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Sunday, December 28, 2025

Claire’s Corner - Stan Lee’s Birthday born 1922 died 2018 ·           Today in honor of the Holy Trinity do the  Divine Office  giving your ...

A Mortgage System That Rewards Marriage, Children, and Service: A Blueprint for American Renewal


Introduction: What If We Rewarded the People Who Hold the Country Together?

Every nation has to decide what it values.
Some reward consumption.
Some reward speculation.
Some reward short-term gain.

But what if America chose to reward the people who actually build the country?

What if the path to homeownership — the heart of the American Dream — became easier for those who commit to marriage, raise children, serve their communities, defend the nation, and carry the weight of a lifetime of work into retirement?

Imagine a mortgage system built around civilizational priorities, not bank profits:

  • –1% mortgage rate for getting married
  • –1% for each child born or adopted
  • –1% for military service
  • –1% for public service (teachers, nurses, first responders)
  • –1% at retirement

This isn’t a gimmick.
It’s a demographic, economic, and cultural strategy — one that could reshape the country for the better.

Let’s explore the positives, the challenges, and how such a system could help renew the American spirit.


The Positives: How This Strengthens the Nation

1. Marriage Becomes a Foundation, Not a Luxury

A 1% mortgage-rate reduction is a life-changing incentive.
It encourages earlier, more stable marriages — the kind that anchor neighborhoods and raise confident children.

2. Children Become a National Investment

A 1% reduction per child transforms the financial equation.
Families can grow without fear of being priced out of their own future.
Demographic decline slows. Hope rises.

3. Service Is Honored in a Tangible Way

Veterans, teachers, nurses, police officers, firefighters, EMTs — the people who keep the country alive — receive real, measurable gratitude.
Not a bumper sticker.
Not a slogan.
A home.

4. Retirement Becomes More Secure

A 1% reduction at retirement honors the long arc of contribution.
It keeps seniors in their homes and reduces poverty in old age.

5. Homeownership Expands and Neighborhoods Stabilize

More families qualify for homes.
More children grow up with roots.
More communities flourish.

6. The Economy Grows from the Bottom Up

Children today are tomorrow’s workers, innovators, and taxpayers.
Stable families reduce social costs and increase civic engagement.
This is long-term economic strategy, not short-term accounting.


The Negatives: Real Challenges to Address

1. Housing Prices Could Rise

More demand without more supply pushes prices upward.
This must be paired with zoning reform and incentives for builders.

2. Banks Lose Interest Revenue

Lower rates mean lower profits.
Government-backed programs would need to bridge the gap.

3. Singles May Feel Overlooked

Any pro-family policy risks appearing unfair.
Parallel incentives for community service or elder care could balance the system.

4. Administrative Complexity

Tracking marriages, births, service records, and retirement status requires coordination.
Fortunately, the infrastructure already exists — it simply needs integration.

5. Incentive Timing

Couples may time marriages or pregnancies around mortgage qualification.
But this simply proves the incentive works.


How This Could Renew America

This policy does more than adjust interest rates.
It reshapes the cultural imagination.

It says:

  • Marriage matters.
  • Children matter.
  • Service matters.
  • Elders matter.
  • Homeownership matters.
  • Stability matters.

It re-centers the American Dream around the people who build the future — not the people who extract from it.

It strengthens the middle class, stabilizes neighborhoods, honors sacrifice, and restores a sense of shared purpose.

It creates a culture where the most important work — forming families, raising children, serving communities — is not punished but prized.

This is how a nation renews itself.


Conclusion: A Nation Worth Building Again

A mortgage system that rewards marriage, children, service, and retirement is more than a financial policy.
It is a moral vision.

It tells young couples:
“Build a home. Build a family. We’re with you.”

It tells veterans and public servants:
“Your sacrifice is seen. Your stability matters.”

It tells retirees:
“You carried us. Now we honor you.”

And it tells the entire country:
“The future is worth investing in.”

America becomes great not through slogans, but through families, communities, and shared sacrifice.
This policy strengthens all three.

If we want a nation that is strong, stable, hopeful, and growing, then we must reward the people who make that possible.


This is one way to begin.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

 


Claire’s Day Try Arnaki me Patates

·         Plan winter fun:

o   Soak in hot springs

o   Hit the snow slopes

o   Ride a snowmobile

o   Go for a dog sled ride

o   Ride a hot air balloon

·         Bucket Item trip: Go on a Safari

·         Get a balanced life month

·         Throw a “Perihelion Day” party

 🌺 Around the World in Perfect Weather: Week 2

Rarotonga, Cook Islands — “Baptism Waters of the Pacific”

January 4–10, 2026


Jan 4 – Arrival in Rarotonga (Epiphany Sunday)

Flight: Bariloche → Buenos Aires → Auckland → Rarotonga (typical $1,450–$1,750 per person)
• Mass: 
St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Arorangi – Epiphany Mass at 9:00 AM
• Lodging: 
The Edgewater Resort & Spa (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$75/day (fresh tuna, taro, tropical fruit)
• Symbolic Act: Walk the lagoon shoreline and journal on “The Light to the Nations.”


Jan 5 – Lagoon Clarity Day (Monday after Epiphany)

Visit: Muri Lagoon – kayaking + snorkeling
• Mass: 
St. Joseph’s Cathedral, Avarua – Daily Mass at 7:00 AM
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (beach café lunch + island BBQ dinner)
• Symbolic Act: Collect a small shell as a reminder of clarity.




Jan 6 – Feast of the Epiphany (Traditional Date)

Visit: Punanga Nui Market (Avarua Market) – crafts, pearls, local culture
• Mass: 
St. Mary’s Catholic Church – Epiphany liturgy
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$75/day (poke bowl lunch + grilled mahi‑mahi supper)
• Symbolic Act: Offer a small gift to a local vendor — your “gold, frankincense, or myrrh.”


Jan 7 – Island Circle Day (Wednesday after Epiphany)

Visit: Full island loop via Rarotonga Bus – scenic stops + village churches
• Mass: 
St. Joseph’s Cathedral – Daily Mass at 7:00 AM
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (roadside fruit stand + island curry dinner)
• Symbolic Act: Write a reflection titled “God in the Ordinary Villages.”


Jan 8 – Mountain Interior Trek (Thursday after Epiphany)

Visit: Cross‑Island Trek with guide – rainforest + “The Needle”
• Mass: 
St. Mary’s – Daily Mass at 7:00 AM
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (mountain café lunch + seafood supper)
• Tickets: ~$55 guided trek
• Symbolic Act: Reflect on “The Needle” as a symbol of direction and discernment.


Jan 9 – Baptism Waters Day (Friday after Epiphany)

Visit: Wigmore’s Waterfall + lagoon swim
• Mass: 
St. Joseph’s Cathedral – Daily Mass at 7:00 AM
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (tropical smoothie lunch + Polynesian dinner)
• Symbolic Act: Renew your baptismal promises privately at the waterfall.


Jan 10 – Farewell to Rarotonga (Saturday after Epiphany)

Visit: Black Rock Beach – volcanic stones + sunset
• Mass: 
St. Mary’s – Saturday Vigil at 6:00 PM
• Lodging: 
Edgewater Resort (~$185/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (farewell island supper)
• Symbolic Act: Leave a written prayer of thanksgiving tucked under a Black Rock stone.




💰 Cost Snapshot (Jan 4–10 Rarotonga Week)

Lodging (6 nights): ~$1,110
Meals (7 days): ~$490–$510
Tickets/Activities: ~$55–$75
Local Transport: ~$120–$150
Flight Bariloche → Rarotonga: ~$1,450–$1,750 round trip per person

➡️ Total per person: ~$3,225–$3,595 for the Rarotonga week



JANUARY 4 Epiphany Sunday

St. Elizabeth Ann Seton-11th Day of Christmas-Spaghetti

 Genesis, Chapter 31, verse 31

Jacob answered Laban, 'I was AFRAID, thinking you were going to snatch your daughters from me.

 According to Kabalistic sources[1] Laban was a powerful man.  Laban was a magi and the whole world feared him. Jacob feared him too, and that was why he fled from Laban in the middle of the night with his wives Rachel and Leah. Laban had cheated Jacob many times but in spite of Laban’s sly tricks God had ensured that Jacob prospered. Jacob feared Laban but when the Lord said to him, “Go back to the land of your fathers and to your relatives, I will be with you”, he did so, but in secret. It is natural to fear powerful men or women who can do us grave harm. What does a person do who finds themselves afraid of powerful, selfish and perhaps evil people? Naturally your choices are you can either fight, run, do nothing, come to a compromise or grow by developing a third alternative as described by the late Dr. Steven Covey[2]. That is to come to a solution that is better than Jacob or Laban in this example, could have come up on their own.  In this case God intervened for Jacob by coming to Laban in a dream warning him not to harm Jacob and as a result both Laban and Jacob came up with a solution that was better than they separately had in mind; and parted as friends. Next time you are faced with fear; resist the temptation to react in the classic fight or flight method and try to discover a way for everyone to win. That is not always possible but that should be your goal. 

Copilot’s Take 

Fear often convinces us that the powerful hold the final word, but Epiphany reminds us that God’s revelation always outruns human intimidation. Jacob fled because he saw only Laban’s strength, yet God was already at work in the unseen—redirecting motives, restraining harm, and preparing a path neither man could have imagined alone. When we face people whose influence feels overwhelming or whose intentions seem selfish or destructive, the invitation is not to collapse into fight or flight but to pause long enough for God to reveal the third way: the path of creative fidelity, truth without violence, courage without recklessness, and reconciliation without surrender. It won’t always be possible, but it is always worth seeking, because the God who intervened for Jacob still steps into human conflict with light strong enough to break cycles of fear. 

ON KEEPING THE LORD'S DAY HOLY[3]

CHAPTER II

DIES CHRISTI

The Day of the Risen Lord
and of the Gift
of the Holy Spirit

The weekly Easter

19. "We celebrate Sunday because of the venerable Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, and we do so not only at Easter but also at each turning of the week": so wrote Pope Innocent I at the beginning of the fifth century, testifying to an already well established practice which had evolved from the early years after the Lord's Resurrection. Saint Basil speaks of "holy Sunday, honored by the Lord's Resurrection, the first fruits of all the other days"; and Saint Augustine calls Sunday "a sacrament of Easter".

The intimate bond between Sunday and the Resurrection of the Lord is strongly emphasized by all the Churches of East and West. In the tradition of the Eastern Churches in particular, every Sunday is the anastàsimos hemèra, the day of Resurrection, and this is why it stands at the heart of all worship.

In the light of this constant and universal tradition, it is clear that, although the Lord's Day is rooted in the very work of creation and even more in the mystery of the biblical "rest" of God, it is nonetheless to the Resurrection of Christ that we must look in order to understand fully the Lord's Day. This is what the Christian Sunday does, leading the faithful each week to ponder and live the event of Easter, true source of the world's salvation.

Epiphany Sunday

WHAT mystery does the Church celebrate today?

 

She celebrates to-day a threefold mystery:

1. The arrival in Bethlehem of the Wise Men from the East to adore the new-born, Savior.

2. The baptism of Jesus in the Jordan.

3. The first miracle of Jesus at the wedding in Cana.

Why is this festival called Epiphany, or the manifestation?

 

Because in the three events just mentioned Jesus manifested Himself not only to the Jews, but also to the gentiles, as the expected Messiah, the Redeemer of the world, and the beloved of His heavenly Father. The Church sings to-day with joy at the Introit, “Behold the Lord, the Ruler, is come, and a kingdom in his hand, and power and dominion” (Mai. iii. 1). “Give to the king Thy judgment, O God, and to the king’s son Thy justice” (Ps. Ixxi. 2).

Prayer.

O God, Who didst on this day reveal Thy only-begotten Son to the gentiles by the guidance of a star, grant in Thy mercy that we, who know Thee now by faith, may be brought to be hold the beauty of Thy majesty.

 

EPISTLE. Is. Ix. 1-6.

Arise, be enlightened, O Jerusalem: for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. For behold darkness shall cover the earth, and a mist the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee: and His glory shall be seen upon thee. And the gentiles shall walk in thy light, and kings in the brightness of thy rising. Lift up thy eyes round about and see all these- are gathered together, they are come to thee: thy sons shall come from afar and thy daughters shall rise up at thy side. Then shalt thou see and abound, and thy heart shall wonder and be enlarged, when the multitude of the sea shall be converted to thee, the strength of the gentiles shall come to thee. The multitude of camels shall cover thee, the dromedaries of Madian and Epha: all they from Saba shall come, bringing gold and frankincense, and showing forth praise to the Lord.

Of what does the prophet here speak?

 

He foretells the future manifestation of the light of the Lord Jesus to Jerusalem, which was a type of the Church, and that by that light the gentiles should enter into the one Church of Christ.

Prayer.

Give praise, O ye heavens, and rejoice, O earth; ye mountains, give praise with jubilation, because the Lord hath comforted His people, and will have mercy upon His poor ones (Is. xlix. 13).

GOSPEL. Matt. ii. 1-12.

When Jesus, therefore, was born in Bethlehem of Juda, in the days of King Herod, behold, there came Wise Men from the East to Jerusalem, saying: Where is He that is born King of the Jews? For we have seen His Star in the East and are come to adore Him. And King Herod hearing this, was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him; and assembling together all the chief priests and scribes of the people, he inquired of them where Christ should be born. But they said to him, In Bethlehem of Juda: for so it is written by the prophet: And thou Bethlehem, the land of Juda, art not the least among the princes of Juda: for out of thee shall come forth the Captain that shall rule My people Israel. Then Herod, privately calling the Wise Men, learned diligently of them the time of the star which appeared to them: and sending them into Bethlehem, said: Go and diligently inquire after the child: and when you have found Him, bring me word again, that I also may come and adore Him. Who having heard the king, went their way: and behold, the star which they had seen in the East, went before them, until it came and stood over where the child was. And seeing the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy. And entering into the house, they found the child with Mary, His Mother, and falling down, they adored Him: and opening their treasures, they offered Him gifts, gold, frankincense, and myrrh. And having received an answer in sleep that they should not return to Herod, they went back another way into their country.

Why did the Wise Men come from afar to seek the Savior in Jerusalem?

They lived in Arabia, and had acquired some information of the prophecies of Israel, particularly of the noted prophecy of Balaam, “A star shall rise out of Jacob, and a scepter shall spring up from Israel” (Num. xxiv. IT), which was the more significant to them because they were, as their name denotes, skilled in astronomy. But to these human considerations must be added the light of divine inspiration, as St. Leo says, “The star shone also in their hearts a beautiful example for us to follow, without delay, the inspirations of divine grace, and to do the will of God without fear of men”.

What was the significance of the presents which the Wise Men offered to the Savior?

In offering gold, the Wise Men honored the infant Jesus as King; in frankincense, as God; in myrrh, as suffering Man.

How can we offer to Jesus similar gifts?

We can present Him with gold by giving up to Him what we value most, our will; also, by giving alms in His name to the poor. We can present Him incense in fervent and devout prayers ascending to heaven; and myrrh, by preserving purity of body and soul.

Prayer.

Give to me, O my divine Savior, the faith of these Wise Men; enlighten my understanding with the light which enlightened them; but move my heart also, that I may follow that light, and sincerely seek Thee, and Thee only, Who didst first seek me. Grant that I may find and adore Thee, with the Wise Men, in spirit and in truth, offering to Thee, like them, gold in my obedience and alms, incense in my prayers, myrrh in my penances and mortifications, that, after having brought Thee the offerings of my faith on earth, I may adore Thee in Thy eternal glory. Amen.

Widow Saint[4] Elizabeth Ann Seton

 

This wife, mother and foundress of a religious congregation was born Elizabeth Ann Bayley on August 28, 1774, in New York City, the daughter of an eminent physician and professor at what is now Columbia University. Brought up as an Episcopalian, she received an excellent education, and from her early years she manifested an unusual concern for the poor.

 

In 1794 Elizabeth married William Seton, with whom she had five children. The loss of their fortune so affected William's health that in 1803 Elizabeth and William went to stay with Catholic friends at Livorno, Italy. William died six weeks after their arrival, and when Elizabeth returned to New York City some six months later, she was already a convinced Catholic. She met with stern opposition from her Episcopalian friends but was received into full communion with the Catholic Church on March 4, 1805.

 

Abandoned by her friends and relatives, Elizabeth was invited by the superior of the Sulpicians in Baltimore to launch a school for girls in that city. The school prospered, and eventually the Sulpician superior, with the approval of Bishop Carroll, gave Elizabeth and her assistants a rule of life. They were also permitted to make religious profession and to wear a religious habit.

 

In 1809 Elizabeth moved her young community to Emmitsburg, Maryland, where she adopted as a rule of life an adaptation of the rule observed by the Sisters of Charity, founded by St. Vincent de Paul. Although she did not neglect the ministry to the poor, and especially to Negroes, she actually laid the foundation for what became the American parochial school system. She trained teachers and prepared textbooks for use in schools; she also opened orphanages in Philadelphia and New York City. She died at Emmitsburg on January 4, 1821, was beatified by Pope John XXIII in 1963, and was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1975.

 

St. Elizabeth Ann Seton - Day Eleven[5]

 

Elizabeth Seton was born of a wealthy and distinguished Episcopalian family. She was baptized in the Episcopal faith and was a faithful adherent of the Episcopal Church until her conversion to Catholicism.

 

·         Day Eleven activity (Story Time)

·         Day Eleven recipe (Colonial Wassail)

 Today’s menu is in anticipation of today’s saint.

Christmas Calendar

 Read: Today we remember the first native-born citizen of the United States to be canonized as a saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton.

 Reflect: Only if people change will the world change; and in order to change, people need the light that comes from God, the light which so unexpectedly [on the night of Christmas] entered into our night.

Pray: Pray for the intersession of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton today.

 Act: Aim to put these practices of building a domestic Church into action.

11th day of Christmas

 

 The 11 pipers piping is a sign for the eleven faithful apostles.  It is interesting to note that Judas’ sin was due to fear, greed, pride, and envy.  Today would be a good day to read about the remaining 11 pipers and their courage to create a Kingdom of God that changed the world. 

Spaghetti Day[6]

One of the world’s favorite dishes, spaghetti, is more than deserving of its own little holiday. And because it is both simple and delicious, spaghetti is the perfect dish to make to bring out your inner chef, even if you don’t have all that much cooking experience!

 Many people don’t know that the first historical reference to boiled noodles suggests that the Arabs invented the dish thousands of years ago, long before it became a staple of Italian cuisine.

What’s especially remarkable about this is that historical records actually refer to dried noodles being purchased from a street vendor, which means that pasta has been sold in stores since at least the 5th century A.D.! Of course, today we associate pasta with the Italians, who revolutionized the dish and invented a wide variety of pasta shapes. 

The first Western pasta was likely long, thin forms made in Sicily around the 12th century; till this day, spaghetti is the most common round-rod type of pasta and in Italian, “spaghetti” means “little lines.” However, the popularity of pasta only spread across the whole country of Italy after the establishment of pasta factories in the 19th century, substantially shortening the time needed for making dishes like spaghetti and enabling the mass production of pasta for the Italian market. 

The steady flow of Italian immigrants to the United States brought traditional Italian dishes with it, and spaghetti was offered in restaurants as early as the 19th century. Spaghetti then gained popularity all over the world.

Spaghetti Day Recipe

Ingredients: (serves 2)

1/2 medium onion
1-1/2 tbsp olive oil
2 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
200g tin chopped tomatoes
20g pack basil leaves, chopped finely
200g dried spaghetti (roughly half of a 500g pack)
100g ball mozzarella
a few pinches of salt & a bit of oil for the pasta

Preparation:

Peel the onion and the garlic and chop both finely. Set a large frying pan over medium heat and when hot, pour in the oil then add the onion. Cook the onion for about 4-5 mins, or until it softens, stirring occasionally. Add the garlic, cook 2 mins more until fragrant. Then, add the tomatoes and half the basil. Leave to gently bubble for 15 mins or so, stirring occasionally–the sauce should become thick and pulpy. Break up any large clumps of tomato with the back of a wooden spoon.

Pour water ¾ of the way up your largest pot. Heat over a high heat and add several large pinches of salt and a spoon or so of oil. When water has reached a rolling boil, put the spaghetti in it. Giving it a stir every now and then stir to separate the pasta, cook it according to pack instructions, usually about 10 mins. Before you finish cooking it, taste a strand of the pasta. It should be just soft, but not mushy. Scoop out a cup of water before draining and set aside (this will help to loosen your sauce). Put the drained pasta back into its cooking pan, then pour in the tomato sauce.

Give everything a good stir. The sauce should just coat the pasta, but if it is thick and looks dry, stir in a few spoons of the pasta water you set aside before. If it is watery, cook over a low heat for 2-3 mins or until evaporates, stirring often.

Use your hands to break the mozzarella into chunky pieces and stir through the pasta along with the remaining basil leaves.

Serve straight away.

Bible in a Year Day 187 Praying for Time

Fr. Mike recalls Hezekiah's prayer for more time and reveals how Hezekiah did not use that time wisely. We all are only given a specific amount of time on this earth, and it's up to us to use that time to become more like Christ, so we can spend eternity with him in heaven. Today's readings are 2 Kings 21, 2 Chronicles 32, and Psalm 145.

Daily Devotions/Activities

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: An increase of the Faithful.

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Pray for our nation.

·         Rosary.

Swamp Water (1941): Mercy in the Okefenokee

Dana Andrews • Anne Baxter • Walter Brennan

A Southern Parable of Truth, Mercy, and Restoration

Jean Renoir’s Swamp Water is more than a backwoods thriller. Beneath the moss and mud of the Okefenokee lies a moral drama about what happens when a man chooses truth over reputation, mercy over vengeance, and communion over exile.

Ben Ragan (Dana Andrews) enters the swamp looking for his lost dog and instead finds Tom Keefer (Walter Brennan), a fugitive living in isolation after being falsely accused of murder. Their uneasy alliance becomes the film’s moral center: two men, one young and untested, the other wounded and hardened, learning to trust each other in a world that has already judged them.

Julie (Anne Baxter), Tom’s daughter, embodies quiet dignity amid poverty and mistreatment. Her presence becomes the film’s Marian counterpoint to the jealousy and false accusation that swirl around Ben’s former sweetheart, Mabel.

By the end, truth emerges, the real killers are exposed, and Tom walks back into town clean‑shaven and restored — a prodigal welcomed home not because he sinned, but because the community finally sees him clearly.

Catholic Lessons from the Swamp

1. Mercy Over Vengeance

Tom’s refusal to kill the surviving Dorson brother is the film’s most explicitly Christian moment. He chooses mercy not because the man deserves it, but because Tom refuses to let injustice deform his soul.

2. Fortitude in the Face of False Judgment

Ben risks everything — reputation, relationships, even his life — to clear Tom’s name. This is fortitude in its purest form: truth pursued at personal cost.

3. The Dignity of the Outcast

Tom’s return to town, washed and restored, mirrors the Prodigal Son’s reintegration. The community’s acceptance becomes a sacrament of healing.

4. Jealousy vs. Charity

Mabel’s false accusation, born of jealousy, shows how disordered desire leads to injustice. Julie’s humility and purity offer the Marian alternative.

5. The Swamp as the Human Heart

Renoir’s swamp is a moral landscape — murky, dangerous, full of hidden sins — yet also the place where truth is found, purified, and brought back into the light.

The Okefenokee Mercy Supper

A hospitality pairing inspired by the film’s themes of grit, truth, and restoration.

🍽️ Meal: Tom Keefer’s Redemption Stew

A rustic, Southern one‑pot meal that feels like something Tom would have eaten the night he finally came home.

Ingredients

  • Smoked sausage or ham hock
  • White beans
  • Onion + garlic
  • Collard greens
  • Splash of cider vinegar
  • Black pepper + thyme

Method

Brown the sausage or ham hock. Add onions and garlic until translucent. Add beans, greens, and broth. Simmer until everything softens into unity. Finish with a splash of cider vinegar.

Symbolism

  • Everything in one pot → unlikely partnerships
  • Slow transformation → the long arc of justice
  • Greens and beans → poverty transfigured into dignity
  • Vinegar at the end → the sting of truth that sets a man free

🍸 Drink Pairing: The Swamp‑Clearing

Built entirely from your bar stock.

Ingredients

  • 1.5 oz bourbon
  • 0.5 oz Kraken rum
  • 0.5 oz Cointreau
  • 2 oz cider
  • Lime squeeze

Method

Shake bourbon, Kraken, and Cointreau. Pour over ice. Top with cider. Finish with lime.

Why It Works

The drink begins dark and ends bright — a liquid retelling of Tom’s journey from exile to restoration.


✝️ A Table Prayer for the Film

“Lord, grant us the courage to stand for truth like Ben, the humility to receive mercy like Tom, and the charity to welcome the outcast back into communion. May this meal be a sign of the restoration You desire for every human heart.”



Start 2026 in the MOST POWERFUL Way Possible!

Saturday, January 3, 2026

 

·         Full Wolf Moon

o   According to the almanac today we are having a Full Wolf Moon; plan to go with your children or grandchildren around a fire and howl a little at the moon having fun together. Also, you could sit down together and listen to the music from Peter and the Wolf. As a child this was one of my favorite record albums that I would make my mother play repeatedly much to her distress.

Vinny’s Corner-Mel Gibson’s Birthday 1956

Whoever is without love does not know God, for God is love.

(1 John 4:8)

·         International Mind-Body Wellness Day

·         John Ronald Reuel Tolkien Day

·         Festival of Sleep Day

Around the World in Perfect Weather: A 52‑Week Dream Trip

🎨 Valparaíso • Neruda’s Bohemian Port
January 3 – January 10, 2026

Jan 3 – Arrival in Valparaíso
• Travel: Easy coastline drive or short flight north from Bariloche/Santiago ($120–$180 one‑way)
• Lodging: 
Hotel Da Vinci Valparaíso ($95/night) – boutique stay in the historic quarter
• Meals: ~$60/day (seafood empanadas + local wine)
• Symbolic Act: Journal on “Port of arrival” — reflect on thresholds and beginnings

Jan 4 – Hillside Colors & Neruda’s House (Sunday, Epiphany Vigil)
• Visit: La Sebastiana, Pablo Neruda’s House – museum of poetry and views
• Mass: 
Iglesia de la Matriz de Valparaíso — Sunday Mass (Epiphany Vigil)
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$65/day (harbor café lunch + bohemian supper)
• Tickets: ~$10 entry
• Symbolic Act: Sketch a hillside mural as a symbol of layered stories



Jan 5 – Feast of the Epiphany (Holy Day of Obligation)
• Mass: Catedral de Valparaíso — Epiphany Mass
• Visit: Cerro Concepción — panoramic views and street art
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$70/day (celebratory Epiphany supper with seafood and citrus)
• Symbolic Act: Journal on “Light to the nations” — reflect on the Magi’s journey in a port city

Jan 6 – Port & Market Communion
• Visit: Mercado Cardonal — bustling local market
• Mass: Daily Mass at 11:00 AM or 8:00 PM
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$60/day (market lunch + seafood supper)
• Symbolic Act: Share fruit or bread with fellow travelers

Jan 7 – Civic Art & Street Murals
• Walk: Cerro Alegre — famous street art neighborhoods
• Mass: Daily Mass at 11:00 AM or 8:00 PM
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$65/day (street café lunch + wine bar dinner)
• Symbolic Act: Journal on “Walls that speak” — reflect on civic joy

Jan 8 – Coastal Rest & Reflection
• Visit: Playa Las Torpederas — quiet beach near the port
• Mass: Daily Mass at 11:00 AM or 8:00 PM
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$60/day (beach picnic + farewell supper)
• Symbolic Act: Journal on “Rest after Epiphany” — pause in the light of revelation

Jan 9 – Ascensor & Panoramic Farewell
• Visit: Ascensor Artillería — historic funicular with panoramic views




• Mass: Daily Mass at 11:00 AM or 8:00 PM
• Lodging: Hotel Da Vinci (~$95/night)
• Meals: ~$65/day (harbor café lunch + farewell dinner)
• Tickets: ~$1.50 funicular ride
• Symbolic Act: Write a closing note of gratitude and leave it at the port

Jan 10 – Departure from Valparaíso
• Travel: Return to Santiago (~$120–$180 one‑way)
• Meals: ~$60/day (light breakfast + airport lunch)
• Symbolic Act: Journal on “Port of departure” — reflect on transitions and onward journeys

💰 Cost Snapshot (Jan 3–10 Valparaíso Week)

Lodging (7 nights): ~$665

Meals (7 days): ~$445–$460

Tickets/Activities: ~$25–$30

Local Transport (funiculars, buses): ~$50–$70

Flight/Drive Santiago → Valparaíso: ~$120–$180 per person

➡️ Total per person: ~$1,300–$1,400 for the Valparaíso week


January 3 First Saturday

Holy Name of Jesus-10th Day of Christmas-Full Wolf Moon

 Genesis, Chapter 28, Verse 17

He was AFRAID and said, 'How awe-inspiring this place is! This is nothing less than the abode of God, and this is the gate of heaven!' 

This verse is about Jacob, who was the grandson of Abraham and he was on a journey to the ancestral home of Abraham, Haran.  During this journey he had a dream while sleeping in the desert that put him in a Holy fear. Almost all fear is destructive but holy fear is the beginning of wisdom and prepares one to do the will of God. A holy fear helps us to have a great respect for life in all its stages from the child that goes in the mother’s womb to the elderly that are approaching their end of life. Holy fear also encompasses a great respect for the earth and all its creatures. The earth in its grandeur reminds us of the awe of our God. Make plans to go out to some awe-inspiring place to experience heavens gates. Holy fear compels us to protect others and nature; realizing that the earth and each life in it are sacred and deserving of protection.

Copilot’s Take

Jacob wakes from his desert dream trembling, not with the panic that scatters a man, but with the holy fear that gathers him. “How awe‑inspiring this place is… this is the gate of heaven.” On the tenth day of Christmas, under the Full Wolf Moon, the Church whispers the Holy Name of Jesus — the Name before which every fear is sifted, sorted, and redeemed. Jacob’s fear becomes reverence; his loneliness becomes encounter; his stone pillow becomes an altar. Holy fear does this: it reorders the heart so we can recognize the sacred in front of us — the unborn child, the aging parent, the stranger, the land itself. It teaches us that creation is not raw material but entrusted gift, that every life bears the imprint of the One whose Name we invoke today. On this First Saturday, let Jacob’s awakening become our own. Go somewhere that stirs awe — a canyon overlook, a winter field, a quiet chapel — and let the veil thin. Holy fear is not the dread that shrinks us but the clarity that enlarges us, reminding us that we walk daily on the threshold of heaven, and that our task is to guard what God calls good.

First Saturday Devotion[1]

The practice of the First Saturday devotion was requested by Our Lady of Fatima, who appeared to three shepherd children in Fatima, Portugal, multiple times starting in 1917. She said to Lucia, the oldest of the three children: “I shall come to ask . . . that on the First Saturday of every month, Communions of reparation be made in atonement for the sins of the world.” Years later she repeated her request to Sr. Lucia, the only one still living of the three young Fatima seers, while she was a postulant sister living in a convent in Spain: “Look, my daughter, at my Heart, surrounded with thorns with which ungrateful men pierce me at very moment by their blasphemies and ingratitude. You at least try to console me, and say that I promise to assist at the hour of death, with the graces necessary for salvation, all those who, on the first Saturday of five consecutive months, shall confess, receive Holy Communion, recite five decades of the rosary, and keep me company for 15 minutes while meditating on the 15 mysteries of the rosary, with the intention of making reparation to me.” 

Conditions to Fulfill the First Saturday Devotion

There are five requirements to obtain this promise from the Immaculate Heart of Mary. On five consecutive first Saturdays of the month, one should:

1. Have the intention of consoling the Immaculate Heart in a spirit of reparation.

2. Go to confession (within eight days before or after the first Saturday).

3. Receive Holy Communion.

4. Say five decades of the Holy Rosary.

5. Meditate for 15 minutes on the mysteries of the Holy Rosary with the goal of keeping Our Lady company (for example, while in church or before an image or statue of Our Lady).

Read How to Make Your First Saturday Rosary Meditation According to Sr. Lucia

Why Five Saturdays?

Our Lord appeared to Sr. Lucia on May 29, 1930, and gave her the reason behind the five Saturdays devotion. It is because there are five types of offenses and blasphemies committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary:

1. Blasphemies against the Immaculate Conception

2. Blasphemies against Our Lady’s perpetual virginity

3.  Blasphemies against her divine maternity, in refusing at the same time to recognize her as the Mother of men

4.  Blasphemies of those who publicly seek to sow in the hearts of children, indifference or scorn or even hatred of their Immaculate Mother

5.  Offenses of those who outrage Our Lady directly in her holy images

Never think that Jesus is indifferent to whether or not His mother is honored!

The Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus[2]

Devotion to the Holy Name of Jesus was originally reserved to the Feast of the Circumcision, since it was at His circumcision that our Lord received His name. But because of the growth of this devotion, a separate feast was instituted, first by the Franciscans in the seventeenth century, then by the universal Church (its date was permanently fixed by Pope St. Pius X). One of the most cherished customs of this feast is singing the hymn, Jesu, Dulcis Memoria by St. Bernard of Clairvaux, the great medieval monk and tireless promoter of devotion to the Holy Name. The Litany of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, recited either after Mass or in procession, is also a popular devotion.

Holy Name of Jesus[3]

The Name Jesus as had been foretold by the angel. The feast is meant to impress on us Christians the dignity of the Holy Name.

What did a name signify originally?

The name should express the nature of a thing. Thus, Adam in paradise gave the animals names in accordance with their being. Among the Jews God's name expressed His essence, Yahweh, i.e., I (alone) am who am (and cause all else to be). The Jews had the highest respect for the name of God, a reverence that finds continuation in the Our Father: "Hallowed be Thy Name." Persons who played prominent roles in the history of salvation often received their names from God Himself. Adam — man of the earth; Eve — mother of all the living; Abraham — father of many nations; Peter — the rock. The Savior's precursor was given the name God assigned him. According to divine precedent, then, the name of the Redeemer should not be accidental, of human choosing, but given by God Himself. For His name should express His mission. We read in Sacred Scripture how the angel Gabriel revealed that name to Mary: "You shall call His name Jesus." And to St. Joseph the angel not merely revealed the name but explained its meaning: "You shall call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins." The Messiah should not only be the savior but should be called Savior. With Jesus, therefore, the name actually tells the purpose of His existence. This is why we must esteem His name as sacred. Whenever we pronounce it, we ought to bow our heads; for the very name reminds us of the greatest favor we have ever received, salvation.

Jesus[4]

His name was called Jesus, which was called by the Angel before He was conceived in the womb." LUKE ii. 21.

1. It is not difficult to meditate upon the Holy Name, or to use the Holy Name in prayer. More than any other name, perhaps alone among all proper names, it is appropriate to the One Who owned it. Usually, the names of men are given at random; they mean nothing in themselves; a man who happens to be called John might just as well have been called Thomas or William; the mere name tells us nothing about him; it is a convenient means of distinguishing him from others, a label put upon him and little or no more With a few human beings it has been otherwise: Adam, Abraham, Josue, John the Baptist were given names that signified the men on whom they were bestowed. But with none is this so true as it is with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. With care the Angel impressed it on His Mother's mind: "Thou shalt call His name Jesus," he said, and there followed the description of His future greatness. With care it was repeated to Joseph: Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins.

2. The Name stands as a complete summary and description of our Lord's character and office, and it is under this aspect that it has been regarded by thousands of saints, whose hearts have melted at its mere sound. To them Jesus is their God, Jesus is their King, Jesus is their Redeemer, Jesus is their Mediator, Jesus is their Savior, Jesus is their great Priest, Jesus is their Intercessor, Jesus is the Captain under Whom they fight, Jesus is the Leader Whom they follow, Jesus is their Teacher, Jesus is the Giver of their law, Jesus is the Spouse and Shepherd of their souls, Jesus is their Light, Jesus is their Life, Jesus is the Judge before Whom they rejoice to think that they must one day stand, Jesus is their final and eternal Reward, for which alone they live.

3. But He is also to them the mirror of all the most glorious and winning virtues. He is, and His Name tells them that He is, unbounded Charity, infinite Mercy, extremist Kindness, deepest Humility, most devoted Piety, transparent Simplicity, uttermost Poverty, Chastity without a stain. It is the prerogative of love to transform those who love into the likeness of Him Whom they love; and as the mere name of one who is loved cannot sound in the ear or be thought of in the mind without adding to the love which is already there, so the thought of the Holy Name and the mention of the Holy Name have a kind of sacramental power in the hearts of His saints. They seem to convey the grace which enables men to think like Him, to speak like Him, to act like Him, to sacrifice themselves like Him, and to Him, and for Him, and along with Him, to make Him known to others, not by word only, but also by reproduction of Him in themselves, and to win all men to love Him.

Bless the Lord, O my soul, and let all that is within thee bless His Holy Name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and never forget all He hath done for thee. Ps. cii. i, 2.

Names are important.[5]

Most of us remember the elementary school playground and the mean names kids called each other. Author and speaker, Kary Oberbrunner, states that we all have a secret name that the One who made us gives us. Oberbrunner said, “My name is Kary, and I have a girl’s name.” He was no stranger to mean names on the playground. He went on to say that each of us has three names:

  1. Our birth name – the name assigned to us when we arrive in this world.
  2. Our given names – the names assigned to us as we walk through the world. These names can be positive and negative, ranging from successful, beautiful, star athlete to those names assigned by mean kids, like concentration camp victim, stupid, addict.
  3. Our secret name – the name granted to us by God, Oberbrunner said the problem is our birth names and given names don’t ever fill up the void inside us. We pretend and wear masks.

What would God call you?

 When Christ called his apostles; He revealed to some of them God’s name for them. Sons of Thunder for John and James and for Simon son of John, He called him Peter which means “Rock”.

 Christmas Calendar[6]

Read "But the one name that contains everything is the one that the Son of God received in his incarnation: JESUS. The divine name may not be spoken by human lips, but by assuming humanity the Word of God hands it over to us and we can invoke it: "Jesus," "YHWAH saves." 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. (Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 2666)

Reflect "May he—who did not shrink from taking a beginning like ours—perfect in us his gifts, and may he also make us children of God, he who for our sakes wished to become a child of man." — St. Augustine, Sermons, 184

Pray Today we remember and honor the Most Holy Name of Jesus. Take time to read the Litany of the Holy Name of Jesus.

Act Make reading the daily readings a part of your New Year's habits this year.

Today is the tenth day of Christmas the 10 Lord’s leaping are a sign for the Ten Commandments.

 

Bible in a Year Day 186 Struggles with Self-Interest

Fr. Mike highlights the goodness of Hezekiah as king of Judah but also points out his failure to protect the future of his people. While Hezekiah let his self-interest cloud his judgment, we are reminded to pray for those who will come after us, doing our best to preserve what will be theirs one day. Today's readings are 2 Kings 20, 2 Chronicles 31, and Psalm 144. 

Daily Devotions

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

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary



[4]Goffine’s Devout Instructions, 1896.

[6]http://www.usccb.org/prayer-and-worship/liturgical-year/christmas/christmas-january-3.cfm


🎬 Too Many Husbands (1940)

Starring: Jean Arthur, Fred MacMurray, Melvyn Douglas
Director: Wesley Ruggles
Studio: Columbia Pictures
Based on: Home and Beauty (1919) by W. Somerset Maugham, retitled Too Many Husbands for New York; inspired by Tennyson’s Enoch Arden.


⭐ Plot Summary

Vicky Lowndes (Jean Arthur) believes her husband Bill (Fred MacMurray) has died in a boating accident. Grieving and lonely, she eventually marries Henry (Melvyn Douglas), Bill’s best friend and business partner.

Six months into her new marriage, Bill unexpectedly returns—very much alive—after surviving on a deserted island.

What follows is a screwball triangle of:

  • two husbands who both want her,
  • a wife who enjoys being adored by both,
  • and a legal/moral puzzle about marriage, loyalty, and desire.

The men bicker, compete, and even share a bedroom to keep an eye on each other, while Vicky refuses to choose until they “work it out.” The film plays the situation for comedy rather than scandal, leaning into rapid-fire dialogue, jealousy, and gender-role satire.


🎭 Why It Works

Jean Arthur is the engine of the film—vivacious, mischievous, and fully aware of her power. MacMurray and Douglas play beautifully off each other: one rugged and impulsive, the other refined and strategic.

It’s stage‑bound (Columbia kept the budget tight), but the performances and pacing make it sparkle.


✝️ Catholic Moral & Virtue Reflections

This is where your hospitality‑and‑formation lens shines. The film’s comedic premise actually opens up rich moral territory.

1. Marriage as Covenant, Not Convenience

The film treats marriage lightly—almost as a social contract that can be rearranged.
Catholic teaching insists marriage is:

  • exclusive,
  • permanent,
  • ordered toward mutual self-gift.

The comedy works precisely because the audience knows the situation is morally impossible. The absurdity highlights the seriousness of the real thing.

2. The Temptation of Being “Wanted by Two”

Vicky enjoys the attention.
This is the spiritual danger of vanity—the desire to be adored rather than to love.
Her indecision becomes a mirror for our own temptations to keep options open instead of committing fully.

3. Friendship Tested by Rivalry

Bill and Henry were business partners and friends.
Their rivalry exposes:

  • envy,
  • suspicion,
  • the fragility of male ego.

Catholic virtue calls for justice and charity—even when desires collide.

4. Providence and the Return of the “Dead”

Bill’s reappearance echoes Enoch Arden—a story about sacrifice, not competition.
Maugham’s play satirizes that ideal; the film softens it into farce.
But the underlying question remains:
What do we owe the people we once vowed to love?


🍸 Hospitality Pairing: A 1940 Screwball Cocktail

Your bar stock is perfect for this era.

The “Vicky’s Dilemma”

A playful, balanced drink representing her two husbands:

  • 1 oz gin (Bill’s boldness)
  • 1 oz bourbon (Henry’s steadiness)
  • 0.5 oz Cointreau
  • 0.5 oz lemon juice
  • Shake hard; serve up; garnish with a lemon twist split down the middle.

A drink that shouldn’t work—but does—just like the film’s premise.



Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
Home of Mary's Vineyard