This blog is based on references in the Bible to fear. God wills that we “BE NOT AFRAID”. Vincit qui se vincit" is a Latin phrase meaning "He conquers who conquers himself." Many theologians state that the eighth deadly sin is fear. It is fear and its natural animal reaction to fight or flight that is the root cause of our failings to create a Kingdom of God on earth. This blog is dedicated to Mary the Mother of God. "
Wednesday, April 29 Cheap Smoke Day Vice Under the Knife: Impurity & Pride
Tonight’s Pairing
Cigar: whatever’s left in the bottom of the box
Whiskey: the bottle you don’t mind finishing
Reason: you’re not here for refinement—you’re here for clarity
The Reflection
She was led next into the place where the souls once stained by impurity were held. It wasn’t fire that struck her first—it was filth. A dungeon so foul, so pestilential, that even a saint recoiled. She turned away, nauseated by what sin actually looks like when stripped of its perfume.
Then she saw the ambitious and the proud.
Those who needed to shine.
Those who needed to be seen.
Those who needed applause like oxygen.
Now they were buried in obscurity—forgotten, unseen, swallowed by the very darkness they once believed they were above.
Her verdict was simple: “Behold those who wished to shine before men; now they are condemned to live in this frightful obscurity.”
This is the part we never admit: impurity and pride always promise elevation, but they always deliver degradation. They sell you a crown and hand you a collar. They whisper “freedom” and then lock the door.
Cheap Smoke Day is the counter-move.
You choose the lesser thing now so you don’t become the lesser thing later.
You take the humble seat now so you don’t get forced into it later.
You let the smoke sting your eyes now so you don’t choke on the fumes of your own vanity in the next life.
Purgatory Note
The saints insist that Purgatory is mercy, not vengeance—but mercy is not softness. Impurity leaves a stench on the soul; pride leaves a shadow. In Purgatory, both are burned off with a precision that makes earthly discomfort look like a warm bath.
Better to scrub now.
Better to choose obscurity now.
Better to take the cheap smoke now.
PERFECT UNDERSTANDING (1933)
Gloria Swanson, Laurence Olivier, John Halliday
A modern‑marriage experiment collapses under the weight of pride, jealousy, and the naïve belief that human weakness can be outsmarted by a contract.
1. Production & Historical Setting
Released in 1933 and filmed at Ealing Studios, Perfect Understanding belongs to the late‑Pre‑Code moment when cinema flirted openly with marital ambiguity, sexual candor, and the illusion of sophistication. Gloria Swanson produced the film as a vehicle to reassert herself in the sound era; Laurence Olivier, still early in his career, brings a polished but untested masculinity.
The film emerges from an era fascinated by:
the “modern marriage” as a social experiment
the tension between emotional freedom and emotional fidelity
the fragility of male ego in the face of female independence
the belief that rational agreements can override irrational human desire
Swanson plays Judy, a woman determined to build a marriage on honesty and equality. Olivier plays Nicholas, a charming but weak-willed husband whose ideals collapse the moment they are tested. John Halliday plays Ivan, the friend whose presence exposes the cracks in the couple’s “perfect understanding.”
The world of the film is a blend of London drawing rooms, Riviera indulgence, and the brittle optimism of early‑’30s modernity.
2. Story Summary
Judy and Nicholas marry under a bold pact: absolute honesty, no jealousy, no accusations—perfect understanding.
But the agreement is built on sand.
On a trip to Cannes, Nicholas drinks too much and sleeps with his former mistress, Stephanie. He confesses immediately, believing their pact will protect them. Judy forgives him, but the wound is deeper than she admits.
While Nicholas is away on business, Judy leans on her friend Ivan for comfort. He confesses his love; she refuses him, but leaves a note of gratitude. Nicholas later sees her entering Ivan’s building and assumes betrayal.
The misunderstanding metastasizes:
Judy’s innocence is questioned publicly.
Nicholas’s pride hardens into suspicion.
A courtroom battle weaponizes Judy’s letter.
Their “perfect understanding” becomes the very thing that destroys them.
Only after the collapse do they recognize the truth: their marriage failed not because of infidelity, but because of wounded pride and the refusal to speak honestly about pain.
The film ends with reconciliation—not triumphant, but chastened.
3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances
A. Human Weakness Cannot Be Outrun by Agreements
The couple tries to engineer a marriage immune to jealousy. But sin, insecurity, and pride are not solved by rules—they are solved by humility.
B. Confession Without Contrition Is Not Healing
Nicholas confesses his infidelity, but he does not grasp its emotional cost. His honesty is technical, not relational.
C. Pride Turns Hurt Into Accusation
Nicholas’s wounded ego becomes the engine of the film’s tragedy. Pride always interprets ambiguity as insult.
D. Emotional Isolation Is More Dangerous Than Temptation
Judy’s vulnerability with Ivan is not adultery—but it reveals how loneliness corrodes fidelity long before any physical act.
E. Marriage Requires Mercy, Not Perfection
The title is ironic: “perfect understanding” is impossible. What is possible is mercy, patience, and the willingness to see the other truthfully.
4. Hospitality Pairing — The Modern Marriage Table
A chilled gin cocktail — elegant, brittle, deceptively strong; the drink of people who pretend everything is fine.
A plate of olives and hard cheese — sharp, salty, the taste of unspoken tension.
A single white candle — the fragile idealism of their marriage pact.
A silver cigarette case on the table — the symbol of early‑’30s sophistication masking emotional immaturity.
A setting for evenings when you want to examine the difference between appearing modern and actually being mature.
5. Reflection Prompts
Where am I relying on rules or agreements instead of cultivating virtue?
What wound in me becomes suspicion when left unspoken?
Where has pride made me interpret ambiguity as betrayal?
Who do I turn to for comfort when I feel unseen—and what does that reveal?
What part of my life needs mercy rather than perfection?
Smoke in This Life and Not the Next Virtue: Gratitude & Vigilance Cigar: Toasted, warm (Cameroon) Bourbon: Jefferson’s Ocean — bright, expansive Reflection:“What blessings have I overlooked?”
The Entry
The Cameroon wrapper gives you that toasted, sun‑warmed sweetness — the kind that doesn’t shout, but reveals itself slowly if you’re paying attention. Jefferson’s Ocean does the same thing: bright, saline edges, a sense of movement, a reminder that grace often arrives after long miles and rough waters.
This Tuesday is about seeing what you’ve missed. Gratitude is not soft; it’s a discipline of vigilance. It’s the refusal to let blessings slip past unnoticed. It’s the trained eye that catches the small mercies, the quiet rescues, the unearned consolations.
And vigilance is not suspicion — it’s readiness. It’s the posture of someone who knows God is always acting, even when the surface looks still.
Purgatory Note — The Press of Impatience
Advancing a little, she saw a multitude of souls bruised and crushed as under a press — those who had lived with impatience and disobedience. The image is severe, but the lesson is clean: impatience flattens the soul. It compresses everything into the narrow space of “my timing, my way.” Disobedience does the same — it collapses the will inward until it can no longer breathe freely.
The press is not punishment for punishment’s sake. It is the soul being stretched back into its true shape after years of shrinking itself.
Gratitude and vigilance are the antidotes now. They widen the interior space. They keep the soul supple. They prevent the slow hardening that leads to that crushing press later.
Saul
was unfaithful and weak and therefore led his warriors by fear rather than by
inspiration. His main concern was keeping and holding power. Hum…some things
don’t change. There was no humility in him, only hubris. “I” was the first word
in his life rather than saying and living the word of God.
Hear,
O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one; and you shall love the Lord your
God with all your Heart, and with all your soul, and with your entire mind, and
with all your strength.”
Saul
fell because of his hubris when humility would have saved him. Real leaders are
humble. They realize and appreciate the sacrifices of others and consider it a
privilege to have the honor and trust to lead them.
Copilot’s
Take
Saul’s rash oath in 1
Samuel 14 exposes a leader who has lost interior order. The Catechism teaches
that humanity lives in a battlefield where evil is both around us and within us
(CCC 409). Saul’s fear-driven command—“before I am able to avenge myself”—reveals
a man who no longer trusts God’s timing. His leadership becomes reactive, not
rooted. When a leader’s interior clock is governed by insecurity, he begins to
legislate panic as if it were piety.
The people’s response is
telling: they fear Saul’s oath more than they trust God’s provision. Honey lies
on the ground—strength, sweetness, renewal—and no one dares touch it. The CCC
warns that authority detached from the moral law becomes mere domination (CCC
1902–1903). Saul’s authority has drifted into that territory. He uses fear to
hold power rather than humility to steward it. Evil thrives in that environment
because fear always shrinks the soul before it ever strengthens the will.
Humility, by contrast,
is the foundation of prayer (CCC 2559) and the only posture that keeps a leader
aligned with God’s timing. Biological Clock Day becomes an unexpected metaphor
here: Saul’s interior timing is off. He rushes, reacts, and imposes burdens God
never commanded. Humility slows a man down enough to hear again. It restores
the rhythm of obedience. It keeps a leader from confusing urgency with
faithfulness.
St. Louis de Montfort
stands as the counterpoint. His life of total consecration is the exact
opposite of Saul’s self-consecration. Where Saul clings to control, de Montfort
empties himself. Where Saul binds others with fear, de Montfort binds himself
to Christ with love. The CCC’s vision of rightly ordered love—God above self,
freedom above coercion, courage above manipulation (CCC 1731, 1808)—is embodied
in him. This is how evil is confronted: not by frantic vows, but by ordered
love.
The pattern is
consistent across Scripture and history: hubris collapses; humility endures.
Evil is not defeated by oaths, displays of strength, or the leader’s anxiety.
It is confronted when a man refuses to lead by fear, refuses to make himself
the center, and refuses to weaponize urgency. When a leader fears God, the
people are free. When a leader fears losing power, the people starve. The fall
of Saul is not a mystery—it is a warning. The path of de Montfort is not an
exception—it is the blueprint.
The world is watching a
widening conflict in the Middle East, and the pattern is painfully familiar:
leaders grasping for control, factions acting from grievance rather than
justice, and entire populations caught in the undertow of fear. The Church
never treats war as an inevitability; it treats it as a sign of disordered
hearts and disordered power. The Catechism warns that evil exploits precisely
these moments of instability—when nations act from wounded pride, when
vengeance masquerades as strategy, when rhetoric outruns reason (CCC
2314–2317). What is developing now is not simply geopolitical tension but a
spiritual crisis: a region where ancient wounds, modern weapons, and competing
narratives of righteousness collide. In such an hour, the Christian task is not
to predict outcomes but to remain anchored in the truth that peace is built
only where humility governs power, justice restrains force, and leaders refuse
the Saul-like temptation to secure victory through fear.
Louis'
life is inseparable from his efforts to promote genuine devotion to Mary, the
mother of Jesus and mother of the church. Totus tuus (completely yours) was
Louis's personal motto; Karol Wojtyla chose it as his episcopal motto. Born in
the Breton village of Montfort, close to Rennes (France), as an adult Louis
identified himself by the place of his baptism instead of his family name,
Grignion. After being educated by the Jesuits and the Sulpicians, he was
ordained as a diocesan priest in 1700. Soon he began preaching parish missions
throughout western France. His years of ministering to the poor prompted him to
travel and live very simply, sometimes getting him into trouble with church
authorities. In his preaching, which attracted thousands of people back to the
faith, Father Louis recommended frequent, even daily, Holy Communion (not the
custom then!) and imitation of the Virgin Mary's ongoing acceptance of God's
will for her life. Louis founded the Missionaries of the Company of Mary (for
priests and brothers) and the Daughters of Wisdom, who cared especially for the
sick. His book, True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin, has become a classic
explanation of Marian devotion. Louis died in Saint-Laurent-sur-Sevre, where a
basilica has been erected in his honor. He was canonized in 1947.
Excerpted
from Saint of the Day, Leonard Foley, O.F.M.
Things to
Do
·Read a longer biography of St. Louis de Montfort's life.
·Start June 13 to end on July 16, the feast of
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
·Start July 13 to end on August 15, the feast of
the Assumption
·Start July 20 to end on August 22, the feast of
the Queenship of Mary
·Start August 6 to end on September 8, the feast
of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary
·Start August 10 to end on September 12, the
feast of the Holy Name of Mary
·Start August 13 to end on September 15, the
feast of Our Lady of Sorrows
·Start September 4 to end on October 7, the feast
of Our Lady of the Rosary
·Start October 17 to end on November 19, the
feast of Our Lady of Divine Providence
·Start October 19 to end on November 21, the
feast of the Presentation of the Virgin Mary
·Start October 25 to end on November 27, the
feast of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal
·Start November 5 to end on December 8, the feast
of the Immaculate Conception
·Start November 9 to end on December 12, the
feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe
·Start November 29 to end on January 1, the feast
of Mary, Mother of God
·Start December 31 to end on February 2, the
feast of the Presentation of Our Lord.
Bible
in a year Day 298 The
Gift of Life
Fr. Mike gives us context for the beginning of 2 Maccabees and recounts the
story of Nehemiah’s discovery of the sacred fire. He also offers a reflection
for those struggling with grief and death, which serves as a reminder to all
about the blessing of our lives and the lives of those we love. Today’s
readings are 2 Maccabees 1, Sirach 40-41, and Proverbs 24:1-7.
TODAY IS ALSO Biological
Clock Day
Biological Clock Day offers a
variety of opportunities to pay respect and attention to our bodies. Perhaps
implement some of these ideas in celebration of the day:
Re-Regulate the Body
It might be a good idea to
celebrate Biological Clock Day by setting aside some time to re-regulate the
body. This will likely take more than a 24-hour period, but the day can perhaps
be a good catalyst. Get started by creating a regular bedtime routine that
allows plenty of time for relaxing and falling asleep at night.
Limit Artificial Light
One of the most basic ways
to observe Biological Clock Day might be to get back to a rhythm the way nature
intended it to be. Try unplugging those electronics and turn off the lights at
a set time in the evening. Pick up an actual book with pages instead of
scrolling through the phone.
See what happens when
nature takes its course and there’s no human intervention of technology to
hijack the processes the body really needs. It might take a bit of time for the
body to detox and reset itself, but the effort will certainly be worth it in the
end!
Practice Sleep Hygiene
Need some additional tips
on how to get the body to engage with its natural rhythms on Biological Clock
Day? Try some of these sleep hygiene ideas:
Go to sleep and wake up at
the same time every day.
Try to avoid taking naps if
they seem to inhibit the ability to fall asleep at the right time at night!
Stop eating and exercising at
least two hours (or more) before bedtime and avoid chemical stimulants
like caffeine and nicotine during these hours.
Try wearing glasses that
block blue light.
THIS WE BELIEVE
PRAYERS AND TEACHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Act of Faith
O my God, I firmly believe that
You are one God in three Divine Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. I
believe that Your Divine Son became man and died for our sins, and that He will
come to judge the living and the dead. I believe these and all the truths which
the Holy Catholic Church teaches, because You revealed them, who can neither
deceive nor be deceived. Amen.
When I fear that surrender will cost me too much — Jesus,
I trust in You
Opening Invocation
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Spirit. Amen.
“Lord Jesus, steady my heart.
Strip away the illusions of control.
Teach me the freedom that comes only through surrender.”
Reflection
There is a particular fear that surfaces once Easter’s
brightness settles:
the fear that trusting God will require a cost you cannot bear.
Not the fear of suffering itself—
you’ve endured enough to know pain is survivable.
The deeper fear is this:
If I surrender fully, God may ask for something I want
to keep.
If I open my hands, He may take what I still cling to.
If I trust Him, He may lead me where I would not choose to go.
This is the fear that keeps a man half‑converted.
Half‑available.
Half‑alive.
But Christ does not deal in halves.
The Risen Lord stands before you today with the same
words He spoke to Peter on the shore:
“Follow Me.”
Not because He wants to diminish you,
but because He intends to make you whole.
Trust is not the loss of self.
Trust is the recovery of the self God intended.
Scripture
John 21:18
“When you were younger, you used to dress yourself and go where you wanted;
but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands…”
This is not a threat.
It is a promise:
maturity in Christ leads to a life guided, not grasping.
Petition of the Day
From the fear that surrender will cost me too much —
deliver me, Jesus.
Not because surrender is painless,
but because surrender is the only path to peace.
Act of Trust
“Jesus, I place my plans, my preferences, and my
private fears before You.
I release the illusion that I can secure my own future.
I choose the narrow road of obedience,
not because it is easy,
but because it is Yours.
Strengthen my will to follow You without bargaining.”
Hospitality Cue
Choose one concrete act of relinquishment today:
simplify one decision you’ve been over‑managing
hand off a task you’ve been gripping too tightly
say no to something that drains your mission
say yes to something God has been nudging you toward
Before you act, pray:
“Jesus, I trust in You.”
Let the action become the offering.
Closing Prayer
“O Christ, my Captain and my King,
teach me the courage of surrender.
Let my obedience be steady,
my heart unafraid,
my trust unbroken.
Lead me where You will,
and make me faithful there.”
[3] Schultz, Patricia. 1,000 Places to See Before You
Die: A Traveler's Life List Workman Publishing Company. Kindle Edition.
[4] Sheraton, Mimi. 1,000 Foods To Eat Before You Die: A
Food Lover's Life List (p. 800). Workman Publishing Company. Kindle Edition.
THE LIGHT THAT FAILED (1939)
Ronald Colman, Walter Huston, Ida Lupino, Muriel Angelus
A tragic drama where pride, blindness, and unspoken longing converge—and where a man discovers too late that vision without humility destroys the very people he loves.
1. Production & Historical Setting
Released by Paramount in 1939 and adapted from Rudyard Kipling’s novel, The Light That Failed sits at the crossroads of late‑’30s romantic tragedy and pre‑war fatalism. Directed by William A. Wellman, the film carries the muscular, unsentimental tone he brought to Wings and A Star Is Born, but here the canvas is smaller, more intimate, more bruised.
The film emerges from an era fascinated by:
the wounded veteran as a symbol of masculine fragility
the artist as both visionary and self‑saboteur
the tension between imperial nostalgia and modern disillusionment
the moral cost of pride in relationships
Ronald Colman plays Dick Heldar, a war artist whose eyesight is failing; Walter Huston plays Torpenhow, the loyal friend who sees the truth before Dick does. Ida Lupino, in one of her early breakout roles, plays Bessie—the volatile model whose resentment becomes the spark of tragedy. Muriel Angelus plays Maisie, the idealized love Heldar cannot hold onto because he cannot see her clearly.
The world of the film is a blend of London studios, Sudan battlefields, and the dim interiors where artists wrestle with their own shadows.
2. Story Summary
Dick Heldar returns from the Sudan with fame, scars, and a secret: his vision is deteriorating. He throws himself into painting, determined to complete his masterpiece before the darkness closes in. Torpenhow, his closest friend, tries to steady him, but Dick’s pride makes him deaf to warning.
Enter Bessie (Ida Lupino), a street‑tough model whose bitterness mirrors Dick’s own interior fractures. Their relationship is combustible—part muse, part torment, part mirror. Dick treats her with a mixture of condescension and desperation; she responds with wounded fury.
Maisie, the woman Dick truly loves, remains just out of reach. Their history is marked by misread intentions, unspoken apologies, and the emotional blindness that precedes the physical.
As Dick’s sight collapses, so does his judgment:
His pride blinds him to Torpenhow’s loyalty.
His desperation blinds him to Maisie’s affection.
His cruelty blinds him to Bessie’s breaking point.
In a moment of vengeance and despair, Bessie destroys Dick’s nearly finished masterpiece. When he discovers the ruin, he realizes too late that his blindness—literal and moral—has cost him everything.
The film ends not with melodrama but with inevitability: a man undone by the very pride that once fueled his genius.
3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances
A. Pride Makes a Man Blind Before His Eyes Fail
Dick’s tragedy begins long before his vision dims. Pride isolates him, distorts his relationships, and makes him incapable of receiving help.
B. Wounded People Wound Others
Bessie is not a villain; she is a soul shaped by neglect and humiliation. Her act of destruction is the cry of someone who has never been seen with compassion.
C. Friendship as Moral Anchor
Torpenhow embodies the virtue of steadfastness. His loyalty is the film’s moral backbone—a reminder that true friendship is a form of grace.
D. The Danger of Idealized Love
Maisie represents the life Dick could have lived, but idealization prevents him from engaging her honestly. The film warns against loving an image rather than a person.
E. Talent Without Humility Becomes a Curse
Dick’s artistic gift becomes the very thing that destroys him because he refuses to steward it with gratitude, discipline, and truth.
4. Hospitality Pairing — The Artist’s Last Light
Black tea with a squeeze of lemon — sharp, clear, a reminder of what is slipping away.
A heel of crusty bread — the sustenance of men who work with their hands and eyes.
A burnt match on the table — the symbol of vision fading, pride consuming itself.
A sprig of lavender — the gentleness Dick could never receive, the mercy he needed but resisted.
A setting for evenings when you need to remember that gifts are not possessions—they are responsibilities.
5. Reflection Prompts
Where has pride made me blind to the people who are trying to help me?
What gifts in my life am I treating as entitlements rather than responsibilities?
Who is the “Torpenhow” in my life—steady, loyal, often unthanked?
Where am I idealizing someone instead of loving them truthfully?
What resentment or wound in me, if left unaddressed, could become destructive?
Virtue: Truth & Purification Cigar: Nothing fancy — plain, honest, unadorned Bourbon: None — clarity without warmth Reflection:“What masks is God tearing away in me?”
The Descent Into the Chamber of Hypocrites
During a series of ecstasies shortly before her death, St. Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi was shown the “prisons” of Purgatory—those chambers where souls undergo purification precisely fitted to the sins they carried into death.
One chamber held the souls of hypocrites.
She saw them pierced through with sharp swords, cut and divided, their outward appearance finally matching the duplicity they had lived with on earth. The punishment was not arbitrary. It was revelation. The soul that had worn two faces in life now endured the tearing away of every false layer.
This is the sound of truth reclaiming what deception once ruled.
This is the sight of a soul being made whole by being cut apart.
This is the moment when God refuses to let a man remain divided.
Purification is not cruelty.
It is the mercy that refuses to leave us in our lies.
The Shepherd’s Counter‑Movement
Into this chamber of divided souls, the Good Shepherd does not arrive as a judge with a ledger. He arrives as the One who knows the real face beneath the mask.
He does not bypass the swords.
He does not soften the purification.
He walks into the chamber and calls the soul by its true name.
Truth is not self‑expression.
Purification is not self‑improvement.
Both are the Shepherd’s work:
He exposes what we hide.
He cuts away what we cling to.
He restores what we fractured.
He leads upward what has lived too long in duplicity.
The “nothing fancy” cigar mirrors the day’s virtue: plainness, honesty, the refusal to hide behind flavor or flourish.
A smoke stripped of ornament for a soul stripped of disguise.
Your Work at the Table
You smoke today not as a man performing strength, but as a man consenting to truth—letting God tear away whatever you have used to protect yourself from being known.
Ask the question slowly, without flinching:
What masks is God tearing away in me—
and what truth have I been avoiding because it cuts?
🔸 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)
THE KEYS OF THE KINGDOM (1944)
Gregory Peck, Thomas Mitchell
A missionary epic where humility, suffering, and steadfast charity shape a priest into a man whose holiness is measured not by success but by endurance.
1. Production & Historical Setting
Released in 1944 by 20th Century Fox and directed by John M. Stahl, The Keys of the Kingdom is one of Hollywood’s most reverent portrayals of priesthood. Adapted from A.J. Cronin’s bestselling novel, the film arrived during WWII, when audiences were hungry for stories of perseverance, conscience, and sacrificial service.
The film sits in the era’s fascination with:
cross‑cultural mission work
the dignity of ordinary, unglamorous virtue
the tension between institutional authority and personal conscience
the cost of vocation in a world shaped by war and upheaval
Gregory Peck plays Father Francis Chisholm, a Scottish priest whose life is marked by tragedy, humility, and a stubborn refusal to compromise charity. Thomas Mitchell, Vincent Price, and Rose Stradner round out a cast that embodies the Church’s spectrum—from bureaucratic suspicion to heroic mercy.
The world of the film moves between mist‑covered Scotland and the harsh, beautiful landscapes of rural China—two places where faith is tested, refined, and revealed.
2. Story Summary
Father Francis Chisholm (Gregory Peck) is introduced as an old priest whose “unorthodox” methods have drawn scrutiny. Monsignor Sleeth arrives to investigate, and Francis’ journal becomes the frame for the story.
A Life Formed by Loss
As a boy, Francis loses his parents in an anti‑Catholic attack.
As a young man, he loses Nora, the woman he loves, in childbirth.
These wounds do not harden him—they hollow him into humility.
The Mission in China
Sent to a ruined mission in Pai‑tan, Francis refuses shortcuts:
no bribing converts with food
no coercion
no inflated numbers to impress superiors
He rebuilds the mission with patience, honesty, and respect for the Chinese people. His friendship with the agnostic Dr. Willie Tulloch becomes a lifeline. His healing of Mr. Chia’s son earns trust that cannot be bought.
Years of Quiet Heroism
Famine, bandits, political chaos, and loneliness shape Francis into a priest whose holiness is not dramatic but durable. He becomes a father to the community—not by authority, but by presence.
Return to Scotland
Back home, his simplicity is misunderstood as incompetence. But when Monsignor Sleeth finishes the journal, he sees the truth: Francis’ life is a long obedience, not a failure. The recommendation for retirement is withdrawn. The old priest is vindicated—not by triumph, but by witness.
3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances
A. Holiness Is Hidden, Not Flashy
Francis’ mission grows slowly, quietly, without spectacle. The film insists that the Kingdom is built by fidelity, not fanfare.
B. Suffering as the Forge of Vocation
Every loss in Francis’ life becomes a place where God carves out compassion. His wounds make him gentle.
C. Respect as Evangelization
He refuses to treat the Chinese as projects. His reverence for their dignity becomes the heart of his ministry.
D. Conscience Over Convention
Francis obeys the Church, but he refuses to lie, manipulate, or inflate numbers. Integrity becomes his form of obedience.
E. Friendship as Grace
Dr. Tulloch—an unbeliever—becomes one of the film’s clearest instruments of God’s mercy. Grace often arrives through unexpected hands.
4. Hospitality Pairing — The Missionary’s Table
Black tea — simple, steady, the drink of long evenings and longer faith.
A bowl of plain rice — the humility of enough, the dignity of daily bread.
A wooden cross on the table — not ornamental, but worn by use.
A sprig of sage — endurance, the quiet strength that survives harsh seasons.
A setting for evenings when you need to remember that God builds His Kingdom through patience, wounds, and the long, slow work of love.
5. Reflection Prompts
Where has God asked me to be faithful rather than successful?
Which wounds in my life have softened me instead of hardening me?
Where am I tempted to measure my worth by visible results?
Who has been an unexpected instrument of grace in my story?
What quiet, daily act of charity is forming me into the person I’m meant to be?
Samuel
here is reminding the Israelites at the coronation of Saul that even though
they now have a king like all the other nations they are not to be like all the
other nations; that they must serve first the Lord of heaven and earth. Yet,
they did not nor could not; they like all men needed a savior. “We have no king but Cesar.”
Copilot’s Take
Samuel’s words expose a truth the Catechism insists
on: failing to pray for others is not neutrality—it is a sin of omission. CCC
2635 teaches that intercession is a work of charity and a participation in
Christ’s own priesthood. Samuel refuses to abandon his people even when they
have chosen a king for the wrong reasons. His fidelity is not based on their
worthiness but on God’s command.
The call to fear the Lord is not servile
dread but the virtue of filial fear, the reverence that refuses to trade God’s
authority for human approval. CCC 2084–2097 frames this as the first duty of
the First Commandment: to acknowledge God as God, to serve Him first, and to
resist the temptation to let the State, culture, or public opinion become a
false master. Israel wanted to be “like the other nations,” but Scripture and
the Catechism agree—God’s people lose themselves the moment they imitate the
world’s idols.
The deeper confrontation with evil appears in CCC
409: humanity lives in a real spiritual battle, and the temptation is always
the same—to replace God with a human power. When Israel said, “Give us a king,”
and when the crowd later cried, “We have no king but Caesar,” the pattern was
identical: fear displaces faith, and human authority is enthroned where only
God belongs.
The antidote is the same in every age: prayer,
obedience, and truth. CCC 2847 teaches that God provides discernment to resist
evil, but only to those who remain in prayer. And CCC 2471 reminds the faithful
that confronting evil requires living in the truth, not merely admiring it.
Samuel models this: he prays, he teaches, he warns, and he refuses to abandon
his post even when the people choose poorly.
To confront evil is not to seize control—it is to
remain faithful.
To fear the Lord is not to tremble—it is to stand firm.
To serve with all your heart is not to perform—it is to obey.
Bible
in a year Day 297 Using
Good Things for Evil
As we read from Proverbs and Sirach, Fr. Mike point out how everything God has
made is good, but we can use those things for evil ends. We also get to the
conclusion of 1 Maccabees. The readings are 1 Maccabees 16, Sirach 38-39, and
Proverbs 23:29-35