Bourbon & Cigars

Bourbon & Cigars
Smoke in this Life not the Next

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Monday, March 30, 2026

     🔸  March 2026 – Lent: Priesthood & Sacrifice Mar 2 –  Diary of a Country Priest  (1951) Mar 9 –  The Nun’s Story  (1959) Mar 16 – ...

Nineveh 90 Consecration-

Total Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

Total Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary
Day 33

Nineveh 90

Nineveh 90
Nineveh 90-Love the Lord with all your heart, mind, soul and strength

Sunday, April 5, 2026


 

Men in Her Life (1931)

A pre‑Code drama where fallen wealth, counterfeit nobility, and unexpected virtue collide—and where a woman discovers that salvation sometimes arrives in the rough hands of a man the world calls unworthy.

Sources: imdb.com

🎬 Production Snapshot

Studio: Columbia Pictures
Director: William Beaudine
Release: 1931
Screenplay: Dorothy Howell (adaptation), based on Men in Her Life by Warner Fabian
Stars: Lois Moran (Julia Cavanaugh), Charles Bickford (Flashy Madden), Victor Varconi (Count Ivan Karloff), Don Dillaway (Dick Webster)
Genre: Pre‑Code drama / social melodrama
Notable: A compact Columbia B‑picture that exposes class hypocrisy, seduction, and the fragile dignity of a woman trying to rebuild her life. A story where the “gentleman” is a fraud and the “criminal” is the only man with a conscience.

🧭 Story Summary

Julia Cavanaugh once belonged to New York’s privileged world—until her family fortune collapses.
Now burdened by debt and social shame, she becomes vulnerable to the wrong kind of attention.

Enter Count Ivan Karloff, a suave European aristocrat who seduces her with charm, flattery, and the illusion of security.
But when he discovers she is penniless, he abandons her without hesitation.

Into this wreckage steps Flashy Madden, a retired bootlegger with rough manners and a surprisingly tender moral core.
He offers to pay her debts—not for romance, but because he wants to become “a gentleman,” and he believes Julia can teach him.

Julia accepts, believing she is simply helping a man refine his manners.
But Flashy’s affection for her is real, deep, and quietly sacrificial.

Meanwhile, Julia is courted by Dick Webster, the senator’s son—a respectable match that promises stability.

Everything collapses when the Count returns to blackmail Julia.
Flashy confronts him.
A struggle.
A gunshot.
The Count falls.

Flashy is arrested and refuses to speak, determined to protect Julia’s reputation.
But Julia steps forward, risking everything—her engagement, her social standing, her future—to tell the truth.

The film closes with a sense of moral clarity:
the world’s “gentlemen” are not always good,
and the world’s “criminals” are not always lost.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

Released in 1931, the film reflects:

  • The Pre‑Code fascination with fallen women and social hypocrisy
  • America’s anxiety about class mobility during the Depression
  • The romanticization of the bootlegger as a folk hero
  • Columbia’s early‑’30s pattern of stories where virtue hides in unexpected places
  • A cultural moment when women’s financial vulnerability was a moral battleground

It sits comfortably beside films like The Good Bad Girl, Anybody’s Woman, and Secrets of a Secretary—stories where the world’s glitter hides rot, and the rough‑edged outsider carries the only real integrity.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

1. The Counterfeit Aristocrat

The Count embodies the world’s false promises: elegance without virtue, charm without loyalty, refinement without conscience.

Catholic insight:
Sin often arrives dressed as sophistication.

2. The Bootlegger as the Unexpected Just Man

Flashy Madden is unpolished, uneducated, and morally ambiguous—but he is loyal, sacrificial, and truthful.

Catholic insight:
God often raises the lowly to shame the proud.
The film becomes a parable of the Good Thief:
a sinner with a clean heart.

3. Debt as a Spiritual Symbol

Julia’s financial ruin mirrors her interior vulnerability.

Insight:
Debt = the weight of past choices
Her temptation to “marry out of it” reflects the human desire to seek salvation through worldly alliances rather than truth.

4. The Mock Proposal Scene

Flashy asks Julia to help him find the words to propose to “someone.”
She doesn’t realize he means her.

Insight:
Grace often speaks indirectly before it speaks plainly.

5. Truth as Purification

Julia’s courtroom testimony is her confessional moment: public, humiliating, costly—and cleansing.

Catholic insight:
Truth spoken at personal cost becomes a path to redemption.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink: “The Rough Gentleman”

A pre‑Code‑era cocktail that mirrors Flashy’s arc:

  • Rye whiskey
  • Sweet vermouth
  • Dash of orange bitters
  • Stirred, served without garnish

Symbolism:

  • Rye = roughness
  • Vermouth = Julia’s civilizing influence
  • Bitters = the cost of truth
  • No garnish = authenticity over appearances

Snack: Sugared Almonds

A nod to the Parisian café setting and the film’s theme.

Symbolism:
Hard shell, soft heart—Flashy in edible form.

Atmosphere

  • Low light
  • A small table, café‑style
  • A sense of intimacy and moral clarity
  • A space where dignity can be restored

🪞 Reflection Prompt

Where in your life have you mistaken refinement for virtue—or roughness for vice?

Who is the “Flashy Madden” in your world:
someone the world dismisses, yet whose loyalty and sacrifice reveal a deeper goodness?

And where might you be called, like Julia,
to speak truth at personal cost—
not to destroy someone,
but to set both of you free?


Saturday, April 4, 2026


 

Secret Beyond the Door (1947)

A psychological‑Gothic drama where fear, wounded memory, and the architecture of the soul collide—and where love must confront not evil, but the terror a man carries inside himself.

Sources: imdb.com

🎬 Production Snapshot

Studio: Universal Pictures
Director: Fritz Lang
Release: 1947
Screenplay: Silvia Richards (adaptation), based on Museum Piece No. 13 by Rufus King
Stars: Joan Bennett (Celia Lamphere), Michael Redgrave (Mark Lamphere), Anne Revere (Caroline), Barbara O’Neil (Miss Robey)
Genre: Gothic noir / psychological thriller
Notable: A late‑period Lang film blending expressionist shadows, Freudian psychology, and Bluebeard myth. A meditation on marriage, trauma, and the hidden rooms of the human heart.

🧭 Story Summary

The film opens with a whirlwind romance in Mexico:
Celia Barrett, a wealthy and self‑possessed New Yorker, meets the enigmatic architect Mark Lamphere.
He is brilliant, magnetic, and strangely fragile beneath the surface.

They marry quickly.
Too quickly.

When Celia arrives at Mark’s estate, she discovers a world of shadows and secrets:

  • A son who fears his father
  • A housekeeper who watches too closely
  • A secretary who hides half her face
  • And most unsettling of all—
    a private wing of rooms meticulously recreating famous murders of women.

One room remains locked.
Mark will not speak of it.
No one will.

As Celia’s fear grows, she begins to suspect that Mark’s obsession is not academic but personal—that the locked room is a prophecy of her own death.

But the truth is deeper and more tragic: Mark is not a killer.
He is a man haunted by a childhood wound so profound that it has shaped his entire adult life.

The climax is not a battle but a revelation: Celia enters the forbidden room, confronts the wound at its source, and forces Mark to face the memory he has spent a lifetime avoiding.

The film ends not with triumph but with a fragile, hard‑won reconciliation—
a marriage rebuilt on truth rather than illusion.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

Released in the late 1940s, the film reflects:

  • Post‑war anxieties about masculinity and psychological instability
  • Hollywood’s fascination with Freudian analysis
  • The Gothic revival in American cinema
  • Lang’s own preoccupation with guilt, fate, and the architecture of the mind

It is a spiritual cousin to Rebecca, Gaslight, and Suspicion, but more expressionist, more symbolic, more interior.

Lang turns the house into a psyche:
every corridor a memory, every locked door a wound.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

1. The Wound Beneath the Sin

Mark’s danger is not malice but unhealed trauma.
Catholic moral theology insists that to heal a person, you must descend beneath the symptom to the wound.

Celia does exactly this.
She refuses to treat Mark as a monster; she treats him as a man in bondage.

2. Marriage as a Descent into Mystery

The film dramatizes a truth the Church teaches:
marriage reveals the beloved’s hidden rooms.

Some are beautiful.
Some are terrifying.
All require courage, patience, and grace.

3. Fear as a False Prophet

Celia’s fear tells her to flee.
But fear is not the voice of God.
She chooses discernment instead—
a clear‑eyed courage that neither denies danger nor surrenders to it.

4. Mercy as a Form of Truth‑Telling

Celia’s mercy is not softness.
It is the willingness to name the wound, confront the darkness, and call Mark back to himself.

This is the Catholic pattern: truth without cruelty, mercy without naivety.

5. The Locked Room as a Spiritual Symbol

Every soul has a room it refuses to open.
The film becomes a parable of confession, healing, and the painful grace of revelation.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink
A deep, smoky red—Syrah or a dark Rioja.
Something with shadows and warmth.

Snack
Dark bread with salted butter, or a simple charcuterie plate.
Food that feels elemental, grounding, steady.

Atmosphere

  • Low light—one candle or a single lamp
  • A quiet room with long shadows
  • A sense of entering a mystery rather than solving a puzzle

A space where hidden things can come into the light without fear.

🪞 Reflection Prompt

What is the “locked room” in your own life—the memory, fear, or wound you avoid?

Who in your orbit carries a hidden sorrow that looks like anger, distance, or danger?

And what would it look like to enter that room—
not recklessly, not naively—
but with the courage of Celia Lamphere:
a courage that sees the wound, names it, and brings light where darkness has lived too long?


Friday, April 3, 2026


 


People Will Talk (1951)

A romantic‑philosophical drama where compassion, courage, and moral imagination confront the smallness of gossip and the cruelty of institutional judgment.

Sources: imdb.com

🎬 Production Snapshot

Studio: 20th Century Fox
Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Release: 1951
Screenplay: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Stars: Cary Grant (Dr. Noah Praetorius), Jeanne Crain (Deborah Higgins), Finlay Currie (Shunderson), Hume Cronyn (Prof. Elwell)
Genre: Romantic drama / social satire
Notable: One of Grant’s most unusual roles—gentle, principled, almost pastoral. Mankiewicz blends romance, ethics, and satire into a film that feels startlingly modern in its defense of human dignity.

🧭 Story Summary

The film begins with a crisis of fear and shame:
Deborah Higgins, a young student, collapses under the weight of an unplanned pregnancy and the terror of public disgrace.

Enter Dr. Noah Praetorius—Cary Grant at his warmest.
He treats her not as a scandal but as a soul.

What follows is a quiet, luminous drama:

  • a doctor who refuses to humiliate the vulnerable
  • a woman learning to trust again
  • a mysterious guardian (Shunderson) whose silence carries the weight of a redeemed past
  • an academic rival, Prof. Elwell, determined to destroy Praetorius through rumor, suspicion, and bureaucratic cruelty

The investigation into Praetorius’s life becomes a moral trial:
Is compassion itself suspicious?
Is mercy a threat to the system?

The climax is not explosive but revelatory:
Praetorius dismantles his accuser not with anger but with truth, humor, and a disarming gentleness that exposes the poverty of Elwell’s soul.

The film ends in hope—marriage, new life, and the triumph of dignity over gossip.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

Released in post‑war America, the film pushes against the era’s moral rigidity:

  • It treats unwed pregnancy with tenderness rather than condemnation.
  • It critiques institutions that value rules over persons.
  • It elevates compassion as a form of intellectual and moral courage.

Mankiewicz, fresh from All About Eve, uses his trademark wit to expose the absurdity of judgmental systems.
Grant, meanwhile, plays Praetorius almost like a secular saint—calm, humorous, unflappable.

The film anticipates later debates about medical ethics, privacy, and the dignity of the patient.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

1. Mercy as the Highest Form of Truth

Praetorius embodies the Gospel’s moral imagination:
truth without cruelty, clarity without condemnation.

He sees Deborah not as a “case” but as a daughter of God.
His mercy is not indulgence—it is justice rightly ordered.

2. Gossip as a Spiritual Disease

The title is a warning:
“People will talk.”

Gossip becomes the film’s antagonist—
a force that wounds reputations, distorts truth, and replaces charity with suspicion.

Catholic tradition names this sin clearly: detraction and calumny.

3. The Dignity of the Wounded

Deborah’s fear is not of her condition but of judgment.
The film insists that dignity is not lost through weakness;
it is lost when others refuse to see Christ in the vulnerable.

4. The Mystery of Shunderson: Redemption in Silence

Shunderson is a living parable:
a man with a dark past who has become a guardian of life.

His loyalty echoes the Church’s teaching that grace can transform even the most wounded histories.

5. The Physician as Moral Steward

Praetorius models the vocation of healing as a spiritual calling:
to protect, to uplift, to restore.

He is a physician of bodies and souls.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink
Chamomile‑Lavender Tea
Gentle, calming, quietly restorative—like Praetorius himself.

Snack
Honey‑Butter Scones
Warm, comforting, simple—echoing the film’s insistence that kindness is never complicated.

Atmosphere

  • Soft lamplight
  • A tidy room with a single vase of flowers
  • Light classical strings or a quiet jazz trio
  • A sense of calm clarity:
    a space where no one is judged and everyone is seen

🪞 Reflection Prompt

Where in your life are you tempted to let “what people will say” shape your decisions?

Who in your orbit needs the kind of mercy that restores dignity rather than measures fault?

And what would it look like, today, to practice Praetorius’s gentle courage—
to defend the vulnerable,
to silence gossip with truth,
and to let compassion become your most persuasive argument?

Thursday, April 2, 2026


Bulldog Drummond Comes Back (1937)

A kidnapping‑revenge thriller where loyalty, courage, and moral clarity collide in the shadows of pre‑war London.

Sources:

🎬 Production Snapshot

  • Studio: Paramount Pictures
  • Director: Louis King
  • Release: 1937
  • Screenplay: Edward T. Lowe Jr.
  • Stars: John Barrymore (as the urbane Inspector), John Howard (as Drummond), Louise Campbell (as the kidnapped fiancée)
  • Genre: Crime thriller / detective adventure
  • Notable: A brisk, stylish entry in the Drummond series, blending gentleman‑adventurer charm with psychological menace. Barrymore’s performance adds gravitas and theatrical intelligence.

🧭 Story Summary

The film opens with a wound:
Phyllis Clavering, Drummond’s fiancée, is kidnapped by the enigmatic and vengeful Irena Soldanis, whose husband died during a previous Drummond case.

What follows is a cat‑and‑mouse pilgrimage through London:

  • cryptic clues delivered with icy elegance
  • traps designed to humiliate or break Drummond
  • a psychological duel between a grieving widow and a relentless hero
  • the police, led by Barrymore’s sardonic Inspector, always one step behind

Drummond is forced to confront not only danger but the moral shadow of his own past victories.
Every clue is a judgment.
Every step is a reckoning.

The climax brings justice — but not triumph.
The victory is real, yet tinged with the sorrow of a world where violence always leaves a residue.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

  • Released in the late 1930s, the film reflects a world sliding toward war:
    men of action, women of resolve, and villains shaped by grief rather than ideology.
  • The Drummond series embodied the British ideal of the gentleman‑hero — brave, witty, loyal — yet this entry complicates that ideal by showing the cost of heroism.
  • Barrymore’s presence elevates the film into something more theatrical and psychological:
    a meditation on justice, guilt, and the thin line between righteousness and obsession.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

1. Justice Without Mercy Becomes Vengeance

Irena Soldanis is not a cartoon villain.
She is a widow.
Her grief has curdled into cruelty.

The film becomes a meditation on the Gospel truth:
“The measure you give will be the measure you get.”

Her pursuit of vengeance mirrors the spiritual danger of nursing old wounds until they become weapons.

2. The Hero’s Temptation: Self‑Righteousness

Drummond is brave — but not blameless.
His past actions, however justified, have consequences.

The film quietly asks:
What does it mean to be responsible for the unintended suffering your victories create?

This is the moral maturity of the Christian life:
courage tempered by humility.

3. Loyalty as a Virtue of the Will

Drummond’s companions — Algy, Tenny, and the Inspector — embody steadfastness.
Their loyalty is not sentimental; it is chosen, tested, and costly.

It echoes the fidelity of covenant love:
to stand with another even when the path is dark.

4. Evil as a Wound, Not a Monster

The film refuses to dehumanize its antagonist.
This is profoundly Catholic:
sin wounds, but does not erase the image of God.

Irena’s tragedy is not that she is wicked,
but that she cannot imagine a world where mercy is possible.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink

Earl Grey with Bergamot
Refined, aromatic, slightly sharp — the taste of London fog and clipped British resolve.

Snack

Shortbread & Blackberry Jam
Buttery stability with a dark, tart center — mirroring the film’s blend of charm and menace.

Atmosphere

  • A dim lamp or low firelight
  • A leather chair or blanket — something “club‑room” in tone
  • Soft classical strings or a 1930s radio playlist
  • A sense of brisk clarity:
    a world where wit is a weapon and loyalty is a shield

🪞 Reflection Prompt

Where in your life are you tempted to repay hurt with hurt?

What past victory — professional, relational, or spiritual — still carries a shadow you haven’t acknowledged?

And what would it look like, in this season, to let mercy interrupt the cycle, so that justice becomes healing rather than harm? 

The Most Forgotten Souls - The Most Ignored Work of Mercy


Summary of the Video

The video emphasizes that Matthew 25 makes our judgment hinge on how faithfully we practice the works of mercy, and it highlights that one of the most neglected of these is caring for “the most forgotten souls.” Eric Genuis—a classical pianist, composer, and missionary—shares how his ministry brings Christ’s presence to people who are abandoned, overlooked, or hidden from society. He describes performing in prisons, rehab centers, and places marked by deep suffering, where beauty, dignity, and personal presence become a form of mercy. The hosts stress that these forgotten souls are not only materially poor but spiritually starved for hope, human connection, and the assurance that God has not forgotten them. The video calls viewers to rediscover this neglected work of mercy and to take seriously Christ’s warning that we will be judged by how we treat “the least of these.” youtu.be

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

 


Dark Journey (1937)

A wartime espionage romance where loyalty, identity, and desire collide in the shadows of Stockholm.

🎬 Production Snapshot

Studio: London Film Productions
Director: Victor Saville
Release: 1937
Screenplay: Arthur Wimperis & Lajos Bíró
Stars: Vivien Leigh, Conrad Veidt, Anthony Bushell
Genre: Spy thriller / romantic espionage drama
Notable: A pre‑war film that blends glamour with moral ambiguity. Beneath its polished surface lies a meditation on divided loyalties, hidden identities, and the cost of loving someone whose truth you cannot fully know.

🧭 Story Summary

Set in neutral Stockholm during World War I, the film follows Madeleine Goddard (Vivien Leigh), a fashionable boutique owner who is secretly a French intelligence agent. Her shop becomes a crossroads of coded messages, whispered alliances, and elegant deception.

Enter Baron Karl von Marwitz (Conrad Veidt), a charming German officer with secrets of his own.

Their attraction is immediate — and dangerous.

As their romance deepens, both continue their covert missions:

  • Madeleine smuggles information through her fashion house
  • Karl manipulates intelligence networks with quiet precision
  • Each suspects the other
  • Each hides behind charm, wit, and half‑truths

The tension builds as their loyalties pull them in opposite directions.
When the truth finally surfaces, love and duty collide.
The ending is bittersweet: two souls drawn together, yet separated by the kingdoms they serve.

🕰 Historical & Cultural Context

  • Released just two years before WWII, the film reflects Europe’s growing anxiety about espionage, shifting alliances, and the fragility of peace.
  • Vivien Leigh was on the cusp of international stardom; Conrad Veidt, already a master of morally complex roles, brings gravity and melancholy.
  • The film’s elegance masks a deeper unease: the sense that truth is always provisional in a world built on coded messages.
  • Stockholm’s neutrality becomes a metaphor for the human heart caught between competing loyalties.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

The Mask as a Spiritual Condition

Both Madeleine and Karl live behind carefully crafted personas.
Their duplicity is professional — but it becomes personal.
The film becomes a meditation on the spiritual cost of living without transparency.

Love in a Divided Heart

Their romance is real, but their truths are not.
They long for intimacy but cannot offer honesty.
It echoes the Gospel’s warning:
“No one can serve two masters.”

The Temptation of Neutrality

Stockholm’s neutrality mirrors the human desire to avoid choosing sides.
But the film insists:
Neutrality is itself a choice — and often a costly one.

The Tragic Nobility of Sacrifice

Karl’s final decisions carry the weight of a man who sees clearly and chooses duty over desire.
Madeleine’s sorrow becomes a quiet echo of the soul’s longing for a unity it cannot yet claim.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink

Black Tea with Lemon
Clean, sharp, elegant — the taste of a room where secrets are spoken softly.

Snack

Dark Chocolate with Sea Salt
Bittersweet, refined, and slightly dangerous — like the romance at the film’s center.

Atmosphere

  • A single candle, evoking the salons and shadowed corners of wartime Stockholm
  • Soft classical strings or salon jazz
  • A sense of poised tension — beauty layered over danger

🪞 Reflection Prompt

Where in your life do you feel the pull of divided loyalties — the desire to be fully known and yet the instinct to hide?

What mask do you wear for the sake of peace, and what would it cost to set it down?

And in this season of discernment, what truth is asking to be spoken so that love can become honest, whole, and free?

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

 


Candace’s Corner

·         Eiffel Tower Day!

o    It’s funny that as child my dad was in the military in Germany and Belgium (for over 6 years) and both places were about a 2 hour drive from Paris and we never went.

§  My Dad said that it was because it was too dangerous to do with a large family (seven children).

·         30 Days with St. Joseph Day 12-Spouse of Our Lady of Sorrows

·         Pray Day 8 of the Novena for our Pope and Bishops

·         Tuesday: Litany of St. Michael the Archangel

·         Developmental Disability Awareness Month

·         Try[15]Artichauts à la Barigoule

·         Spirit Hour: National Après Day

·         Bucket List trip[16]Eiffel Tower

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

 

Candace’s Worldwide Vineyard Tour — Walla Walla Valley, Washington

Theme: Fullness, Maturity, and Walking in the Strength God Has Built


🌿 OVERVIEW

Walla Walla is where the journey gathers weight—
not heaviness, but substance,
the kind of maturity that comes after courage has been lived, not merely imagined.



The valley is a bowl of abundance:
rolling wheat fields, deep soils, old vines, and wines that speak with confidence and depth.
After Yakima’s forward stride, this week invites you to stand tall in the strength God has already formed in you.

This is a landscape of fullness:
• reds with depth and muscle,
• whites with richness and poise,
• vineyards that feel seasoned, rooted, and sure of themselves.

This week is about owning the maturity God has cultivated in you—
walking without shrinking,
speaking without hesitation,
and living as someone who has been shaped by grace and fire.

The wines—Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, Sangiovese, and expressive blends—carry that same seasoned confidence.


🍇 DAILY OUTLINE


TUESDAY • MAR 31

Location: L’Ecole No. 41 (lecole.com)
Focus: Maturity and depth
Act: Taste a heritage red and notice how age brings harmony, not fragility.
Prompt: Where has God matured me in ways I didn’t notice until now?


WEDNESDAY • APR 1

Location: Pepper Bridge Winery (pepperbridge.com)
Focus: Strength with gentleness
Act: Stand among the estate vines and feel the quiet power of rootedness.
Prompt: What strength in me is becoming more gentle, more controlled, more Christlike?


THURSDAY • APR 2

Location: Woodward Canyon (woodwardcanyon.com)
Focus: Honesty that refines
Act: Taste a structured Cabernet and let its clarity challenge you.
Prompt: What truth is God sharpening so I can walk more cleanly?


FRIDAY • APR 3

Location: Seven Hills Winery (sevenhillswinery.com)




Focus: Legacy and long vision
Act: Walk slowly through the historic district and feel the weight of time.
Prompt: What legacy is God asking me to build with intention?


SATURDAY • APR 4

Location: Reininger Winery (reiningerwinery.com)
Focus: Integration of past and present
Act: Hold a glass to the light and notice how layers coexist without conflict.
Prompt: What parts of my story is God weaving together into something whole?


SUNDAY • APR 5 — PALM SUNDAY

Mass: St. Patrick Catholic Church, Walla Walla (stpatrickww.org)
Vineyard: Doubleback (doubleback.com)
Focus: Entering the Passion with dignity
Act: Write one place where you feel Christ inviting you to walk with Him into holy courage.
Word: Hosanna.


MONDAY • APR 6

Location: Gramercy Cellars (gramercycellars.com)
Focus: Discipline and spiritual precision
Act: Taste a focused Syrah and reflect on the discipline God is restoring in you.
Prompt: What practice is God calling me to reclaim with seriousness and joy?

 

MARCH 31 Tuesday of Holy Week

Trans Day of Visibility-Rene Descartes

 Judges, Chapter 4, Verse 18

Jael went out to meet Sisera and said to him, “Turn aside, my lord, turn aside with me; do not be AFRAID.” So he went into her tent, and she covered him with a rug.

 This story doesn’t turn out well for Mr. Evil “Sisera” as God protects Israel from their enemies via women. We are now in the final stages of God’s covenant that is going to be completed via another woman, the mother of Christ.

 Girl Power

 Israel turns away from God again. This time they're conquered by Jabin, the king of Canaan. Israel cries unto the Lord.

 Wait—haven't we seen this episode before?

 Luckily for them, God raises up an awesome judge: Deborah, a prophetess and the only female judge in the book. Girl power! Deborah tells Barak, an Israelite general, that God commands him to take 10,000 soldiers from the tribes of Naphtali and Zebulun and attack Jabin's army. She promises that God will give them victory.

Barak says he'll only go to battle if Deborah comes, and she does, but lets him know that it won't be him who kills Sisera, the captain of Jabin's army—it'll be a woman! Barak leads his 10,000 men against Sisera's army, including 900 chariots of iron. Barak's army kills every last one of Sisera's men—except for Sisera. He's hiding at his friend Heber's tent. Looks like things are about to get really in-tents.

 Heber's wife, Jael, goes out to meet Sisera, "and said unto him, turn in, my lord, turn into me; fear not" (KJV 4:18). If your friend's wife ever says these words to you, run away. Sisera tells Jael not to tell anyone he's in the tent. "Sure, Siss. No problem," she says, tucking him into bed with some milk. After he drifts off to sleep, Jael "took a nail of the tent, and took a hammer in her hand, and went softly unto him, and smote the nail into his temples, and fastened it into the ground" (KJV 4:21).

 And with that, Jabin was defeated. Ladies for the win!

Aids in Battle [1] pegging the Devil.

The Devil and I do struggle [God said to St. Bridget], in that we both desire souls as bridegrooms desire their brides. For I desire souls in order to give them eternal joy and honor.

The Devil desires souls to give them eternal horror and sorrow.

Great courage is required in spiritual warfare. ST. TERESA OF ÁVILA

Draw near to God, and Satan will flee from you. ST. EPHRAEM THE SYRIAN

To sin is human, but to persist in sin is devilish. ST. CATHERINE OF SIENA

Repentance is returning from the unnatural to the natural state, from the Devil to God, through discipline and effort. ST. JOHN THE DAMASCENE

Hence the Lord has said that he who has faith the size of a mustard seed can move a mountain by a word of command; that is, he can destroy the Devil’s dominion over us and remove it from its foundation. ST. MAXIMUS THE CONFESSOR

Do not oppose head-on the thoughts that the Enemy sows in your mind. Instead, cut off all conversation with them by prayer to God. ST. ISAAK OF SYRIA

Copilot’s Take

 

The Book of Judges opens with a nation caught between promise and compromise, still surrounded by the very enemies they failed to drive out. Into this landscape of half‑obedience and recurring infidelity, God raises leaders—not magistrates, but deliverers—who embody His determination to rescue His people even when they drift. Deborah and Jael stand out in this cycle as luminous figures, women who step into the breach when courage among the men has thinned. Their story unfolds like a solstice: light reaching its longest stretch, exposing everything that hides in the shadows.

Deborah’s leadership is not an anomaly but a divine intervention. She listens when others hesitate, speaks when others stall, and calls Barak into a mission he is reluctant to embrace alone. Her presence becomes the catalyst for Israel’s movement, a reminder that God’s authority is not constrained by human expectations. The Catechism’s teaching on providence—God guiding all things toward their appointed end—echoes through her role. She is the voice of clarity in a season of confusion, the prophetic light that breaks through Israel’s spiritual cloud cover.

 

Jael, by contrast, is the quiet force of decisive action. She does not command armies or sit beneath a palm tree dispensing judgments. She simply recognizes evil when it collapses at her doorstep and refuses to let it survive the night. Her tent becomes the unlikely battleground where Sisera’s tyranny ends. The saints speak with one voice about this kind of courage: fortitude that resists evil, prayer that cuts off the enemy’s whisper, repentance that returns the soul to its natural state. Jael embodies all of it without fanfare. She acts not out of vengeance but out of fidelity to the covenant people.

 

Together, Deborah and Jael reveal a pattern for confronting evil that is both ancient and urgently relevant. God speaks through Deborah, Israel moves through Barak, and deliverance arrives through Jael. Revelation, obedience, and decisive action—three movements of the same divine symphony. Judges 4 is not a celebration of human violence but a portrait of moral clarity. Evil is not negotiated with. It is not entertained. It is not allowed to linger. It is confronted, exposed, and ended by those who are willing to stand in the light God provides.

 

On the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, this story reads like a spiritual mirror. God gives maximum light for maximum clarity. He exposes what hides, strengthens what trembles, and empowers whoever is willing to act with courage. Deborah listens, Barak moves, Jael finishes. The invitation is the same today: listen with clarity, move with obedience, and act with courage. Evil is real, but its power is limited. God’s light is stronger, and He wastes none of it.

 

Tuesday of Holy Week

 

Traditionally the account of Christ's Passion according to St. Mark is read today and most people continue with spring cleaning. Also today marks the bargaining of Judas with the Sanhedrin as the Jewish way of tracking time makes Tuesday evening Wednesday as days changed after sunset and not at midnight following the Roman time keeping method.[2]

 

We learned yesterday from St. John that Judas was a thief. He robbed from Christ, from the other apostles, from the incipient Church. Jesus, for him, had become merely an excuse to seek after his own interests. Jesus was not the one thing necessary, as he was for Mary of Bethany. Jesus wasn't even an end, but merely a means for Judas to satisfy his own greed. Judas supposedly had serious qualms of conscience about the failure to sell the years’ worth of aromatic nard with which Mary had anointed Jesus' feet, but he thought nothing about selling Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. Judas had been a disciple merely in his body, not in his heart. Judas had been called personally by the Lord, had lived with him for about 1,000 days, had followed him for three years, had heard him preach and teach, had seen him walk on water, still stormy seas, feed thousands with a five rolls and two sardines, raise three people from the dead, heal on countless occasions the sick, blind and lame and have mercy on countless sinners, had even received from the Lord the power to do many of these same things himself, and had been entrusted by him with the money bag for the Twelve. But he tragically had never gotten to know Jesus, and even more tragically had never gotten to love him. He remained just a follower of Jesus on the outside, not on the inside. In betraying Jesus, Judas valued him less than a handful of coins, forgetting that it would profit him nothing to gain the whole world and forfeit his life.[3]

Goffine’s Devout Instructions (1896) for Tuesday in Holy Week

Prayer. O ALMIGHTY and everlasting God grant us so to celebrate the mysteries of Our Lord s passion that we may deserve to obtain pardon.

 EPISTLE. Jeremias xi. 18-20.

 In those days Jeremias said: Thou, O Lord, hast showed me, and I have known then Thou showedst me their doings. And I was as a meek lamb that is carried to be a victim: and I knew not that they had devised counsels against me, saying: Let us put wood on his bread, and cut him off from the land of the living, and let his name be remembered no more. But Thou, O Lord of Sabbath, Who judgest justly, and triest the reins and the hearts, let me see Thy revenge on them: for to Thee have I revealed my cause, O Lord my God.

 Instead of the gospel the Church reads to-day:

 THE PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST,

According to St. Mark xiv. and xv.

 At that time: The feast of the Pasch, and of the Azymes was after two days: and the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might by some wile lay hold on Him, and kill Him. But they said: Not on the festival- day, lest there should be a tumult among the people. And when He was in Bethania in the house of Simon the leper, and was at meat, there came a woman having an alabaster box of ointment of precious spikenard: and breaking the alabaster box she poured it out upon His head. Now there were some that had indignation within themselves, and said:

 Why was this waste of the ointment made?

For this ointment might have been sold for more than three hundred pence, and given to the poor. And they murmured against her. But Jesus said:

Let her alone, why do you molest her?

 She hath wrought a good work upon Me. For the poor you have always with you: and whensoever you will, you may do them good; but Me you have not always. What she had, she hath done she is come beforehand to anoint My body for the burial. Amen I say to you, wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, that also which she hath done, shall be told for a memorial of her. And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went to the chief priests to betray Him to them.

 Who hearing it were glad: and they promised him they would give him money?

 And he sought how he might conveniently betray Him. Now on the first day of the unleavened bread when they sacrificed the Pasch, the disciples say to Him: Whither wilt Thou that we go, and prepare for Thee to eat the Pasch. And He sendeth two of His disciples, and saith to them:

 Go ye into the city; and there shall meet you a man carrying a pitcher of water, follow him; and whithersoever he shall go in, say to the master of the house, The Master saith, where is My refectory, where I may eat the Pasch with My disciples?

 And he will show you a large dining-room furnished; and there prepare ye for us. And His disciples went their way, and came into the city; and they found as He had told them, and they prepared the Pasch. And when evening was come, He cometh with the twelve. And when they were at table and eating, Jesus saith: Amen I say to you, one of you that eateth with Me shall betray Me. But they began to be sorrowful, and to say to Him one by one:

 Is it I?

 Who saith to them:

 One of the twelve, who dippeth with Me his hand in the dish?

 And the Son of man indeed goeth, as it is written of Him: but wo to that man by whom the Son of man shall be betrayed. It were better for him, if that man had not been born. And whilst they were eating, Jesus took bread: and blessing broke, and gave to them, and said: Take ye, this is My body. And having taken the chalice, giving thanks He gave it to them. And they all drank of it. And He said to them: This is My blood of the New Testament, which shall be shed for many. Amen I say to you, that I will drink no more of this fruit of the vine, until that day when I shall drink it new in the kingdom of God. And when they had said a hymn, they went forth to the Mount of Olives. And Jesus saith to them: You will all be scandalized in My regard this night; for it is written, I will strike the shepherd, and the sheep shall be dispersed. But after I shall be risen again, I will go before you into Galilee. But Peter saith to Him: Although all shall be scandalized in Thee, yet not I. And Jesus saith to him: Amen I say to thee, to-day even in this night, before the cock crow twice, thou shalt deny Me thrice. But he spoke the more vehemently: Although I should die together with Thee, I will not deny Thee. And in like manner also said they all. And they come to a farm called Gethsemani. And He saith to His disciples: Sit you here, while I pray. And He taketh Peter and James and John with Him; and He began to fear and to be heavy. And He saith to them: My soul is sorrowful even unto death; stay you here, and watch. And when He was gone forward a little He fell flat on the ground; and He prayed that if it might be, the hour might pass from Him: and He saith: Abba, Father, all things are possible to Thee, remove this chalice from Me, but not what I will, but what Thou wilt. And He cometh, and findeth them sleeping. And He saith to Peter:

 Simon, sleepest thou? couldst thou not watch one hour?

 Watch ye, and pray that you enter not into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. And going away again, He prayed, saying the same words. And when he returned, He found them again asleep (for their eyes were heavy) and they knew not what to answer Him. And He cometh the third time, and saith to them: Sleep ye now, and take your rest. It is enough: the hour is come behold the Son of man shall be betrayed into the hands of sinners. rise, let us go. Behold, he that will betray Me, is at hand. And while He was yet speaking, cometh Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, and with him a great multitude with swords and staves, from the chief priests and the scribes and the ancients. And he that betrayed Him had given them a sign, saying: Whomsoever I shall kiss, that is He, lay hold on Him, and lead Him away carefully. And when he was come, immediately going up to Him, he saith: Hail, Rabbi: and he kissed Him. But they laid hands on Him, and held Him. And one of them that stood by drawing a sword, struck a servant of the chief priest, and cut off his ear. And Jesus answering, said to them:

 Are you come out as to a robber with swords and staves to apprehend Me?

 I was daily with you in the temple teaching, and you did not lay hands on Me. But that the Scriptures may be fulfilled. Then His disciples leaving Him all fled away. And a certain young man followed Him having a linen cloth cast about his naked body: and they laid hold on him. But he, casting off the linen cloth, fled from them naked. And they brought Jesus to the high priest: and all the priests and the scribes and the ancients assembled together. And Peter followed Him afar off, even into the court of the high priest: and he sat with the servants at the fire, and warmed himself. And the chief priests and all the council sought for evidence against Jesus that they might put Him to death, and found none. For many bore false witness against Him, and their evidences were not agreeing. And some rising up, bore false witness against Him, saying: We heard Him say, I will destroy this temple made with hands, and within three days I will build another, not made with hands. And their witness did not agree. And the high priest rising up in the midst, asked Jesus, saying:

Answerest Thou nothing to the things that are laid to Thy charge by these men?

 But He held His peace and answered nothing. Again, the high priest asked Him, and said to Him:

 Art Thou the Christ, the Son of the blessed God?

 And Jesus said to him: I am. And you shall see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of the power of God, and coming with the clouds of heaven. Then the high priest rending his garments saith: 

What need we any farther witnesses? You have heard the blasphemy. What think you?

Who all condemned Him to be guilty of death. And some began to spit on Him, and to cover His face, and to buffet Him, and to say unto Him: Prophesy: and the servants struck Him with the palms of their hands. Now when Peter was in the court below, there cometh one of the maidservants of the high priest. And when she had seen Peter warming himself, looking on him she saith: Thou also wast with Jesus of Nazareth. But he denied, saying I neither know nor understand what thou sayest. And he went forth before the court, and the cock crew. And again, a maid servant seeing him, began to say to the standers-by: This is one of them. But he denied again. And after a while they that stood by said again to Peter: Surely, thou art one of them: for thou art also a Galilean. But he began to curse and to swear, saying I know not this man of Whom you speak. And immediately the cock crew again. And Peter remembered the word that Jesus had said unto him: Before the cock crow twice, thou shalt thrice deny Me. And he began to weep. And straightway in the morning the chief priests holding a consultation with the ancients and the scribes and the whole council, binding Jesus, led Him away and delivered Him to Pilate. 

And Pilate asked Him: Art Thou the King of the Jews?

But He answering, saith to him: Thou sayest it. And the chief priests accused Him in many things. And Pilate again asked Him, saying:

Answerest Thou nothing?

behold in how many things they accuse Thee. But Jesus still answered nothing: so that Pilate wondered. Now on the festival-day he was wont to release unto them one of the prisoners, whomsoever they demanded. And there was one called Barabbas, who was put in prison with some seditious men, who in, the sedition had committed murder. And when the multitude was come up, they began to desire that he would do, as he had ever done unto them.

And Pilate answered them, and said: Will you that I release to you the King of the Jews?

For he knew that the chief priests had delivered Him up out of envy. But the chief priests moved the people, that he should rather release Barabbas to them. And Pilate again answering, saith to them: 

What will you then that I do to the King of the Jews?

But they again cried out: Crucify Him. And Pilate saith to them:

Why, what evil hath He done?

But they cried out the more: Crucify Him. And so, Pilate being willing to satisfy the people, released to them Barabbas, and delivered up Jesus, when he had scourged Him, to be crucified. And the soldiers led Him into the court of the palace, and they call together the whole band: and they clothe Him with purple, and platting a crown of thorns, they put it upon Him. And they began to salute Him: Hail, King of the Jews. And they struck His head with a reed: and they did spit on Him. And bowing their knees, they adored Him. And after they had mocked Him, they took off the purple from Him, and put His own garments on Him, and they led Him out to crucify Him. And they forced one Simon a Cyrenian who passed by, coming out of the country, the father of Alexander and of Rufus, to take up His cross. And they bring Him into the place called Golgotha, which being interpreted is, the place of Calvary. And they gave Him to drink wine mingled with myrrh: but He took it not. And crucifying Him, they divided His garments, casting lots upon them, what every man should take. And it was the third hour, and they crucified Him. And the inscription of His cause was written over, THE KING OF THE JEWS. And with Him they crucify two thieves, the one on His right hand, and the other on His left. And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith: And with the wicked He was reputed. And they that passed by, blasphemed Him, wagging their heads, and saying: Vah, thou that destroyest the temple of God, and in three days buildest it up again, save Thyself, coming down from the cross. In like manner also the chief priests mocking, said with the scribes one to another: He saved others, Himself He cannot save. Let Christ the King of Israel come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe. And they that were crucified with Him, reviled Him. And when the sixth hour was come, there was darkness over the whole earth until the ninth hour. And at the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying:

Eloi, Eloi, lamma sabacthani?Which is, being interpreted, My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?

And some of the standers-by hearing, said: Be hold He calleth Elias. And one running and filling a sponge with vinegar, and putting it upon a reed, gave Him to drink, saying: Stay, let us see if Elias come to take Him down. And Jesus having cried out with a loud voice gave up the ghost. 

[Here all kneel.] 

And the veil of the temple was rent in two, from the top to the bottom. And the centurion who stood over against Him, seeing that crying out in this manner He had given up the ghost, said: Indeed, this man was the Son of God. And there were also women looking on afar off: among whom was Mary Magdalen, and Mary the mother of James the Less and of Joseph, and Salome: who also when He was in Galilee, followed Him, and ministered to Him, and many other women that came up with Him to Jerusalem. And when evening was now come (because it was the Parasceve, that is, the day before the Sabbath), Joseph of Arimathea, a noble counsellor, who was also himself looking for the kingdom of God, came and went in boldly to Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus. But Pilate wondered that He should be already dead. And sending for the centurion, he asked him if He were already dead. And when he had understood it by the centurion, he gave the body to Joseph. And Joseph buying fine linen and taking Him down, wrapped Him up in the fine linen, and laid Him in a sepulcher which was hewed out of a rock. And he rolled a stone to the door of the sepulcher.

The Physical Death of Jesus Christ[4]

Jesus of Nazareth underwent Jewish and Roman trials, was flogged, and was sentenced to death by crucifixion. The scourging produced deep stripe like lacerations and appreciable blood loss, and it probably set the stage for hypovolemic shock, as evidenced by the fact that Jesus was too weakened to carry the crossbar (patibulum) to Golgotha. At the site of crucifixion, his wrists were nailed to the patibulum and, after the patibulum was lifted onto the upright post (stipes), his feet were nailed to the stipes. The major pathophysiologic effect of crucifixion was an interference with normal respirations. Accordingly, death resulted primarily from hypovolemic shock and exhaustion asphyxia. Jesus' death was ensured by the thrust of a soldier's spear into his side. Modern medical interpretation of the historical evidence indicate that Jesus was dead when taken down from the cross.

GETHSEMANE

After Jesus and his disciples had observed the Passover meal in an upper room in a home in southwest Jerusalem, they traveled to the Mount of Olives, northeast of the city. (Owing to various adjustments in the calendar, the years of Jesus' birth and death remain controversial.  However, it is likely that Jesus was born in either 4 or 6 BC and died in 30 AD.  During the Passover observance in 30 AD, the last Supper would have been observed on Thursday, April 6 [Nisan 13], and Jesus would have been crucified on Friday, April 7 [Nisan 14].) At nearby Gethsemane, Jesus, apparently knowing that the time of his death was near, suffered great mental anguish, and, as described by the physician Luke, his sweat became like blood.

Although this is a very rare phenomenon, bloody sweat (hematidrosis or hemohidrosis) may occur in highly emotional states or in persons with bleeding disorders. As a result of hemorrhage into the sweat glands, the skin becomes fragile and tender. Luke's descriptions supports the diagnosis of hematidrosis rather than eccrine chromidrosis (brown or yellow-green sweat) or stigmatization (blood oozing from the palms or elsewhere). Although some authors have suggested that hematidrosis produced hypovolemia, we agree with Bucklin that Jesus' actual blood loss probably was minimal However, in the cold night air, it may have produced chills.

Stations of the Cross[5] 

Though technically only the last fourteen days of Lent explicitly consider the sufferings of our Lord, the Stations of the Cross (a.k.a. the Way of the Cross) have long been a popular Lenten devotion for any or all of the forty days (though they tend to be done on Fridays). These fourteen scenes from the via dolorosa, the sorrowful path that Christ took while carrying His cross to Golgotha, help direct one's heart to the mysterium fidei of our Lord's selfless sacrifice.

Other Forms of Asceticism[6]

 

Since Lent recapitulates time spent in the desert, other forms of asceticism have accrued to its observance. Unessential travel and diversion are discouraged. In former times, certain forms of entertainment, such as live theatre and secular music, were banned, as was the holding of court. Weddings were also forbidden in the early Church; even after this changed, the Solemn Nuptial Blessing could not be given during a Lenten wedding. Finally, married couples were once admonished to abstain from conjugal relations during this time (as they were admonished to do during all solemn fasts and feasts). Again, the principle is the same: withdrawal from the preoccupations of the flesh in order to focus on the spirit. 

Today, plan to do at least one Novena for the calendar year for yourself and for your Family. I always plan to do the Divine Mercy Novena by hiking for nine Saturdays starting on the Friday before Divine Mercy Sunday.

Timeline of Holy Week[7]

·         Jesus denounces the scribes and Pharisees (Mt 23:1-36; Mk 12:37-40; Lk 20:4547)

·         Jesus teaches in the Temple (Lk 21:37-38)

·         Jesus predicts the destruction of the Temple. (Mt 24:1-3; Mk 13:1-4; Lk 21:5-7

·         Returns to Bethany at night.

On Tuesday morning, Jesus and his disciples returned to Jerusalem. They passed the withered fig tree on their way, and Jesus spoke to his companions about the importance of faith. Back at the Temple, religious leaders, upset at Jesus establishing himself as a spiritual authority, organized an ambush with the intent to place Him under arrest. But Jesus evaded their traps and pronounced harsh judgment on them, saying:

"Blind guides! For you are like whitewashed tombs—beautiful on the outside but filled on the inside with dead people's bones and all sorts of impurity. Outwardly you look like righteous people, but inwardly your hearts are filled with hypocrisy and lawlessness...Snakes! Sons of vipers! How will you escape the judgment of hell?" (Matthew 23:24-33)

Later that afternoon, Jesus left the city and went with his disciples to the Mount of Olives, which sits due east of the Temple and overlooks Jerusalem. Here Jesus gave the Olivet Discourse, an elaborate prophecy about the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the age. He speaks, as usual, in parables, using symbolic language about the end times events, including His Second Coming and the final judgment. Scripture indicates that this Tuesday was also the day Judas Iscariot negotiated with the Sanhedrin, the rabbinical court of ancient Israel, to betray Jesus (Matthew 26:14-16). After a tiring day of confrontation and warnings about the future, once again, Jesus and the disciples return to Bethany to stay the night.

Lenten Calendar[8]

Read: Read these 5 suggestions for Holy Week from USCCBs www.foryourmarrige.org. . . .   

Reflect: Watch a video reflection on the days readings. 

Pray: As we journey with Jesus through Holy Week, remember all those in our world today who carry heavy crosses of poverty, homelessness, and hunger. Pray for the poor and vulnerable today. 

Act: Commit with your family to do at least one of the five suggestions in the article above.

The Church’s Calendar[9]

We often learn our doctrine much more deeply and effectively simply by celebrating the feasts and fasts of the Church.

In fact, in Orthodox Judaism the calendar is the catechism of Israel. According to Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, “On the pinions of time which bear us through life, God has inscribed the eternal words of His soul-inspiring doctrine, making days and weeks, months and years the heralds to proclaim His truths. Nothing would seem more fleeting than these elements of time, but to them God has entrusted the care of His holy things, thereby rendering them more imperishable and more accessible.” 

Catechism of the Catholic Church 

2698 The Tradition of the Church proposes to the faithful certain rhythms of praying intended to nourish continual prayer. Some are daily, such as morning and evening prayer, grace before and after meals, the Liturgy of the Hours. Sundays, centered on the Eucharist, are kept holy primarily by prayer. The cycle of the liturgical year and its great feasts are also basic rhythms of the Christian's life of prayer.

No one knows human nature better than the God who created it. The book of Genesis tells us that the Lord God made the world in six days and rested on the seventh. He rested not because he was weary-God does not tire-but because He wanted to provide a model for human labor and rest. The Church calendar coincides with the cosmic rhythms of God. The Church calendar reflects this fact: That Christ rose from the dead in payment for our sins and is the Jewish Messiah that was hoped for.

Aids in Battle[10] When in the battle

In the moments when you are tempted to be careless or halfhearted in the struggle, let these exhortations stir you to a renewed valor in battle and provide you with strategies to follow.

·         The life of man upon the earth is a warfare. Tob 12: 13 DOUAY-RHEIMS

·         God has not destined us to wrath, but to gain.

·         Fight the good fight, having faith and a good conscience. 1 Tim 1: 19

·         lay hold of the life eternal, to which you have been called.

·         Conduct yourself in work as a good soldier of Christ Jesus.

·         Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. Rom 12: 21 RSVCE

·         The unceasing prayer of a just man has great effectiveness.

Bible in a year Day 272 The Call of Nehemiah

Fr. Mike introduces the book of Nehemiah and takes us through Nehemiah’s exemplary response to the call of God as he does what God asks simply because he asks. He also encourages us to pray for our enemies and explains the need to refrain from vengeance in our interactions with others, especially when we are provoked by their actions. Today’s readings are Nehemiah 1-2, Zechariah 12-13, and Proverbs 20:20-22.

Today is International Transgender Day of Visibility.

Another way the world and the modernist clerics are attempting to put blinders on us is to bully us into being okay with transgenderism.

·         Note as of this date the USCCB has made no statement on the Transgender shooter in Tennessee.

·         A collaborative statement from three communities of women religious seeks to offer Catholic support for trans, nonbinary, and gender-expansive people[11]

o   On Trans Day of Visibility, the church must be ‘a force for good’.

This is what the catechism of the church states on this subject.[12]

Sexual Identity

 

(No. 2333) “Everyone, man and woman, should acknowledge and accept his sexual identity. Physical, moral, and spiritual difference and complementarity are oriented toward the goods of marriage and the flourishing of family life. The harmony of the couple and of society depends in part on the way in which the complementarity, needs, and mutual support between the sexes are lived out.”

 

(No. 2393) “By creating the human being man and woman, God gives personal dignity equally to the one and the other. Each of them, man and woman, should acknowledge and accept his sexual identity.”

 

Body and Soul

 

(No. 364) “The human body shares in the dignity of "the image of God": it is a human body precisely because it is animated by a spiritual soul, and it is the whole human person that is intended to become, in the body of Christ, a temple of the Spirit: Man, though made of body and soul, is a unity. Through his very bodily condition he sums up in himself the elements of the material world. Through him they are thus brought to their highest perfection and can raise their voice in praise freely given to the Creator. For this reason man may not despise his bodily life. Rather he is obliged to regard his body as good and to hold it in honor since God has created it and will raise it up on the last day.”

 

Modesty

 

(No. 2521) “Purity requires modesty, an integral part of temperance. Modesty protects the intimate center of the person. It means refusing to unveil what should remain hidden. It is ordered to chastity to whose sensitivity it bears witness. It guides how one looks at others and behaves toward them in conformity with the dignity of persons and their solidarity.”

(No. 2522) “Modesty protects the mystery of persons and their love… Modesty is decency. It inspires one's choice of clothing. It keeps silence or reserve where there is evident risk of unhealthy curiosity. It is discreet.”

(No. 2523) “There is a modesty of the feelings as well as of the body. It protests, for example, against the voyeuristic explorations of the human body in certain advertisements, or against the solicitations of certain media that go too far in the exhibition of intimate things. Modesty inspires a way of life which makes it possible to resist the allurements of fashion and the pressures of prevailing ideologies.” Updated August 7, 2019 2

 

Privacy

 

(No. 1907) “First, the common good presupposes respect for the person as such. In the name of the common good, public authorities are bound to respect the fundamental and inalienable rights of the human person. Society should permit each of its members to fulfill his vocation. In particular, the common good resides in the conditions for the exercise of the natural freedoms indispensable for the development of the human vocation, such as ‘the right to act according to a sound norm of conscience and to safeguard . . . privacy, and rightful freedom also in matters of religion.’”

 

Mutilation

 

(No. 2297) “Except when performed for strictly therapeutic medical reasons, directly intended amputations, mutilations, and sterilizations performed on innocent persons are against the moral law.”

Rene Descartes[13] born March 31, 1596

Rene Descartes (1596-1650), founder of Analytical Geometry and Modern Philosophy

In the beginning of his Meditations (1641) Descartes wrote:

“I have always been of the opinion that the two questions respecting God and the Soul were the chief of those that ought to be determined by help of Philosophy rather than of Theology; for although to us, the faithful, it be sufficient to hold as matters of faith, that the human soul does not perish with the body, and that God exists, it yet assuredly seems impossible ever to persuade infidels of the reality of any religion, or almost even any moral virtue, unless, first of all, those two things be proved to them by natural reason. And since in this life there are frequently greater rewards held out to vice than to virtue, few would prefer the right to the useful, if they were restrained neither by the fear of God nor the expectation of another life.” (Descartes 1901).

 

“It is absolutely true that we must believe in God, because it is also taught by the Holy Scriptures. On the other hand, we must believe in the Sacred Scriptures because they come from God.” (Descartes 1950, Letter of Dedication).

 

“And thus, I very clearly see that the certitude and truth of all science depends on the knowledge alone of the true God, insomuch that, before I knew him, I could have no perfect knowledge of any other thing. And now that I know him, I possess the means of acquiring a perfect knowledge respecting innumerable matters, as well relative to God himself and other intellectual objects as to corporeal nature.” (Descartes 1901, Meditation V).

The Seven Sacraments[14] 

The English word "sacrament" comes from Latin sacramentum, which means "mystery" or "rite" in classical Latin (although it also came to mean an "obligation" or "oath" in Medieval Latin).
It is related to the Latin adjective sacra ("holy") and verb sacrare ("to devote, consecrate, make holy"). The Latin Vulgate Bible uses sacramentum 16 times (8x OT; 8x NT) to translate Greek mystērion.

On the other hand, the Greek word μυστήριον (mystērion, something "secret" or "hidden"; used 28 times in the NT) is translated by several different words in the Latin Vulgate Bible:

  • mysterium (19 times in the Vulgate NT: Matt 13:11; Mark 4:11; Luke 8:10; Rom 11:25; 16:25; 1 Cor 2:7; 4:1; 13:2; 14:2; 15:51; Eph 3:4; 6:19; Col 1:26; 2:2; 4:3; 2 Thess 2:7; 1 Tim 3:9; Rev 10:7; 17:5)
  • sacramentum (8 times: Eph 1:9; 3:3, 9; 5:32; Col 1:27; 1 Tim 3:16; Rev 1:20; 17:7)
  • testimonium (only once: 1 Cor 2:1)
  • All three of these Latin words could be translated "mystery," but mysterium more often connotes the invisible or hidden dimensions, while sacramentum more often refers to the visible or symbolic aspects of a spiritual or divine mystery. 

In a sense, Jesus Christ himself can be called "the mystery of salvation" or "the sacrament of God," since he, through his incarnation, made visible to us the mystery of the invisible God.
Similarly, the Church as a whole is sometimes called "the sacrament of salvation," since it is "the sign and the instrument of the communion of God and men" (CCC §780; cf. §§774-776).

The word "sacrament" most commonly refers to seven particular rites or rituals performed in and by the Church.

  • Many older Catholics will still remember the very brief definition from the Baltimore Catechism (1941): "A sacrament is an outward sign instituted by Christ to give grace." (§304).
  • The current official Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994; 2nd edition 1997), gives a more extended definition:
    • "The sacraments are efficacious signs of grace, instituted by Christ and entrusted to the church, by which divine life is dispensed to us. The visible rites by which the sacraments are celebrated signify and make present the graces proper to each sacrament. They bear fruit in those who receive them with the required dispositions." (CCC §1131; see also "Sacrament" in the CCC's Glossary).
  • These sacraments are considered "Sacraments of Christ," "Sacraments of the Church," "Sacraments of Faith," "Sacraments of Salvation," and "Sacraments of Eternal Life" (CCC §§1113-1134).
  • The seven sacraments can be subdivided into three sub-groups:
    • three "Sacraments of Christian Initiation" (Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist);
    • two "Sacraments of Healing" (Penance/Reconciliation and Anointing of the Sick);
    • two "Sacraments of Vocation" (Holy Orders/Ordination and Matrimony/Marriage; also referred to as "Sacraments at the Service of Communion").

Litany of Trust — Tuesday, March 31

From the fear that my weakness makes me unusable to You, deliver me, Jesus.

 Reflection

As the Church approaches the solemn days of the Passion, the Gospel places before us not the strength of the disciples but their frailty. Peter boasts of loyalty and collapses. James and John fall asleep in the garden. Judas trades intimacy for silver. Even the crowds who once cried “Hosanna” will soon shout “Crucify Him.” Holy Week is not a parade of human competence—it is a revelation of divine mercy moving through human weakness. We fear that our failures disqualify us, that our inconsistencies make us unworthy instruments of grace. Yet Christ enters His Passion surrounded not by heroes but by the hesitant, the fearful, and the flawed.

Jesus does not abandon them. He does not replace them. He carries them. The Passion reveals a God who does not wait for perfect disciples but forms saints out of those who stumble toward Him. In Gethsemane, Jesus asks His friends to stay awake, knowing they will fall asleep. At the trial, He looks at Peter with tenderness, not condemnation. On the Cross, He entrusts His Mother and His Church to a disciple who had fled only hours before. To stand with Christ on March 31 is to let this truth settle into the heart: God does not need our strength to accomplish His work—He asks only for our surrender. Our weakness is not a barrier to His grace but the very place where His mercy takes root.

Scripture

“My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness.”
2 Corinthians 12:9

Prayer

Jesus, meet me in the places where I feel small, inconsistent, or unworthy. Teach me to trust that Your strength is not hindered by my weakness but revealed through it. Free me from the fear that I must be perfect before I can serve You. Let my limitations become openings for Your mercy, and shape my heart to walk with You through the mysteries of Your Passion.

Reflection Question

Where do you fear that your weakness disqualifies you—and how might Jesus be inviting you to let His strength be revealed precisely there?

Daily Devotions

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

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan



[1] Thigpen, Paul. Manual for Spiritual Warfare. TAN Books.

[9] Hahn, Scott, Signs of Life; 40 Catholic Customs and their biblical roots. Chap. 6. The Church Calendar.

[10]Thigpen, Paul. Manual for Spiritual Warfare. TAN Books.

[11] https://uscatholic.org/articles/202303/on-trans-day-of-visibility-the-church-must-be-a-force-for-good/

[15] Sheraton, Mimi. 1,000 Foods To Eat Before You Die: A Food Lover's Life List (p. 800). Workman Publishing Company. Kindle Edition.

[16] Schultz, Patricia. 1,000 Places to See Before You Die: A Traveler's Life List Workman Publishing Company. Kindle Edition. 


Tormented (1960)

🎬 Production Snapshot
Studio: Allied Artists Pictures
Director: Bert I. Gordon
Release: 1960
Screenplay: George Worthing Yates & Bert I. Gordon
Stars: Richard Carlson, Susan Gordon, Lugene Sanders, Juli Reding
Genre: Supernatural thriller / psychological horror / guilt‑haunting morality tale
Notable: A seaside ghost story that plays like a moral parable. Beneath its B‑movie surface lies a sharp meditation on conscience, omission, and the slow corrosion of the soul.

🧭 Story Summary
Jazz pianist Tom Stewart is preparing for marriage on a quiet island. His former lover, Vi Mason, returns and threatens to expose their past. At the lighthouse, she slips and clings to the railing, begging for help.

Tom chooses not to save her.
This silent refusal becomes the film’s hinge.

After Vi’s death, Tom’s life begins to unravel. Her ghost appears in subtle, unnerving ways:

  • A wristwatch washing ashore
  • Footprints where no one walks
  • A disembodied hand stealing the wedding ring
  • Her voice whispering the truth
  • Her face appearing in photographs
  • Her presence disrupting the wedding rehearsal

Tom’s attempts to hide the truth lead him deeper into darkness. A ferryman discovers his secret and tries to blackmail him; Tom kills again. A young girl, Sandy, witnesses his actions, becoming the final threat to his collapsing façade.

At the lighthouse—where the first sin occurred—Tom tries to silence the child. Vi’s ghost intervenes. Tom falls to his death, and the haunting ends only when the truth is restored.

🕰 Historical and Cultural Context

  • Part of the late‑1950s/early‑1960s wave of supernatural thrillers where ghosts represent conscience rather than monsters.
  • Director Bert I. Gordon, known for creature features, turns inward toward psychological and moral horror.
  • The seaside setting reflects postwar anxieties about reputation, hidden sin, and the fragility of public respectability.
  • The film’s ghost effects, though modest, serve the story’s moral clarity rather than spectacle.
  • The narrative echoes mid‑century fears of scandal and the cost of maintaining a lie.

✝️ Catholic Moral Resonances

The Sin of Omission as the First Betrayal
Tom’s refusal to save Vi is not an act of violence but an act of withholding—a betrayal born in silence.
It echoes the Catechism’s teaching that sins of omission can be as grave as active wrongdoing.

The Ghost as Conscience Made Visible
Vi’s haunting is not malevolent; it is revelatory.
She is the truth Tom refuses to face—persistent, unyielding, and ultimately merciful.

The Multiplication of Lies
Tom’s descent illustrates how sin darkens the intellect and weakens the will.
One refusal becomes a pattern.
One death becomes two.
The soul collapses under the weight of its evasions.

The Innocent as the Final Test
Sandy, the child who sees clearly, becomes the target of Tom’s desperation.
Evil, when cornered, always turns on innocence.

A Hint of Judas on Tuesday of Holy Week
Tuesday is the day Christ exposes hidden intentions.
It is the day Judas’s interior fracture becomes visible.
Tom’s story mirrors this pattern:
a quiet betrayal, a concealed truth, a conscience that refuses to stay silent.
The haunting becomes a cinematic echo of the Gospel’s warning—
that the heart’s secret choices eventually step into the light.

🍷 Hospitality Pairing

Drink:
Dark Roast Coffee with a Dash of Sea Salt
Bracing, coastal, slightly bitter—like the taste of a conscience awakening.

Snack:
Salted Caramel Popcorn
A nod to the film’s B‑movie roots: simple, nostalgic, perfect for a late‑night thriller.

Atmosphere:

  • A dim lamp or candle, echoing the lighthouse’s lonely glow
  • Soft jazz playing quietly, recalling Tom’s profession
  • A sense of moral tension—truth pressing gently but firmly toward the surface

🪞 Reflection Prompt
Where in your life is there a temptation to “look away” rather than act—and how might God be inviting you to choose courage over concealment?

What truth is quietly knocking, asking to be faced before it grows heavier?

And in this Tuesday of Holy Week, where Judas’s hidden intentions come into the light, what small act of honesty could keep your heart free, clear, and steady?


Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
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