Bourbon & Cigars

Bourbon & Cigars
Smoke in this Life not the Next

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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Introduction Today begins a quiet but decisive pivot in my spiritual calendar. Earlier this week I set the long arc for next year: in 2027 I...

Saturday, May 16, 2026

 William H. Seward born 1801

Smoke in This Life — Saturday After the Ascension (May 16)

Virtue: Gratitude & Constancy
Cigar: Maduro with a steady, earthy burn
Bourbon: A grounded rye—firm, honest, unpretentious
Reflection: “Whom do I thank by how I live?”

After such an explanation, incredulity was impossible. Hugette, at once astounded and grateful, received with joy the services rendered during the fourteen days designated. She alone could see and hear the deceased, who came at certain hours and then disappeared. As soon as her strength permitted, she devoutly made the pilgrimages which were asked of her.

This is the quiet day in the story—the day when the miraculous has already been revealed, the terms are clear, and the work begins. No more astonishment, no more testing of spirits, no more debate. Just fidelity. Just gratitude expressed through action.

Hugette’s gratitude is not sentimental. It is not a warm feeling. It is a task. A pilgrimage. A debt of love paid in footsteps. She does not merely thank her aunt; she walks her thanks.

And this is the lesson for the Saturday after the Ascension:
Christ has ascended. The angels have spoken. The mission is clear. Now comes the quiet fidelity of the in‑between days—the days when nothing dramatic happens, but everything depends on whether we keep walking.

Gratitude is proven by constancy.
Constancy is proven by obedience.
Obedience is proven by action.

Today’s smoke is not triumphant. It is steady. Earthy. A Maduro that holds its line without theatrics. The rye is the same—honest, grounded, without ornament. Together they form the posture of the day: I will do what has been asked of me, and I will do it with gratitude.

Meditation:
Where in my life has God already spoken clearly—
and I am now simply called to walk the path with quiet fidelity?

Prayer:
Lord, give me Hugette’s gratitude,
not the kind that speaks,
but the kind that walks.
Teach me to thank You with my feet.


SUDDEN FEAR (1952)

Joan Crawford • Jack Palance • Gloria Grahame
Directed by David Miller

A marital thriller filmed like a nocturnal confession, Sudden Fear turns the San Francisco elite world of writers, actors, and socialites into a stage where trust becomes a weapon. Joan Crawford gives one of her most controlled and devastating performances—not as a fallen woman, but as a woman who discovers that the man she loves is rehearsing her murder. Jack Palance is all sharp angles and predatory charm, while Gloria Grahame slithers through the film like a living temptation.

This is not a simple noir.
It is a spiritual study of betrayal, illusion, and the terrifying clarity that comes when a woman finally sees the truth.

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1952 by RKO, Sudden Fear stands at the intersection of:

Postwar American Glamour and Anxiety

The film’s world is elegant—mansions, theater circles, tailored suits—but beneath the polish lies insecurity, ambition, and the fear of becoming obsolete. Crawford’s Myra Hudson embodies the successful woman who still longs to be loved.

The Rise of Psychological Noir

This is noir without alleys or gangsters.
The shadows are interior:
jealousy, deception, the quiet dread of sleeping beside someone who wants you gone.

Joan Crawford’s Reinvention

After Mildred Pierce, Crawford mastered the role of the self‑made woman whose strength becomes her vulnerability. Here she is a playwright—wealthy, respected, but emotionally exposed.

Jack Palance’s Breakthrough as the New Male Threat

Palance’s Lester Blaine is not a brute.
He is articulate, handsome in a severe way, and capable of tenderness—until the mask slips.
His Oscar nomination signaled a new kind of screen villain:
the intimate predator.

Gloria Grahame and the Noir Femme Fatale

Grahame’s Irene Neves is not merely “the other woman.”
She is the embodiment of opportunism—sexual, financial, and emotional.
She doesn’t seduce Lester; she activates him.

San Francisco as a Psychological Labyrinth

Fog, hills, staircases, streetcars—
the city becomes a maze where Myra must outthink the people plotting her death.

The world is small:
a mansion, a rehearsal room, a dictation machine, a bedroom where a woman listens to her own death sentence.

But the moral terrain is vast—
trust, betrayal, fear, self‑possession, and the moment when innocence becomes strategy.

2. Story Summary

Myra Hudson (Joan Crawford)

A successful playwright.
A woman who has everything—except a man who loves her for herself.

She meets Lester Blaine (Jack Palance), an actor she once rejected professionally.
He charms her.
He marries her.
He moves into her world.

At first, it feels like salvation.
Then Myra discovers the truth.

The Dictation Machine Revelation

In one of noir’s greatest sequences, Myra accidentally records Lester and Irene plotting her murder.
She listens.
She freezes.
She understands.

The man she adores is rehearsing her death like a scene in a play.

The Transformation

Myra does not collapse.
She becomes strategic.
Silent.
Observant.

She plans her escape.
She imagines killing them first.
She rehearses her own counter‑plot.

But fear and conscience war within her.

The Final Night

A chase through San Francisco—
fog, headlights, footsteps, panic.

Lester and Irene destroy each other through suspicion and rage.
Myra survives not by violence, but by endurance.

The film ends with her trembling, exhausted, alive—
a woman who has seen the truth and walked through it.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. The Terror of False Intimacy

The greatest danger is not the stranger in the alley.

It is the person who shares your bed.

The film exposes the spiritual horror of misplaced trust.

B. The Awakening of Discernment

Myra’s salvation begins when she stops romanticizing Lester and starts seeing him.

Clarity is painful, but it is holy.

C. The Strength of the Interior Life

Myra’s battle is not physical.

It is psychological and spiritual—

the fight to remain sane, moral, and alive while surrounded by deceit.

D. Evil as Collaboration

Lester is weak.

Irene is manipulative.

Together they become lethal.

The film shows how sin multiplies when two wounded souls feed each other’s worst impulses.

E. The Triumph of Endurance Over Violence

Myra does not kill.

She survives.

The film insists that sometimes victory is simply refusing to become what threatens you.

4. Hospitality Pairing — The Nocturnal Vigil Spread

  • A dark‑wrapped Maduro cigar — dense, shadowed, slow‑burning, like Myra’s rising dread.
  • A pour of rye whiskey — sharp, angular, echoing Palance’s presence.
  • Black coffee and almond cookies — the taste of late‑night clarity, when illusions fall away.
  • A leather notebook — a place to confront the truths you’ve avoided.

A setting for nights when you want to reflect on trust, betrayal, and the courage of seeing clearly.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where have I trusted someone’s charm more than their character.
  • What truths have I overheard—directly or indirectly—that changed how I see someone.
  • When have I survived not by fighting, but by enduring.
  • What illusions about love or loyalty need to be stripped away.
  • Where do I need the courage to see what is actually happening, not what I wish were true.

Friday, May 15, 2026


Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Fri, May 15 – Friday After the Ascension

Virtue: Perseverance & Purified Identity
Cigar: Aged Maduro — dark, steady, disciplined
Bourbon: Old Forester 1920 — deep, honest, uncompromising
Reflection: “Who am I becoming under God’s fire?”

The Devotion

The day after the Ascension is the day after glory.
Christ has risen, mission has descended,
and now the world looks exactly the same—
except the disciple is not.

Heaven has moved.
Therefore man must move.

And into this sober, post‑glory clarity
steps the second revelation of Leonarde Collin.

Hugette, astonished, feared deception.
She sought her confessor, Father Antony Roland,
who told her to test the spirit with the exorcisms of the Church.

The young woman did not tremble.

They have no power but against the demons and the damned;
none whatever against predestined souls,
who are in the grace of God as I am.

This is the first truth of Purgatory:
the souls suffering there are not half‑saved.
They are the elect, sealed, confirmed,
already belonging entirely to God.

Their suffering is not uncertainty.
It is purification.

Hugette pressed further:
“How can you be my Aunt Leonarde?
She was old, irritable, worn.
You are young, patient, gentle.”

The answer cut through the air like a blade:

My real body is in the tomb…
this one is formed from the air.
Seventeen years of terrible suffering
have taught me patience and meekness.
In Purgatory we are confirmed in grace
and therefore exempt from all vice.

This is the second truth of Purgatory:
the fire does not merely punish vice—
it burns it out.
It does not merely correct temperament—
it recreates it.
It does not merely refine behavior—
it restores identity.

The Ascension lifts man upward.
Purgatory strips away everything that cannot rise.

Today asks:

What in me still clings to the earth?
What habits, tempers, and excuses
would seventeen years of divine fire burn away?
What would I look like
if God finished what He has already begun?

The day after the Ascension is the day of honesty.
Christ has risen.
Now the disciple must rise.

The Purgatory Line

A soul once said:

“I entered Purgatory with the same face I wore on earth—
the face shaped by my habits,
my temper,
my refusals of grace.”

Not malice.
Not scandal.
Not hatred.

Resistance.
The stubborn refusal to let God make a saint
out of the man He created.

Leonarde’s seventeen years
were the long correction
of every place she resisted grace
while she lived.

Purgatory is the furnace
where God finishes the work
we would not let Him complete in life.

The Cigar & Bourbon

Aged Maduro — dark, steady, disciplined.
A wrapper that has endured time,
a leaf that has learned patience,
a smoke that teaches the soul to stay in the fire
until the fire has done its work.

Old Forester 1920 — deep, honest, uncompromising.
A bourbon that refuses pretense,
that carries weight without apology,
that tastes like truth spoken plainly.

Together they form a discipline of identity—
the willingness to be remade,
to let God burn away the man you were
so He can reveal the man you are.

The Question for the Night Smoke

“Who am I becoming under God’s fire?”

Not:
“What must I suffer?”
but
“What will remain of me
when everything false has been burned away?”

Let the smoke rise slowly,
like the soul learning to ascend—
purified, patient,
finally recognizable to Heaven.

BIGGER THAN LIFE (1956)

James Mason • Barbara Rush • Walter Matthau
Directed by Nicholas Ray

A domestic tragedy filmed like a psychological horror story, Bigger Than Life turns a middle‑class American home into a pressure cooker where pride, illness, and masculine delusion collide. James Mason gives one of the most frightening performances of the 1950s—not as a monster, but as a father who believes he has become a prophet. Barbara Rush anchors the film with quiet, exhausted strength, while Walter Matthau plays the lone friend who sees the danger no one else will name.

This is not a medical drama.
It is a spiritual autopsy of American masculinity under pressure.

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1956 by 20th Century‑Fox, Bigger Than Life stands at the crossroads of:

Post‑war suburban anxiety

The new American dream—house, job, family—looks stable on the outside, but beneath it lies exhaustion, debt, and the pressure to appear successful at all costs.

The rise of medical modernity

Cortisone was hailed as a miracle drug.
Ray’s film exposes the darker truth:
a culture that believes science can fix the soul.

Nicholas Ray’s obsession with fractured families

Like Rebel Without a Cause, this film dissects the American home as a battleground of pride, fear, and unspoken wounds.

James Mason’s self‑produced indictment of middle‑class pride

Mason didn’t just star—he produced the film.
He wanted to expose the rot beneath the respectable surface.

The 1950s cult of the “perfect father”

The film tears down the myth of the infallible patriarch and shows how fragile that ideal truly is.

The world is small:
a school, a kitchen, a church, a doctor’s office, a living room where the wallpaper becomes a prison.

But the moral terrain is vast—
pride, delusion, fear, authority, and the terrifying ease with which a man can mistake his own voice for the voice of God.

The cultural backdrop:

  • The pressure on men to be providers, leaders, and moral anchors
  • The shame of weakness in a decade obsessed with strength
  • The belief that illness is a private failure
  • The worship of scientific progress
  • The fragility of suburban respectability

The film’s power lies in its contrasts:
Mason’s volcanic mania, Rush’s quiet endurance, Matthau’s steady decency, and a home that becomes a psychological furnace.

2. Story Summary

Ed Avery (James Mason)

A respected schoolteacher.
A loving father.
A man quietly drowning in financial strain and chronic pain.

When he collapses, doctors diagnose a rare inflammatory disease and prescribe cortisone, a new “miracle” drug.

At first, it works.
Ed feels reborn—energetic, confident, powerful.

Then the dosage increases.
And something inside him breaks.

The Transformation

Ed becomes grandiose.
Authoritarian.
Ruthlessly honest.
He begins to see himself as a visionary—
a man chosen to correct the moral failings of his family and society.

His wife, Lou (Barbara Rush), watches in terror as the man she loves becomes a tyrant.

His son becomes the target of his “corrections.”
His friend, Wally (Walter Matthau), tries to intervene.

Ed’s delusion peaks in a chilling scene:
he believes God has commanded him to sacrifice his son,
echoing Abraham and Isaac.

Only Lou’s desperate intervention stops him.

Ed is hospitalized.
The cortisone is withdrawn.
He returns to himself—broken, ashamed, and uncertain of the future.

The family gathers around him.
The film ends not with triumph, but with a fragile, trembling hope.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. The Idolatry of Pride

Ed’s downfall begins long before cortisone.

The drug merely amplifies what was already there:

the belief that a man must be strong, infallible, and in control.

B. The Fragility of Masculine Identity

Ed’s terror of weakness becomes the seed of his madness.

The film exposes how men can destroy themselves trying to appear “bigger than life.”

C. The Family as the First Battleground

Ed’s mania expresses itself most violently toward those he loves.

The home becomes the stage where pride wages war against tenderness.

D. Science Without Wisdom

The film is not anti‑medicine.

It is anti‑hubris.

Cortisone becomes a symbol of the belief that human problems can be solved without humility.

E. The Need for Mercy

Ed’s recovery is not victory.

It is surrender.

The film insists that healing begins when pride breaks.

4. Hospitality Pairing — The Suburban Furnace Spread

A pour of Elijah Craig Small Batch — warm, complex, with a burn that mirrors Ed’s rising mania.
A Connecticut‑shade cigar — pale wrapper, deceptive gentleness, a smoke that slowly tightens like the film’s tension.
Salted butter cookies — the taste of 1950s domesticity, sweet on the surface, brittle underneath.
A leather‑bound notebook — a place to confront the pressures you hide from others.

A setting for nights when you want to reflect on pride, pressure, and the thin line between strength and delusion.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where has pride disguised itself as responsibility in my life.
  • What pressures do I hide from the people who love me.
  • When have I mistaken control for leadership.
  • What part of my identity collapses when I feel weak.
  • Where do I need mercy more than mastery.



Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

Smoke in This Life and Not the Next

Thu, May 14 – Ascension of the Lord (Ascension Thursday)

Virtue: Glory & Mission
Cigar: Candela — bright, lifted, green‑gold
Bourbon: Angel’s Envy — elegant, radiant
Reflection: “Where am I sent with joy?”

The Devotion

The Ascension is not Christ’s departure.
It is His elevation of the human race.

He rises so that man may rise.
He ascends so that mission may descend.
He enters glory so that glory may enter the world.

A Candela belongs to this day—
bright, spring‑colored, almost weightless,
a leaf that refuses heaviness.
Angel’s Envy follows it:
refined, luminous, touched by light.

Together they teach the truth of the feast:
mission is not burden; it is buoyancy.
A man sent by Heaven is carried more than he carries.

And into this upward mystery steps the soul of Leonarde Collin.

When she returned to Hugette in the evening,
she no longer hid herself:

“Know, my dear niece, that I am your aunt…
Thanks to the Divine bounty, I am saved…
The Blessed Virgin obtained for me perfect contrition…
I am permitted to finish my expiation by serving you for fourteen days.”

Her story is the Ascension in miniature:
a soul lifted by mercy,
a soul purified through service,
a soul whose final ascent depends on charity freely given.

Three pilgrimages to three Marian sanctuaries—
not as payment,
but as participation in her rising.

Glory received becomes mission given.
This is the law of Heaven.

Today asks:

Where is Christ lifting me?
Where am I resisting the upward pull?
Where is mission waiting for my joy?

The Ascension is not escape.
It is sending.

Christ rises so that His disciples may go.

The Purgatory Line

A soul once confessed:

“I was nearly lost because I lived without mission.
I received grace but never carried it outward.”

Not hatred.
Not rebellion.
Not scandal.

Neglect.
A life without ascent.
A heart that never rose to meet the work Heaven entrusted.

Leonarde’s fourteen days of service
were the final purification of a soul
that had once lived too small.

Purgatory is often the long correction
of every place we refused to rise
when Heaven called us upward.

The Cigar & Bourbon

Candela — bright, lifted.
A wrapper the color of new life,
a leaf that smokes like a green flame,
teaching the soul to rise.

Angel’s Envy — elegant, radiant.
A bourbon touched by light,
the taste of ascent without arrogance,
glory without weight.

Together they form a discipline of mission—
the willingness to be carried upward
and then sent outward.

The Question for the Night Smoke

“Where am I sent with joy?”

Not:
“What must I endure?”
but
“What glory is Christ inviting me to carry into the world?”

Let the smoke rise like the path of the Ascension—
a thin, bright column
teaching your soul how to rise.

MAY 14 Thursday-The Ascension of the Lord
Feast of Saint Matthias-Novena St. Rita-Yom Haazmaut-Chicken Dance

 

1 Samuel, Chapter 28, Verse 5

When Saul saw the Philistine camp, he grew AFRAID and lost heart completely.

 

Are we like Saul?

 

Have we lost heart completely?

 

Have we seen the camps of our enemies and come to despair?

 

God will not abandon us like we have abandoned him. Do not despair but call out to the Lord and listen. Pay attention and if today you hear His voice harden, not your heart.

 

Comparing David with Saul, the one thing that distinguished them from each other was David’s humility and confidence in the Lord.

 

This we can see in David’s Psalm 23.

 

The LORD is my shepherd; there is nothing I lack. In green pastures he makes me lie down; to still waters he leads me; he restores my soul. He guides me along right paths for the sake of his name. Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff comfort me. You set a table before me in front of my enemies; You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Indeed, goodness and mercy will pursue me all the days of my life; I will dwell in the house of the LORD for endless days.

 

Copilot’s Take

Saul’s terror before the Philistine camp exposes the spiritual truth the Catechism names plainly: fear becomes destructive when it grows from a heart no longer anchored in God. Saul does not simply tremble at an enemy; he trembles because he has forgotten the One who once made him king. The CCC calls this interior collapse acedia—a sadness that drains courage and hollows out the will. When a man stops listening to God, every threat looks final, every enemy looks larger than life, and every valley looks like the end.

David stands as the opposite kind of man. His strength is not natural boldness but humility—what the Catechism calls the foundation of all prayer. David knows he is small, and that is precisely why he is fearless. Psalm 23 is not a pastoral lullaby; it is the creed of a warrior who has learned to walk through darkness with the Shepherd at his side. “You are with me” is the line Saul could no longer say. It is the line that makes the valley survivable.

The Church teaches that evil remains active in every age, not as myth but as a real distortion of human freedom and a real assault on the good. Today the enemy’s camp rarely looks like Philistine tents; it looks like despair, cynicism, spiritual numbness, and the quiet pressure to abandon truth. The devil’s strategy is unchanged: make God’s people forget who leads them. When we lose that memory, we become Saul—overwhelmed by shadows that were never stronger than God.

Yet the Christian is called to confront evil with David’s posture, not Saul’s collapse. The CCC urges us to trust divine providence, resist temptation, and keep the heart soft before God’s voice. Courage is not the absence of danger but the refusal to interpret danger without God. The Shepherd does not promise the absence of enemies; He promises a table set in their presence. He does not promise an easy path; He promises His rod and staff along the way.

If we have lost heart, it is not because God has abandoned us. It is because we have stopped listening. The remedy is the same today as it was for David: return to the Shepherd, let Him restore the soul, and walk the valley with the confidence that goodness and mercy still pursue us. The camps of the enemy remain, but so does the God who leads His people through them.

Feast of the Ascension[1]

 

Forty days after Easter, our Lord ascends into heaven. The Paschal candle is extinguished.

AT the Introit of the Mass the Church sings the words spoken by the angels to the apostles when Jesus ascended to heaven: “Ye men of Galilee, why wonder ye, looking up to heaven? Alleluia. He shall so come as you have seen Him going up into heaven, alleluia! alleluia! alleluia! Oh, clap your hands, all ye nations, shout unto God with the voice of joy.”

Prayer. Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that we who believe that Thy only begotten Son, our Redeemer, ascended this day into heaven, may ourselves also, in mind, dwell in heavenly things.

EPISTLE. Acts i. 1-11.

The former treatise I made, O Theophilus, of all things which Jesus began to do and to teach until the day on which, giving commandments by the Holy Ghost to the apostles whom He had chosen, He was taken up: to whom also He showed Himself alive after His passion, by many proofs, for forty days appearing to them, and speaking of the kingdom of God. And eating together with them, He commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but should wait for the promise of the Father, which you have heard, saith He, by my mouth: for John, indeed, baptized with water, but you shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence. They therefore who were come together asked Him, saying:

Lord, wilt Thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?

But He said to them: It is not for you to know the times or moments which the Father hath put in His own power. But you shall receive the power of the Holy Ghost coming upon you, and you shall be witnesses unto Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and Samaria, and even to the uttermost part of the earth. And when He had said these things, while they looked on, He was raised up: and a cloud received Him out of their sight. And while they were beholding Him going up to heaven, behold two men stood by them in white garments, who also said:

Ye men of Galilee, why stand you looking up to heaven?

This Jesus Who is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come as you have seen Him going into heaven.

Explanation.

For forty days after His resurrection, Jesus remained with His disciples, to convince them of the truth of His resurrection, to teach them in regard to His kingdom, that is, His Church, and their vocation; and as they were still thinking of an earthly kingdom to be established by Christ, He referred them to the instruction of the Holy Ghost, and then ascended to heaven, whence He shall come to be our judge. Rejoice over the instructions which are preserved for you through the Church; but rejoice especially that Jesus has taken possession of the glory gained by His most profound humiliations, for now He is there an intercessor for you; there He prepares for you a mansion; there is now your home. To-day look up to heaven where Christ is, hope, suffer, love, and pray.

GOSPEL. Mark xvi. 14-20.

At that time, as the eleven were at table, Jesus appeared to them and He upbraided them with their incredulity and hardness of heart: because they did not believe them who had seen Him after He was risen again. And He said to them: Go ye into the whole world, and preach the Gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved: but he that believeth not shall be condemned. And these signs shall follow them that believe: In My name they shall cast out devils: they shall speak with new tongues: they shall take up serpents: and if they shall drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them: they shall lay their hands upon the sick, and they shall recover. And the Lord Jesus, after He had spoken to them, was taken up into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God. But they going forth preached everywhere, the Lord working withal, and confirming the word with signs that followed. “Let us ‘says St. Augustine, “in spirit, ascend with Christ, that when the time comes, we may follow Him in body also. But we must know, dear brethren, that neither pride, nor avarice, nor impurity can ascend with Christ, our Lord, for pride does not keep company with the teacher of humility, nor wickedness with the source of all good, nor impurity with the Son of the Virgin.”

Aspiration.

O King of glory! Who didst on this day ascend victoriously above the heavens, leave us not orphans, but send us, from the Father, the Spirit of truth Whom Thou hast promised, and receive us all into Thy glory.

Why, on this day, is the Easter-candle extinguished and carried away after the gospel?

It is done in remembrance of the hour in which Christ, Who is typified by the Easter-candle, left this earth.

Ascension Thursday Customs[2]

Ascension Plays

 

In the early centuries the Church celebrated the Feast of the Ascension with elaborate processions that imitated Christ's conducting His Apostles to Bethany (Lk. 24.50). Eventually, however, these liturgical processions became nonliturgical pageants, and the pageants, in turn, became plays. Ascension Thursday was a day for special effects. This could happen in a dignified way during the Mass, as when in Germany the priest would lift a crucifix during the Gospel at the words, "He was taken up into heaven," or it could happen in a dramatic way after Mass with a theatrical representation of the Ascension event. Statues of the risen Christ would be hoisted by pulleys into the air and then either concealed by white silk representing clouds or pulled through an opening in the ceiling. The audience would then be showered with roses, lilies, and wafers. The flowers symbolized the various gifts of the Holy Spirit promised by Christ before He left, while the wafers reminded all that Jesus is still present to us in the Blessed Sacrament.

 

·         Traditional banquets on this day would gastronomically imitate Christ's ascension by making the main course something that could fly to heaven. Birds of almost every feather - pigeons, pheasants, partridges, and even crows - eventually found their way to the Ascension Day table.

 

Hiking

 

In Central Europe Ascension Thursday is a popular day for mountain climbing or picnicking on hilltops. No doubt this is in commemoration of the summit of the Mount of Olives from which Christ ascended and the heights to which he soared. A similarly inspired tradition is eating some kind of bird for the Feast since on this day Christ "flew" to Heaven.

 

Rest

 

Like any other solemnity, Ascension Thursday is supposed to be a day of rest and liberal leisure. For some reason or another, however, traditional folklore treats this observance for today with particular severity. Popular superstitions warned against working in field or garden, and special punishments were purportedly reserved for women who sewed. Any needle, it was thought, that was used for work on Ascension Thursday would soon attract lightning!

 

Ascension Thursday[3]

 

Ascension commemorates the day that Jesus ascended into Heaven (Acts 1:1-11) after spending 40 days appearing to his disciples after his resurrection.  The disciple’s thought Jesus was going to restore the earth to the Kingdom of Heaven, but instead, as he promised to send the Holy Spirit to give them power, he ascended into Heaven and disappeared in a cloud.  Ascension is the 40th day after Easter, celebrated on the sixth Sunday of the Easter season in Protestant churches and on the 40th day after Easter in Roman Catholic churches.

 

Ascension Facts & Quotes

 

·         The Apostle's Creed, one of the statements of faith in the Christian Church, mentions Jesus' ascension:

·         I believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; And in Jesus Christ, his only begotten Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried. The third day he rose from the dead.  He ascended into heaven and sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty.

·         An ancient custom in England, called the Beating of the Bounds, is often performed on or near Ascension.  Before maps, this was the day that people would mark the boundaries of their property with stones marked with chalk.  Some English churches still perform the custom, led by the vicar.  Church members carry sticks to wick at weeds as they process.

·         In the Orthodox tradition, celebration of the Jesus' Ascension starts with an all-night vigil or vespers (evening) service beginning on Saturday.

 

Ascension Top Events and Things to Do

 

·         Johann Sebastian Bach wrote several pieces related to both Easter and the Ascension.  Listen to Bach's the Ascension Oratorio, Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen (Praise God in His Kingdoms) on YouTube.

·         Go bird watching.  A custom in Sweden, is to get up early in the morning of Ascension and venture out into the woods to listen for the call of a cuckoo.  It is considered good luck to hear one on this holiday.

·         Go to church and learn about why Jesus' ascension is important to the Christian faith.  Jesus is considered to be both human and divine, and the ascension is an illustration of Christ's divine nature.

·         View paintings that depict the ascension.  One of the most famous works is The Ascension of Christ by Rembrandt Van Rijn.

·         Have a picnic.

 

Curried Chicken Salad Sandwiches

Chinese Chicken Salad

(It is traditional to eat some sort of bird since Jesus "flew" to heaven.)

Strawberries

(The fruit represents Christ, the first fruit of all men.)

Cream Puffs

(Symbolizing the clouds that were in the sky.)

Sparkling Grape Juice

(Chosen for the "rising" bubbles.)

 

Preparing for the empowerment of the Holy Spirit[4]

 

On Ascension Day the Lumen Christi is taken from the dining room table to signify that the Lord has ascended. In the days when the Faith was flourishing, the Sunday after the feast of the Ascension was called "The Sunday of the Roses," the name given from the custom of strewing the pavements of the churches with roses, as an homage to Christ who ascended into heaven when the earth was in the season of flowers. Why cannot we in our day have roses in our homes, make an offering of flowers to our church, or take roses from our gardens to one infirm or sick?

 

Here are some prayers and meditations to be said in the family between the Ascension and Pentecost Sunday.

 

One of the simplest ways we have found for young children to prepare for Pentecost is by meditating on the mysteries of the Chaplet of the Holy Spirit. We reflect on one mystery a day.

 

Opening Prayer: Sign of the Cross-Act of Contrition

 

First Mystery: Jesus is conceived by the Holy Spirit of the Virgin Mary.

 

Meditation: The Holy Spirit shall come upon thee and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee. Therefore, the Holy One to be born shall be called the Son of God (Luke 11:35).
Prayers: One Our Father and Hail Mary; seven Glory be to the Father.

 

Second Mystery: The Spirit of the Lord rests upon Jesus.

Meditation: When Jesus was baptized, He immediately came up from the water. And behold, the heavens were opened to Him, and He saw the Spirit of God descending as a Dove and coming upon Him (Matthew 3:16). Prayers: One Our Father and Hail Mary; seven Glory be to the Father.

 

Third Mystery: Jesus is led by the Spirit into the desert.

Meditation: Now Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan, and was led by the Spirit about the desert for forty days, being tempted the while by the devil (Luke 4:11). Prayers: One Our Father and Hail Mary; seven Glory be to the Father.

 

Fourth Mystery: The Holy Spirit in the Church.

 

Meditation: Suddenly there came a sound from heaven, as of a violent wind blowing, and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak of the wonderful works of God (Acts 2:2, 4, 11). Prayers: One Our Father and Hail Mary; seven Glory be to the Father.

 

Fifth Mystery: The Holy Spirit in the souls of the Just.

 

Meditation: Or, do you not know that your members are the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you? Do not extinguish the Spirit. And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God in whom you were sealed for the day of redemption (1 Cor. 6:19; 1 Thess. 5:19; Eph. 4:30).
Prayers: One Creed, Our Father, Hail Mary; seven Glory be to the Father.

Devotions for Holy Communion[5]

HOW WE OUGHT TO COMMUNICATE.

 

PREPARE yourself for holy communion the evening before by many thoughts of love, retiring earlier, that you may rise sooner in the morning. Should you awake in the night, raise your heart to God immediately, and make some ardent aspirations, in order to prepare your soul for the reception of her Spouse, Who, being awake whilst you were asleep, prepares a thousand graces and favors for you, if, on your part, you are disposed to receive them.

 

In the morning, rise up with eagerness to enjoy the happiness you hope for; and having confessed, go with a great but humble confidence to receive this heavenly food, which nourishes your soul to immortality: and after repeating thrice, “Lord, I am not worthy,” cease to move your lips to pray, or to sigh, but opening your mouth gently and moderately, and lifting up your head as much as is necessary, that the priest may see what he is about, full of faith, hope, and charity, receive Him, in Whom, by Whom, and for Whom you believe, hope, and Whom you love. Represent to yourself that as the bee, after gathering from the flowers the dew of heaven, and the choicest juice of the earth, reducing them into honey, carries it into her hive, so the priest, having taken from the altar the Savior of the world, the true Son of God, Who, as the dew, is descended from heaven, and the true Son of the Virgin, Who, as a flower, is sprung from the earth of our humanity, puts Him as delicious food into your mouth and body.

 

Having received Him in your breast, excite your heart to do homage to the author of your salvation; treat with Him concerning your internal affairs; consider that He has taken up His abode within you for your happiness; make Him then as welcome as you possibly can, and conduct yourself in such a manner as to make it appear by all your actions that God is with you.

 

But when you cannot enjoy the benefit of really communicating at holy Mass, communicate at least spiritually, uniting yourself by an ardent desire to this life-giving flesh of Our Savior. Your principal intention in communicating should be to advance in virtue, to strengthen yourself in the love of God, and to receive comfort from this love; for you must receive through love that which love alone caused to be given to you. You cannot consider Our Savior in an action either more full of love, or more tender than this, in which He annihilates Himself, or, as we may more properly say, changes Himself into food, that so He may penetrate our souls, and unite Himself most intimately to the heart, and to the body of His faithful.

 

If worldlings ask you why you communicate so often, tell them it is to learn to love God, to purify yourself from your imperfections, to be delivered from your miseries, to be comforted in your afflictions, and supported in your weaknesses.

 

Tell them that two sorts of persons ought to communicate frequently: the perfect, because, being well disposed, they would be greatly to blame not to approach to the source and fountain of perfection; and the imperfect, to the end that they may be able to aspire to perfection; the strong, lest they should become weak; and the weak, that they may become strong; the healthy, lest they should fall into sickness; and the sick, that they may be restored to health: that for your part, being imperfect, weak, and sick, you have need to communicate frequently with Him Who is your perfection, your strength, and your physician.

 

Tell them that those who have not many worldly affairs to look after ought to communicate often, because they have leisure; that those who have much business on hand should also communicate often, for he who labors much and is loaded with toil ought to eat solid food, and that frequently.

 

Tell them that you receive the Holy Sacrament, to learn to receive it well; because one can hardly perform an action well which he does not often practice. Communicate frequently, then, and as frequently as you can, with the advice of your ghostly father; and, believe me, by approaching to and eating beauty, purity, and goodness itself, in this divine sacrament, you will become altogether fair, pure, and virtuous.

 

Feast of Saint Matthias, Apostle

 

The feast of Saint Matthias[6] was included in the Roman Calendar in the 11th century and celebrated on the sixth day to the Calends of March (24 February usually, but 25 February in leap years). In the revision of the General Roman Calendar in 1969, his feast was transferred to 14 May, so as not to celebrate it in Lent but instead in Eastertide close to the Solemnity of the Ascension, the event after which the Acts of the Apostles recounts that Matthias was selected to be ranked with the Twelve Apostles.

OF[7] this apostle nothing certain is known beyond what is contained in the epistle. In the Introit of the Mass the Church sings: “To me Thy friends, O God, are made exceedingly honorable; their principality is exceedingly strengthened. Lord, Thou hast proved me and known me; Thou hast known my sitting down and my rising up.”

Prayer. O God, Who didst associate blessed Matthias to the company of the apostles, grant, we beseech Thee, that, by his intercession, we may ever experience Thy tender mercy towards us.

Prayer to St. Matthias. O St. Matthias, glorious apostle and martyr of Jesus Christ, who, by the special providence of God, wast added to the eleven apostles in the room of the traitor, I humbly beseech thee to obtain for us the grace of Him Who chose thee from all eternity, that, assisted thereby, we may, after thy example, keep the commandments of God, practice good works, and thus merit to be numbered with the elect. Amen.

 

Novena of St. Rita[8]

 

This novena prayer, although short, is sufficient. It would be better of course to add, if time permits, three Hail Mary’s or say five times the Our Father, Hail Mary and Glory be to the Father, or to use some of the many well-loved novena prayers from other sources. Remember that prayers must be said with your lips in order to gain the indulgences. This novena begins on May 14 and ends on May 22. Rita is the patron of the impossible.

Prayer: O glorious St. Rita! You who so wonderfully participated in the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, obtain for me the grace to suffer with patience the pains of this life and protect me in all my needs.

Apostolic Exhortation[9]

Veneremur Cernui – Down in Adoration Falling

of The Most Reverend Thomas J. Olmsted, Bishop of Phoenix,
to Priests, Deacons, Religious and the Lay Faithful of the Diocese of Phoenix on the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist

My beloved Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

1. I wish to speak to you about the most important and central teaching of our faith. What I share is “not too high for you.” It is not theology that is only meant for theologians and priests. This concerns the most important reality of our lives – the saving presence of our Lord. This is not a teaching that can be dumbed down or over simplified. This is a truth that we need to be clear and certain about. Be bold, then! Take up and read, drink in the truth, discuss and share it with others and allow Jesus, truly present in the Eucharist, to conform you further to Himself and fulfill the deepest longings of your heart.

2. From the time I was a little child, I knew Jesus was present in every Catholic Church. I could not have explained it, but I was certain He was there. The way my father genuflected before the Tabernacle, the quiet reverence of my mother, the way our pastor Father Daly sang the Tantum Ergo with such gusto and a thick Irish brogue, it was these actions and God’s grace, more than words, that imbedded in my heart a solid conviction about the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. And because our farm family prayed together every evening, during thunderstorms or blizzards, whether we had a bumper crop or hardly anything at all from drought-stricken soil, no matter what, we knew that the Lord Jesus we received at Mass was with us, every day and night, and that whatever we faced, all would be well because of Him.

3. Of course, that faith in the Eucharist has been tested many times over the years. As a seminarian in Tours, France, for example, during two months of intensive French language study, some classmates learning of my practice of daily Mass accosted me, sneering with venom, “You really believe Jesus is present in that piece of bread?” Shocked by their hate-filled tone, I could say nothing for what seemed like eternity; but after probably less than a minute, I managed to stammer, “Yes… I do.” That shocking and embarrassing moment, to my surprise, led ever so gradually to new gratitude for the gift of the Eucharistic faith and a deeper conviction about daily Mass and Eucharistic adoration. It also taught me to expect my faith in our Eucharistic Savior to face scorn and contradiction.

4. I invite you in this Exhortation to “put out into the deep” (Lk 5:4). Whether your faith in the Eucharist is strong or weak, whether you consider the Church your Home or you have recently decided to disassociate, or even if you have no faith at all, my sincere hope is that a true “Eucharistic amazement” will be ignited within you.

5. The People of Israel faced many obstacles, challenges, and sufferings as they crossed the desert and entered the Promised Land. But God had assured them of His presence and guidance on their arduous sojourn. In the Ark of the Covenant, they recognized the presence of God. Into battles and in dangerous lands, wherever the Israelites went, the Ark went with them because it assured them that God would be with them to fight their battles, to care for them and protect them. For this reason, the Ark became a powerful and enduring image of God’s presence.

6. When the People of Israel were preparing to cross the Jordan river and enter the Promised Land, Joshua stressed the importance of following the Ark: “When you see the ark of the covenant of the Lord being carried, you are to set out from your positions and follow it… so that you can see the way to go, since we have never been this way before” (Josh. 3:2-4). This instruction was addressed to a people who would face the dangers of the crossing and the challenges and threats that awaited them in an unknown land.

To be continued…

Bible in a year Day 313 The Ark of the New Covenant

As we begin reading the Gospel of Luke, Fr. Mike draws our attention to Mary. He clarifies the difference between Zechariah's response and Mary's response to the angel Gabriel, and also explains why Mary is the Ark of the new Covenant. We learn that through Mary, God begins to fulfill his promises to the people of Israel. Today's readings are Luke 1-2, and Proverbs 25:24-26.

 

Israel Independence Day

 

Yom Haazmaut (Hebrew: יום העצמאות) is Israel's Independence Day. Israel declared independence on May 14th, 1948.  This was only a few hours before the British Mandate of Palestine was to draw to an end. Yom Haazmaut is a public holiday in Israel. All commercial establishments are closed, apart from Restaurants, Cafes and Bars. Israelis celebrate Yom Haazmaut with an opening ceremony, comprising lighting of the Masuot (twelve torches, one for each of the twelve tribes of Israel). The honor of lighting each torch is given to outstanding Israelis, such as brave soldiers and policemen, scientists, artists, senior citizens and the like. Yom Haazmaut always occurs the day after Yom Hazikaron (Memorial Day to honor fallen soldiers and soldier victims of terrorists).  There are typically firework displays at night, airplane displays and bands during the day. Israeli citizens spend Yom Haazmaut with family and friends, often in a Park, on a beach or at home. The Israel Prize is given in scientific fields to notable scientists, artists and people who made a lifetime contribution to the State of Israel.

 

Yom HaAtzma'ut (Israel) Facts & Quotes

 

·         Many Jewish prophets in the Bible prophesied that the Children of Israel would return to their land.  Isaiah, Jeremiah and Zachariah made notable prophecies. For example, Jeremiah 29:10.  This is what the Lord says: 'When seventy years are completed for Babylon, I will come to you and fulfill my good promise to bring you back to this place'.

·         In the 19th century, Theodor (Benjamin Zeev) Herzl was the visionary of the State of Israel in his book Altneuland, 'The Old New Land' in 1902.  Tel Aviv (old hill/ new spring) was established in 1909.

·         According to Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook and many others in the Religious Zionist camp, the founding of the State of Israel was considered to be Atchalta DeGeulah the beginning of the final redemption.

·         In the Talmud (Sanhedrin 98a) it is stated by Rav Aba Ein lecha meg'uleh mizu, there is no greater indication of the end of days than that which the prophet Ezekiel (Ezekiel 36:8) prophesizes, Now mountains of Israel, your branches shall come forth and your fruit will be offered to my people Israel.

·         The return of Jews to the Holy Land was also mentioned by Isaiah: On that day (the day of the redemption) a great shofar will be sounded, and those who are lost in the land of Ashur (Assyria) and those who are dispersed in the Land of Egypt will return to the Holy Land. (Isaiah 27:13).

 

Yom HaAtzma'ut (Israel) Top Events and Things to Do

 

·         Attend a Yom Haazmaut Party, held at many local Israeli/Jewish Communities on the Eve of Yom Haazmaut.  Typically, Israeli food is served, followed by a fireworks display. A live broadcast of the Yom Haazmaut ceremony from Har Herzl, Jerusalem may be watched and culminates in the singing of the Hatikvah, the Israeli National Anthem.

·         Attend a lecture on the connection between Jews, Israel and the Bible.  Yeshivah University holds many public lectures on this topic.

·         Attend a Yom Haazmaut Concert. There are many venues for Yom Haazmaut concerts including popular ones at New York City and Stamford (CT).

·         Take part or view the Bible Quiz (Chidon Hatanach)

Chicken Dance Day[10]

We’ve all seen it, it’s utterly ridiculous and usually performed in a bout of intoxicant driven lunacy. You tuck your hands into your armpits to make ‘wings’, and then you flap like an idiot in time with some particularly unfortunate music. All that aside, you’re having complete giggle fits with a bunch of your friends while you behave in a fashion that has the local sanitarium eyeballing you for membership. What are we talking about? The Chicken Dance of course! Chicken Dance Day commemorates this dance and its origins, and even gives you a chance to learn WHY anyone would do this terrible, terrible thing.

History of Chicken Dance Day

“Der Ententanz” was the name of the song that inspired all of this, and while the dance has come to be called “The Chicken Dance”, the song itself is called The Duck Dance. At least that was its original name, and now it has spread all over the world, undergoing multiple name changes in the process. It has been known as everything from The Little Bird Dance to De Vogeltjesdans, or “The dance of the little birds.” This rendition was actually the B-Side of a single released by a band called “De Electornica’s”. The A-Side simply wasn’t being well received by the radio station’s audiences, so they flipped it over. At that moment, history was made, and it rocketed to the Dutch charts and stayed there for nearly a year. So much has its popularity exploded that it has been recorded in no less than 140 versions with over 40,000,000 records published over its lifetime. In 1981 the dance brought to Oktoberfest in the United States, and due to a complete lack of duck costumes anywhere near the event, they had to settle for chicken costumes instead. The result of which is the name by which it is now known. The song responsible gets new covers done almost every year, with new lyrics added all the time. That’s right, there’s lyrics. You’re welcome.

How to Celebrate Chicken Dance Day

Do we need to say it?

The best way to celebrate Chicken Dance Day is by getting out there and doing the Chicken Dance! It’s quite simple, and it all starts with making a beak with your hands, and ‘squawk’ them four times in beat with the music, then you make wings as described earlier, and flap them four times in time with the music. Then… ya know what? Just watch this: How to Chicken Dance.

Around the Corner Try Cheese Blintzes

After their audience with the king, they set out. And behold, the star that they had seen at its rising preceded them, until it came and stopped over the place where the child was. (Matthew 2:9)

§  Bucket List Trip: The Holy Land

§  Spirit hour: White Wine Spritzer

§  National Month of Hope

See Dinosaurs an Immersive Experience

·         At Dino Safari you can dig up fossils, learn about cutting-edge research, take a turn on the Sauropod Slide, see many varieties of animatronic dinosaurs, and enjoy thrilling virtual reality and other exciting activities to immerse the whole family in the age of dinosaurs.

Mary’s Month-Do a family Rosary

·         Brain Tumor Awareness Month

o   Note from Rachel: When I was but a child, I suffered a grand-mal seizure that nearly killed me. I was diagnosed with a brain tumor. My Dad immediately called Father Paul Wolff who was General Patton's Belgian Guide and asked for prays at the shrine of our Lady of Beauraing. A week later the brain tumor disappeared and there was still a small scar left on a portion of my brain, and I continued to have seizures, but medicine kept it under control for many years. Eventually through the work of a doctor I received a world class surgical procedure that completely healed me of seizures, from the world-famous Barrow Neurological Institute. Today I work there.

·         do a personal eucharistic stations of the cross.

Thursday Feast

Thursday is the day of the week that our Lord gave himself up for consumption. Thursday commemorates the last supper. Some theologians believe after Sunday Thursday is the holiest day of the week. We should then try to make this day special by making a visit to the blessed sacrament chapel, Mass or even stopping by the grave of a loved one. Why not plan to count the blessing of the week and thank our Lord. Plan a special meal. Be at Peace. According to Mary Agreda[11] in her visions it was on a Thursday at six o'clock in the evening and at the approach of night that the Angel Gabriel approached and announced her as Mother of God and she gave her fiat.

Dinner Menu

 

Best Places to Visit in May

Michigan[12] is home to a long winter, but when May rolls around, it is the height of the spring season and considered the start of summer. Tourists and locals alike emerge to enjoy the climbing temperatures and wealth of events in May in Michigan.

No matter what you’re interested in, there is something for everyone to do. Check out one of these amazing events and activities during your next trip to Michigan in spring.

Attend a Spring Festival

Festivals of all kinds are held throughout May in Michigan — from the Tulip Time Festival in Holland to the annual Food Truck Festival in Frankenmuth. As the weather warms up and the flowers begin to bloom, it is the perfect time to enjoy a community event.

Many of these festivals take place in the vicinity of the lakes, but you will find spring festivals going on all over Michigan. Whether you are interested in local food, cultural events, holiday celebrations, or musical performances, you can find it all.

Pure Michigan Dinner Menu[13]

  • Wolverinetini
  • Michigan Cherry Salad
  • Country Ribs Dinner
  • Grilled Sweet Corn
  • Apple Cranberry Slab Pie

Religion in the Home for Preschool: May

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Catholic Politian’s and Leaders

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Make reparations to the Holy Face

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary



[1]Goffine’s Devout Instructions, 1896

[5] Goffine’s Devout Instructions, 1896

[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Matthias

[7] Goffine’s Devout Instructions, 1896

[11] Venerable Mary of Agreda. The Mystical City of God: Complete Edition Containing all Four Volumes with Illustrations (p. 770). Veritatis Splendor Publications. Kindle Edition

TRY AND GET ME! (1950)

Frank Lovejoy • Lloyd Bridges • Kathleen Ryan
(Released originally as The Sound of Fury)

A blistering social‑conscience noir where unemployment, pride, and mob violence collide in a California town that believes it is righteous even as it descends into savagery. Directed by Cy Endfield—soon to be blacklisted—the film is a howl against collective sin, media hysteria, and the terrifying speed with which ordinary men become executioners.

Frank Lovejoy gives one of noir’s most heartbreaking performances as a decent man crushed by desperation. Lloyd Bridges is electric and feral, a charming sociopath whose recklessness ignites the tragedy. And the town—self‑assured, moralistic, and easily manipulated—becomes the true villain.

1. Production & Historical Setting

Released in 1950, Try and Get Me! stands at the intersection of:

Post‑war American disillusionment

The war is over, prosperity is rising, but working‑class men are being left behind. Howard Tyler is one of them—jobless, ashamed, and vulnerable to the first man who offers him a way out.

The blacklist era

Director Cy Endfield was driven out of Hollywood soon after this film.
You can feel the urgency of a man who knows the walls are closing in.

The rise of social‑issue noir

This is noir not about private sin but public guilt—a community that believes itself moral while committing atrocities.

Media sensationalism as a new American power

The film anticipates the modern news cycle:
crime → outrage → spectacle → violence.

The working‑class tragedy

Howard Tyler is not a gangster, not a drifter, not a femme‑fatale’s victim.
He is a husband and father who cannot find work.
His downfall is the noir of economic humiliation.

The world is small: grocery stores, gas stations, cheap apartments, bowling alleys, and the sun‑blasted California streets where men pretend everything is fine.

But the moral terrain is enormous—
fear, pride, mob justice, cowardice, and the terrifying ease with which a community abandons its conscience.

The cultural backdrop:

  • The anxiety of men unable to provide for their families
  • The seductive danger of charismatic evil
  • The press as both storyteller and arsonist
  • The illusion that “good people” cannot commit atrocities
  • The American belief that justice is swift, righteous, and ours to administer

The film’s power lies in its contrasts:
Lovejoy’s wounded decency, Bridges’ reckless magnetism, the town’s self‑righteous fury, and a justice system too weak to withstand the crowd.

2. Story Summary

Howard Tyler (Frank Lovejoy)

A good man under pressure.
Unemployed, ashamed, desperate to support his wife and child.
He meets:

Jerry Slocum (Lloyd Bridges)

Handsome. Charming. Amoral.
A small‑time criminal who lives for thrills and attention.
He recruits Howard into petty robberies—easy money, no blood.

Until the night everything changes.

A kidnapping.
A ransom.
A panicked moment.
A murder.

Howard is horrified.
Jerry is exhilarated.

The press seizes the story.
The town erupts.
Fear becomes anger.
Anger becomes righteousness.
Righteousness becomes a mob.

Howard and Jerry are arrested.
But the town does not want justice.
It wants blood.

The final act is one of the most harrowing sequences in noir:
a mob storming the jail,
a sheriff overwhelmed,
a community convinced it is doing God’s work
as it commits murder.

Howard dies begging for mercy.
Jerry dies screaming.
The town congratulates itself.

3. Spiritual & Moral Resonances

A. The Sin of Desperation

Howard’s fall is not malice—it is weakness.

The film exposes how poverty can deform a man’s judgment long before it touches his soul.

B. The Seduction of Charisma

Jerry is not brilliant.

He is simply bold.

And boldness, in a world of frightened men, becomes leadership.

C. The Mob as the Face of Collective Sin

No one person kills Howard.

Everyone does.

The crowd becomes a single organism—self‑righteous, blind, and violent.

D. Media as Moral Accelerant

A reporter turns a tragedy into a spectacle.

The film shows how storytelling can become a weapon.

E. Justice Without Mercy

The town believes it is defending morality.

In truth, it is destroying it.

The film is a warning:

Communities can commit evil with a clean conscience

if they mistake outrage for righteousness.

4. Hospitality Pairing — The California Heat Spread

A pour of Old Grand‑Dad Bonded — hot, sharp, working‑class bourbon with no illusions.
A Broadleaf Maduro cigar — dark, heavy, smoke that clings like guilt.
Salted peanuts — the food of bowling alleys and late‑night bars where desperate men make bad decisions.
A worn newspaper — the symbol of how stories become weapons.

A setting for nights when you want to reflect on fear, pride, and the terrifying speed with which ordinary men become part of a mob.

5. Reflection Prompts

  • Where in my life am I vulnerable to bad leadership because of fear or pressure.
  • What compromises have I justified in the name of providing or surviving.
  • When have I joined a “crowd” instead of standing alone for what is right.
  • Where have I allowed outrage to replace discernment.
  • What part of my conscience needs strengthening before the next moment of pressure arrives.



Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
Home of Mary's Vineyard