honest, matching Beaumont’s temperament.
  • A plate of roast beef or stew, the kind of heavy, late‑night meal eaten in a back‑room office after a political brawl.
  • A single desk lamp or low light, echoing the film’s chiaroscuro moral world.
  • A small metal key placed on the table as a symbolic object—representing access, secrets, and the price of opening locked rooms.

This is a meal for nights when the world feels crooked and you need something solid, warm, and grounding.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where am I tempted to confuse loyalty with convenience?
  • What alliances in my life require clarity rather than sentiment?
  • Where has ambition—mine or others’—distorted my judgment?
  • What truths am I avoiding because they will cost me comfort?
  • How do I act when the room turns against me and I must stand alone?

Sources: imdb.com






Saturday, April 18, 2026

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Pick Your Preference — Smoke & Drink

Pick your smoke — whatever you reach for without thinking.
Pick your drink — whatever burns just enough to remind you you’re alive.
The point isn’t the label.
The point is the lesson:
the small fire you choose now teaches you how to face the great fire later.


✨ Purgatory in the Divine Plan (Short, Sharp, True)

A mystic of the old religious houses once testified that as her community prayed the Office for the Dead, she saw the soul of a recently departed sister rise from “the depths of the earth” and ascend straight to Heaven. No spectacle, no delay — just a soul lifted by the prayers of those still standing in choir, the psalms acting like bellows beneath her feet.

That is purification in its purest form: the fire already finished, the ascent already earned, the community’s prayer becoming the final breath that carries a soul upward. A man with a cigar in one hand and a drink in the other can understand this better than he thinks: your small sacrifices, your chosen burn, your willingness to purify yourself now may be the very thing that helps another soul rise when its hour comes.



Michael’s Corner 

The valiant one whose steps are guided by the LORD,

who will delight in his way,

May stumble, but he will never fall,

for the LORD holds his hand.

(Psalm 37:23-24)

·         30 Days with St. Joseph Day 31

·         Bucket List trip: Sri Lanka

·         National Food Month

o   Chicken Tabaka

·         Spirit Hour: Gibson

Colossal Cave Mountain Park, Tucson

·         Ask any former visitor and they’ll yell it from the rooftops: a trip to this hidden gem in Vail, just a short drive from Tucson, is one of the most unique things to do in Arizona.

·         A former hideout for Apache Indians and stagecoach robbers, Colossal Cave Mountain Park is a maze of caves and tunnels — which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places — is now open for exploration by thrill-seeking tourists from all over the world.


APRIL 18 Saturday of the Second Week of Easter

 

John, Chapter 6, verse 19-20:

When they had rowed about three or four miles, they saw Jesus’ walking on the sea and coming near the boat, and they began to be AFRAID  but he said to them, “It is I. Do not be afraid.”

 

After rowing three or four miles they must have been exhausted and there must have been no wind, for surely any sailor would have used the wind if it was blowing. The conditions on the sea that night had to have been unnerving but there must have been some light from the moon as they had seen our Lord nevertheless, they were afraid.  Then He said, “It is I” or literally “I AM” which was the name of God which no pious Jew was allowed to even say!

 

I wonder if they were thinking of the words of the Torah, 

 

“The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters.” (Genesis 4:2)

 

When they had seen and heard Christ.  They must have known at that point that here was the messiah because they believed. Immediately they arrived on shore and Christ spoke on the “Bread of Life” discourse stating.”

 

Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day.” (John 6:54).

 

At this saying all but these 12 walked away because they believed!

 

We too are like the Apostles in that boat, the boat which we call the Holy Catholic Church.  Let us resolve like the Apostles to believe, follow the precepts of our church and row three or four miles if we must.

Copilot’s Take

John 6 places the apostles in the exact spiritual position the Catechism describes: fear rising, strength failing, and God revealing Himself in the very place that terrifies us. The disciples have rowed three or four miles in the dark, exhausted, disoriented, and unable to make progress. Fear is not irrational here—it is honest. And into that fear Christ speaks the divine name: “I AM. Do not be afraid.”

The Catechism teaches that fear becomes ordered only when it is anchored in God. Fortitude “ensures firmness in difficulties and constancy in the pursuit of the good” (CCC 1808). It does not remove the storm; it prevents the storm from ruling the heart. The apostles are not rebuked for being afraid—they are invited to let fear be reordered by the presence of the One who walks on the waters of chaos. This is the same Spirit who hovered over the deep in Genesis; the same God who reveals Himself as “I AM” in Exodus; the same Christ who now stands on the waves and says, “Do not be afraid.”

The Catechism also teaches that faith is an assent of the whole person to God (CCC 150). The apostles show this assent not by understanding the miracle, but by staying in the boat, receiving Him, and believing the Bread of Life discourse when everyone else walks away. Truth divides. Fear scatters. But faith holds. This is why the Church is symbolized as a boat: she is the place where Christ climbs in, calms the storm, and carries His people to shore. The moment the apostles receive Him, “immediately the boat reached the land”—a sign that grace completes what human effort cannot.

Confronting evil, then, is not about heroic self‑reliance. The Catechism says evil is overcome by truth, perseverance, and the courage that comes from God’s presence (CCC 1808, 2471). The apostles confront the storm not by rowing harder, but by recognizing the One who stands above it. The same is true for the Church today: we row, we strain, we labor—but salvation comes when Christ steps into the boat.

The question that remains is simple: in which part of your life is Christ already walking toward you, waiting for you to stop rowing in fear and let Him in?

Bible in a year Day 288 Battling Against Gossip

Fr. Mike explains the importance of wisdom in our everyday lives when we face temptations to gossip, encouraging us in the battle for virtue, wisdom, and goodness. He emphasizes that we must ask the Lord for his wisdom to guide us as we interact with the people around us, just like the Jews prayed before battle. Today’s readings are 1 Maccabees 7, Sirach 19-21, and Proverbs 22:22-25..

THIS WE BELIEVE

PRAYERS AND TEACHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

The Glory Be[1]

Glory be to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit;
as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be,
world without end.
Amen. 

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: Absent Fathers (Physically & Spiritually)

·         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


THE BISHOP’S WIFE (1947)
Cary Grant, Loretta Young & David Niven
A Christmas parable of visitation, reordered desire, and the quiet restoration of a marriage

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1947 and directed by Henry Koster, the film sits squarely in Hollywood’s post‑war turn toward spiritually inflected domestic dramas.
Samuel Goldwyn produced it with the explicit aim of creating a Christmas film that felt both miraculous and grounded.
The casting is deliberate: Cary Grant’s effortless charm becomes a theological device; Loretta Young’s poise anchors the emotional core; David Niven’s tension embodies clerical overreach and vocational strain.
Shot in warm black‑and‑white tones, the film blends gentle comedy with moral seriousness, using winter streets, parish interiors, and domestic rooms as symbolic spaces of longing and reorientation.
It is one of the era’s clearest attempts to portray divine intervention without spectacle—grace arriving in the form of a visitor who unsettles, redirects, and heals.

2. Story Summary

Bishop Henry Brougham (David Niven) is consumed by his ambition to build a grand cathedral, hoping it will secure influence and satisfy wealthy donors.
His wife Julia (Loretta Young) feels increasingly sidelined, her marriage strained by Henry’s preoccupation and emotional distance.

Into this tension arrives Dudley (Cary Grant), an angel sent in response to Henry’s desperate prayer for guidance.

Inside the bishop’s world:

  • Julia finds in Dudley the attention, gentleness, and presence she has been missing.
  • Henry grows jealous, threatened, and spiritually exposed.
  • Parishioners and friends are quietly transformed by Dudley’s interventions—ice skating, small kindnesses, and unexpected reconciliations.

Dudley never forces outcomes; he reveals hearts.
His presence exposes what each character truly desires—love, admiration, purpose—and then redirects those desires toward fidelity, humility, and charity.
By the film’s end, Henry’s vocation is restored, his marriage renewed, and the cathedral project re‑ordered toward genuine service rather than prestige.
Dudley departs without fanfare, leaving behind a blessing and no memory of himself—only the fruits of grace.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. The Angel as the Corrective of Disordered Desire
Dudley is not a wish‑fulfillment figure; he is a mirror.
He reveals how ambition can masquerade as piety, how neglect can hide beneath “important work,” and how love must be chosen, not assumed.
His charm is not temptation but illumination.

B. Marriage as a Sacred Trust
Julia’s loneliness is treated as a theological wound, not a sentimental one.
The film insists that vocation—especially clerical vocation—cannot eclipse the covenant of marriage.
Grace restores Henry not by empowering him but by humbling him.

C. Christmas as Visitation and Re‑ordering
The Incarnation theme runs quietly beneath the narrative: God arrives, interrupts, and redirects.
The bishop’s crisis becomes a miniature Advent—expectation, disruption, revelation, renewal.

This is a Christmas film in the deepest sense: not festive, but transformative.

4. Hospitality Pairing

Winter Parish Table

  • A warm mug of mulled wine or spiced cider—gentle, aromatic, quietly festive.
  • A simple roast chicken with herbs, signaling the return to domestic love and shared meals.
  • A small evergreen sprig or candle on the table, symbolizing visitation and renewal.
  • Soft lamplight rather than bright illumination, echoing the film’s theme of grace arriving quietly.

Food for a night when the house needs warmth, the heart needs re‑centering, and the soul needs a visitor.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where has ambition—professional, spiritual, or relational—begun to overshadow love.
  • What would it look like for grace to interrupt your schedule the way Dudley interrupts Henry’s.
  • Where have I mistaken busyness for vocation.
  • What relationships in my life need presence rather than accomplishment.
  • How do I respond when grace arrives in a form I did not expect.

If you want this placed into your devotional calendar—Christmas cycle, Advent vigil sequence, or a Sunday film rotation—I can map it directly into your existing architecture.


Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
Home of Mary's Vineyard