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Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Oct 7 (Tue) Our Lady of the Rosary Marian contemplation Basil Hayden’s – light, floral La Aroma de Cuba Mi Amor “Where does beauty lead me d...

Character is Destiny-Catholic Edition 33 day prayer in preparation to All Saints to start-Sep 29

Character is Destiny-Catholic Edition 33 day prayer in preparation to All Saints to start-Sep 29
“Qui Deo confidit, omnia facere potest.” He who trusts in God can do all things.

Monday, October 13, 2025

 Monday Night at the Movies

Franco Zefferelli       Brother Sun Sister Moon

"Brother Sun, Sister Moon" is a poetic retelling of St. Francis of Assisi’s radical spiritual awakening, emphasizing his embrace of poverty, nature, and Christ-like humility. Its Catholic lessons center on simplicity, detachment from wealth, and living in communion with creation and the poor.


🌞 Film Summary: Brother Sun, Sister Moon (1972)

Directed by Franco Zeffirelli, this visually rich drama traces the transformation of Francesco Bernardone, the privileged son of a wealthy merchant in Assisi, into St. Francis, founder of the Franciscan order:

  • Francesco returns from war physically and spiritually broken, haunted by the violence he witnessed.
  • During his recovery, he experiences a profound spiritual renewal, drawn to the beauty of nature and the simplicity of life.
  • He rejects his family's wealth and status, choosing instead to live among the poor, serve lepers, and rebuild ruined churches.
  • His confrontation with his father culminates in a dramatic scene where he publicly renounces his inheritance, stripping off his clothes to symbolize his total surrender to God.
  • Francesco’s relationship with Clare of Assisi is tender but ultimately transcended by his spiritual calling.
  • The film ends with Francis and his followers seeking papal approval for their new way of life, emphasizing humility and service.

✝️ Catholic Lessons and Themes

1. Radical Poverty as Imitation of Christ

  • Francis embraces poverty, chastity, and obedience, mirroring Jesus’ life.
  • He sees wealth as a barrier to spiritual freedom and communal justice.

2. Creation as a Sacred Communion

  • Inspired by Francis’ Canticle of the Sun, the film portrays nature as a reflection of divine love.
  • Animals, plants, and the elements are treated as siblings—Brother Sun, Sister Moon—inviting a theology of ecological reverence.

3. Detachment from Materialism

  • Francesco’s rejection of his father’s textile empire critiques the exploitation and vanity of wealth.
  • His descent into the dye vats symbolizes a descent into the suffering hidden beneath luxury.

4. Identification with the Poor and Marginalized

  • Francis’ ministry to lepers and laborers reflects the Catholic call to preferential option for the poor.
  • His actions challenge societal norms and ecclesial structures, yet remain rooted in deep faith.

5. Obedience and Ecclesial Dialogue

  • Though radical, Francis seeks approval from the Pope, showing reverence for Church authority.
  • His humility contrasts with institutional grandeur, offering a prophetic voice within tradition.

The evangelical counsels—poverty, chastity, and obedience—are not just monastic vows but spiritual postures that echo through the Rosary’s mysteries. When prayed with intention, the Rosary becomes a rhythm of surrender, mirroring these three counsels in the life of Christ and Mary.


🌿 Poverty, Chastity, and Obedience in the Rosary

Here’s how each counsel resonates through the Rosary’s structure:

🕊️ Poverty — Detachment and Trust

  • Joyful Mysteries:
    • Nativity: Christ is born in a manger—God enters poverty to sanctify it.
    • Presentation: Mary and Joseph offer the poor man’s sacrifice (two doves), showing humble trust.
  • Sorrowful Mysteries:
    • Carrying the Cross: Jesus stripped of everything, even dignity, yet remains sovereign in love.
  • Glorious Mysteries:
    • Assumption: Mary’s poverty of spirit is exalted—she is lifted into glory without grasping.

Spiritual Practice: Pray these mysteries with open hands, asking for freedom from material anxiety and a heart that trusts divine provision.


💙 Chastity — Purity and Wholehearted Love

  • Joyful Mysteries:
    • Annunciation: Mary’s virginity is not just physical—it’s a symbol of undivided “yes.”
  • Luminous Mysteries:
    • Wedding at Cana: Christ blesses marital love, but also transforms it—pointing to divine intimacy.
  • Glorious Mysteries:
    • Coronation: Mary, the pure vessel, is crowned Queen—chastity leads to communion.

Spiritual Practice: Offer these decades as a renewal of your own purity—of intention, gaze, and desire. Let Mary’s “fiat” shape your own.


🙇‍♂️ Obedience — Listening and Surrender

  • Joyful Mysteries:
    • Visitation: Mary goes in haste—obedience is active, joyful, relational.
  • Sorrowful Mysteries:
    • Agony in the Garden: “Not my will, but yours”—Christ’s obedience is the hinge of redemption.
  • Luminous Mysteries:
    • Transfiguration: The Father says, “Listen to Him”—obedience begins in listening.

Spiritual Practice: As you pray, pause between decades to ask: “Where am I being invited to surrender?” Let obedience be a gentle yielding, not a grim duty.


🔁 Suggested Rosary Flow for the Evangelical Counsels

You might try this weekly rhythm:

Day Mystery Set Counsel Focus
Monday Joyful Poverty
Tuesday Sorrowful Obedience
Wednesday Glorious Chastity
Thursday Luminous Integration of all three
Friday Sorrowful Poverty
Saturday Joyful Chastity
Sunday Glorious Obedience


Sunday, October 12, 2025


2026 maybe when I am 73 if only my readers would start a go fund me for the Iceman

 
I had one of these in high school at 17


Claire’s Corner

·         Today in honor of the Holy Trinity do the Divine Office giving your day to God. To honor God REST: no shopping after 6 pm Saturday till Monday. Don’t forget the internet.

·         Spirit Hour: 15 Distilleries You Must Visit in Perth

·         Foodie: Wrap up your day with a burst of flavor on National Pulled Pork Day and National Gumbo Day.

o   Today is national farmers day: The average farm can grow enough to feed over 160 people according to the U.S Farm Bureau.

§  Cook up a storm in the kitchen or support a local restaurant Celebrate cultural diversity on Yerevan Day by cooking a Spanish dish for National Day of Spain. Get fresh ingredients from a farmers’ market on National Farmers Day. Swap recipes with friends and have a virtual cooking session.

·         I’m a 6’ girl but Wilt was taller-Basketball player Wilt Chamberlain died 1999

o   Just because you are over 6 feet don’t forget about your smaller friends

§  Dwarfism Awareness Month

·         How to celebrate Oct 12th

o   How about starting your day with some brain boost? Dive into a game of chess to celebrate National Chess Day. Challenge a friend or play online to sharpen your strategic skills.

o   Then, take a break under the open sky on International Astronomy Day. Grab a blanket, head to a park, and stargaze while contemplating our place in the universe.

biggest hit on you tube for Astronomy-Really

o   Next, immerse yourself in music on Universal Music Day. Explore new genres, attend a virtual concert, or even create your own playlist.

o   Embrace nature on Urban Wildlife Conservation Day. Take a walk-in a nearby park, observe the wildlife, and learn about conservation efforts.

o   Don’t forget to visit your local bookshop on Love Your Bookshop Day. Pick up a new read or donate a book to spread the love of reading.

·         Bucket List Trip: Around the World “Perfect Weather”

Perth—a city of expansive skies, sacred coastlines, and deep Aboriginal wisdom. This 7-day pilgrimage blends cultural immersion, ecological reverence, and symbolic acts of gentle repair, all choreographed to honor your rhythm of clarity, hospitality, and renewal.

🕊️ Perth Pilgrimage & Cultural Immersion Itinerary

October 12–18 • Sacred Clarity, Gentle Repair
A standalone rhythm of spring beauty, Marian devotion, and vineyard stewardship in Western Australia.
Day 1: Sending Forth & Blessing (Oct 12)
  • Morning: Walk through Araluen Botanic Park or along the Swan River—let the land receive your presence.
  • Midday: Visit Fremantle Markets for symbolic souvenirs: native teas, handmade crafts, incense.
  • Evening: Farewell dinner at Wildflower or a quiet soba house—mark the start of pilgrimage with gratitude and gentle joy.

Day 2: Eucharistic Anchoring & Marian Clarity (Oct 13)Day 3: Civic Memory & Cultural Listening (Oct 14)
  • Morning: Visit WA Museum Boola Bardip—honor stories of exile, resilience, and rebirth.
  • Midday: Walk through Supreme Court Gardens, reflecting on justice and mercy.
  • Symbolic Act: Write a blessing and leave it anonymously in a public space.
  • Evening: Attend a civic talk or poetry reading—listening as hospitality.
Day 4: Vineyard Pilgrimage & Eucharistic Table (Oct 15)
  • Morning: Journey to the Swan Valley—choose a biodynamic vineyard for soil-to-spirit reflection.
  • Midday: Pause at St. Anthony’s Church, Greenmount for vineyard blessing.
  • Symbolic Act: Pour a small libation at the vineyard edge—gratitude for labor, fruit, and land.
  • Evening: Shared meal with wine, bread, and spring greens—sacramental and communal.


Day 5: Ecological Reverence & River Ritual (Oct 16)Day 6: Artistic Communion & Cultural Blessing (Oct 17)
  • Morning: Explore the Holmes à Court Gallery or a local artist collective.
  • Midday: Visit a community garden or the Aboriginal Cultural Centre (planned site).
  • Symbolic Meal: Shared lunch with native cheeses, bush chutney, and seasonal fruit.
  • Evening: Create a small art piece or poem as a personal offering—blessing the land and your journey.
Day 7: Benediction & Departure (Oct 18)
  • Morning: Final walk through Kings Park or along the Indian Ocean coast—perhaps Cottesloe Beach or Trigg Point.
  • Midday: Write a closing reflection or prayer of sending.
  • Before Departure: Offer a quiet benediction:
  • “May this land remember my reverence. May my steps echo peace.”



OCTOBER 12 Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Columbus Day

 

Acts, Chapter 15, Verse 24-26

Since we have heard that some of our number [who went out] without any mandate from us have upset you with their teachings and disturbed your PEACE of mind, we have with one accord decided to choose representatives and to send them to you along with our beloved Barnabas and Paul, who have dedicated their lives to the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

The issue that caused the disruption of peace in the new church was whether it was necessary for salvation for one to be circumcised. It was determined that it was not and that it was prudent not to lay on the new gentiles any burden that was not necessary for salvation. It was determined that the gentiles should abstain from:

 

1.      Things offered to idols.

2.      Blood.

3.      Things strangled.

4.      Sexual immorality.

 

One Prohibition, Not Four[1]

 

But these "essential abstinences” were not references to fragments of the Mosaic Law at all. This short list of things to avoid was the very essentials that divided believing Gentile from unbelieving Gentile. They divided Christian from idolater. Each of these four "essential" things to avoid were not four things, but one. They were meant to be read as "never again worship idols by eating with the idolaters in the sacrificial meals, drinking the cup of blood at the idol sacrifice ceremonies, do not ceremoniously eat the flesh of animals strangled during the worship of idols, and abstain from ritual acts of fornication with temple prostitutes". In other words, these four seemingly disassociated prohibitions were completely unified around one theme: Christians cannot serve God and idols. One cannot worship God and also worship idols. Also take note of the things cited: idols, blood, flesh, unity. Idols are the false gods. Drinking blood is the false wine of the idol’s communion cup. Strangled flesh is the false body of the idol’s communion dinner. And the temple prostitute is the false unity of the idol’s servants. The things listed are the false communion in the service of the idol. Again, to abstain from those things is essential.

 

Copilot’s Take

 

On this Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost, which also falls on Columbus Day, we are invited to reflect on peace, purity, and the nature of true communion. In Acts 15:24–26, the apostles respond to a crisis of confusion in the early Church. Some had gone out without mandate, disturbing the peace of mind of new Gentile believers with teachings that burdened rather than blessed. In response, the apostles sent Barnabas and Paul—men who had dedicated their lives to the name of Jesus—to restore unity and clarity. They discerned that salvation did not require circumcision and that it was prudent not to impose unnecessary burdens. Instead, they offered four abstentions: from things offered to idols, blood, things strangled, and sexual immorality. These were not fragments of Mosaic Law, but a unified renunciation of false communion. Each prohibition pointed to a counterfeit table—idols as false gods, blood as false wine, strangled flesh as false body, and temple prostitution as false unity. Together, they formed a symbolic rejection of pagan worship and a call to purity of heart and peace of mind.

 

Today, these ancient boundaries echo in modern forms. “Things offered to idols” might be seen in consumer rituals and branded allegiances—when identity is shaped more by consumption than by covenant. “Blood” reflects our appetite for spectacle and violence, the emotional addiction to outrage and scandal that disturbs rather than deepens peace. “Strangled flesh” speaks to disconnected consumption—exploiting creation without reverence, feeding without gratitude, and ingesting what has not been ethically or spiritually blessed. And “sexual immorality,” especially temple prostitution, finds its modern parallel in pornography—a digital liturgy of disembodied desire, a false sacrament that distorts eros and fractures unity. In each case, the invitation is not merely to abstain, but to reorient: to turn from false communion and receive the true. The body is not shameful—it is sacred. Desire is not to be suppressed—it is to be sanctified. The peace of Christ is not passive—it is fiercely protected by clarity, covenant, and communion.

 

On Columbus Day, often marked by contested narratives of conquest and pilgrimage, we might reframe our journey—not as one of domination, but of reconciliation. Like Barnabas and Paul, we are sent to restore peace, to embody the true communion of Christ, and to walk gently in the world. Let this Sunday be a rite of renewal—a turning from confusion to clarity, from spectacle to sacrament, from false unity to the healing Table of the Lord.

Eighteenth Sunday after Pentecost[2]

The church now enters a season of reflection on the final magnification of Christ…

Sacrifice, forgiveness, and "confirmation in the end without crime" (1 Cor. 4.8)

IN the Introit of the Mass the Church prays for the peace which God has promised through His prophets. “Give peace, O Lord, to them that patiently wait for Thee, that Thy prophets may be found faithful; hear the prayers of Thy servants, and of Thy people Israel. I rejoiced at the things that were said to me; we shall go into the house of the Lord.

Prayer.

We beseech Thee, O Lord, that the work of Thy mercy may direct our hearts; for without Thy grace, we cannot be pleasing to Thee.

EPISTLE, i. Cor. i. 4-8.

Brethren: I give thanks to my God always for you, for the grace of God that is given you in Christ Jesus, that in all things you are made rich in Him, in all utterance, and in all knowledge; as the testimony of Christ was confirmed in you: so that nothing is wanting to you in any grace, waiting for the manifestation of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Who also will confirm you unto the end without crime, in the day of the coming of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Brief Lessons.

St. Paul shows in this epistle that he possesses the true love of his neighbor, by rejoicing and thanking God that He had bestowed on the Corinthians manifold gifts and graces, and thereby confirmed the testimony of Christ in them. By this we learn that we should rejoice over the gifts and graces of our neighbors; should thank God for them, and pray Him to fill all who are in the darkness of error with knowledge, and love, and all virtues.

GOSPEL. Matt. ix. 1-8.

At that time Jesus, entering into a boat, passed over the water and came into His own city. And behold they brought to Him one sick of the palsy lying in a bed. And Jesus, seeing their faith, said to the man sick of the palsy: Be of good heart, son, thy sins are forgiven thee. And behold some of the scribes said within themselves: He blasphemeth.

And Jesus seeing their thoughts, said:

Why do you think evil in your hearts? Whether is easier, to say, Thy sins are forgiven thee: or to say, Arise and walk?

But that you may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins, then said He to the man sick of the palsy: Arise, take up thy bed and go into thy house. And he arose, and went into his house. And the multitude seeing it, feared, and glorified God that gave such power to men.

Explanation.

The charity of those who brought the sick man to Christ was so full of faith, so pleasing to Him, that, out of regard for it, He forgave the palsied man his sins, and healed him.

Christ did not heal the man sick with the palsy until He had forgiven him his sins. By this He teaches us that sins are often the cause of the sicknesses and evils that pursue us; and that if we sincerely repent of our sins, God would be likely to remove these evils from us. This is also intimated by the words of Jesus to him who had been sick eight-and-thirty years: “Sin no more, lest some worse thing happen to thee” (John v. 14). This should be kept in mind by those who so impetuously be seech God to free them from their afflictions, but who do not think to free themselves from the sins which may be the cause of them, by a sincere repentance and by leading a Christian life.

“He blasphemeth.”; Thus, in their perverted minds, the Jews thought of Christ; supposing that, by forgiving the sick man his sins, He had committed an encroachment on the prerogative of God, and thereby done Him great wrong; for it is blasphemy against God to attempt to wrong Him, or to think, speak, or do anything insulting to Him or to His saints.

“And Jesus seeing their thoughts, said:

Why do you think evil in your hearts?”

This is something to be considered by those who suppose their thoughts to be free from scrutiny, and to whom it does not even occur to make their evil thoughts matter of confession. God, the most holy and most just, will no more leave unpunished impure, proud, angry, revengeful, envious thoughts, than He will an idle word (Matt. xii. 36). Do not, therefore, give yourself up to evil thoughts; and in order to repel them, remember each time that God sees and punishes them.

Would you not drive them away if men saw them?

ON INDULGENCES

 

What is an indulgence?

 

It is the remission granted by the Church, in the name of God, and on account of the merits of Jesus Christ and of all the saints, of the temporal punishment which men must suffer, either in this world or in the world to come, for sins that have been already forgiven.

 

Whence do we know that after sins are forgiven there yet remains a temporal punishment?

 

From Holy Scripture, thus, God imposed upon Adam and Eve great temporal punishments, although He forgave them their sin (Gen. iii.). Moses and Aaron were punished for a slight want of confidence in God (Num. xx. 24; Deut. xxxii. 51). David, though forgiven, was obliged to submit to great temporal punishments (n. Kings xii.). Finally, faith teaches us that after death we must suffer in purgatory till we have paid the last farthing (Matt. v. 26).

 

Can the Church remit all temporal punishments, even those imposed by God Himself, and why?

 

Certainly, by virtue of the power to bind and to loose which Christ has given her (Matt, xviii. 18). For if the Church has received from God the power to remit sins which is the greater, she certainly has authority to remit the punishment of them which is the less. Moreover, it is by the bands of punishment that we are hindered from reaching the kingdom of God.

 

But if the Church can loose all bands, why not this?

 

Finally, Jesus certainly had power to remit the temporal punishment of sins and the power which He Himself had He gave to His disciples.

 

What is required in order rightly to gain an indulgence?

 

 In order to gain an indulgence, it is necessary:

 

I. To be in the grace of God. It is proper, therefore, to go to confession every time that one begins the good works enjoined for the gaining of an indulgence. In granting partial indulgences sacramental confession is not usually prescribed, but if one who is in the state of mortal sin wishes to gain the indulgence, he must at least make an act of true contrition with a firm purpose of going to confession.

 

2. It is necessary to have at least a general intention of gaining the indulgences.

 

3. It is necessary to perform in person and with devotion all the good works enjoined as to time, manner, end, etc., according to the terms in which the indulgence is granted. To gain plenary indulgences, confession, communion, a visit to some church or public oratory, and pious prayers are usually prescribed. If visits to a church are prescribed, Holy Communion may be received in any church, but the indulgenced prayers must be said in that church in which the indulgence is granted, and on the prescribed day. As to prayers, it is recommended that there be said seven times the Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be to the Father, and Creed.

 

Prayer for gaining an Indulgence.

 

“We beseech Thee, O Lord, graciously accept the petitions of Thy holy Church, that Thou wouldst deliver her from all adversities, root out from her all heresies, unite all Christian rulers and princes, and exalt Thy holy Church on earth, that we may all serve Thee in peace and quietness. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 

Bible in a Year Day 99 The Word Became Flesh

Today we begin reading the Gospel of John! Fr. Mike emphasizes the significance of Jesus' divinity, and explains how the story of salvation culminates in Christ as the Messiah. 

Columbus Day[3]

Columbus Day is the celebration of the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas on October 12, 1492. Christopher Columbus was an Italian-born explorer who discovered the Americas for the Spanish King Ferdinand of Spain. Columbus set off into the Atlantic with three ships, the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. Two months later he would set foot on the Bahamas and establish settlements on Hispanola Island (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Upon his return to Spain, he spoke of gold in the New World and thus the Americas were opened up for European colonization. In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared October 12th every year as Columbus Day. In the US, Columbus Day is celebrated by all US states except for Hawaii, South Dakota and Alaska.  Columbus Day now occurs on the second Monday in October each year.  

Columbus Day Facts & Quotes

·         Colorado was the first state to officially recognize and celebrate Columbus Day in 1906.

·         Christopher Columbus' first settlement on Hispaniola Island was called Villa de Navidad (Christmas Town)

·         In 1971, the official holiday was moved to the second Monday in October in order to give workers in the US a long weekend. This was part of the Uniform Monday Holiday Act.

·         Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly. - Robert F. Kennedy

·         You can never cross the ocean unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore. - Christopher Columbus

Columbus Day Top Events and Things to Do

·         Attend the Columbus Day Parade.  The parade in New York City is one of the largest.

·         Eat some good Italian food.

·         Watch a parade.

·         Visit the Library of Congress's online exhibit 1492: An Ongoing Voyage.

·         Host a scavenger hunt for the neighborhood kids and let them become Explorers for the afternoon.

Knights of Columbus[4] 

Thanks to the efforts of Father Michael J. McGivney, assistant pastor of St. Mary’s Church in New Haven and some of his parishioners, the Connecticut state legislature on March 29, 1882, officially chartered the Knights of Columbus as a fraternal benefit society. The Order is still true to its founding principles of charity, unity and fraternity. The Knights was formed to render financial aid to members and their families. Mutual aid and assistance are offered to sick, disabled and needy members and their families. Social and intellectual fellowship is promoted among members and their families through educational, charitable, religious, social welfare, war relief and public relief works. The history of the Order shows how the foresight of Father Michael J. McGivney, whose cause for sainthood is being investigated by the Vatican, brought about what has become the world's foremost Catholic fraternal benefit society. The Order has helped families obtain economic security and stability through its life insurance, annuity and long-term care programs, and has contributed time and energy worldwide to service in communities. The Knights of Columbus has grown from several members in one council to 15,342 councils and 1.9 million members throughout the United States, Canada, the Philippines, Mexico, Poland, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Panama, the Bahamas, the Virgin Islands, Cuba, Guatemala, Guam, Saipan, Lithuania, Ukraine, and South Korea.

 

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: Holy Priests, Consecrated and Religious.

·         Religion in the Home for Preschool: October

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary

Saturday, October 11, 2025

 


Vinny’s Corner

Jesus then said to those Jews who believed in him, “If you remain in my word, you will truly be my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” They answered him, “We are descendants of Abraham and have never been enslaved to anyone.  How can you say, ‘You will become free’?” Jesus answered them, “Amen, amen, I say to you, everyone who commits sin is a slave of sin. A slave does not remain in a household forever, but a son always remains. So if a son frees you, then you will truly be free. (John 8:31-36)

·         Saturday Litany of the Hours Invoking the Aid of Mother Mary

·         Foodie Food on the Camino de Santiago

·         Spirit hour: 15 Traditional Spanish Drinks

·         Texas State Fair (Dallas) September 27-Oct 20 “Our state fair is a great state fair.” How can it not be when it’s in Texas? Beginning the last Friday in September, the annual Texas State Fair unfolds over 24 days in Dallas, TX, with plenty of fun for the whole family, including the chance to ride this Ferris wheel – the largest in North America. 

o   Arizona State Fair

Spooky Spooky Soupy Soupy

·         Friday Soup: EASY CROCKPOT RECIPES for COZY FALL MEALS

o   –––Brodo Apostolorum

§  National Sausage Pizza Day

·         I wonder if you can make a sausage pizza soup

·         Hotel Monte Vista – Flagstaff, Arizona

o   Flagstaff’s Hotel Monte Vista has its fair share of paranormal guests who have seriously overstayed their welcome. Some of the most popular ghouls include a long-term boarder who had a habit of hanging raw meat from the chandelier in room 210, and two women who were thrown from the third floor and now attempt to asphyxiate male guests in their sleep. There’s also reportedly an infant whose disturbing cries have sent staff members running upstairs from the basement. (Actor John Wayne even once had a paranormal encounter here.) Book your stay today!

·         How to celebrate Oct 11th

o   Start your day with a nutritious breakfast featuring eggs. Get creative with your cooking, try a new recipe like a spicy Shakshuka or fluffy Japanese rolled omelet.

§  Throw a spontaneous party for yourself or with a few close friends. It doesn’t have to be elaborate; a simple get-together with music and snacks can lift your spirits.

·         Explore the rich culinary heritage of the American South by preparing a traditional Southern dish. Think fried chicken, collard greens, or cornbread for a taste of Southern comfort

·         Bucket Item trip: 🥾 Camino Francés: Santo Domingo → León

o   A Week of Bridges, Chant, and Civic Memory

§  Oct 11: Santo Domingo → Belorado (~23 km)

·         🌉 Symbolic Act: “Bridge Blessing” at the exit of Santo Domingo—recall the saint’s legacy of repair.

o   🛏️ Stay: Albergue Caminante or Albergue Cuatro Cantones

§  Oct 12: Belorado → San Juan de Ortega (~24 km)

·         🌲 Symbolic Act: “Forest Silence” in Montes de Oca—walk in quiet for one hour, listening for grace.

o   🛏️ Stay: Albergue San Juan de Ortega

§  Oct 13: San Juan de Ortega → Burgos (~26 km)

o   🕍 Symbolic Act: “Civic Chant” in Burgos Cathedral—chant a psalm in the Gothic nave as a pilgrim offering.

§  🛏️ Stay: Albergue Municipal de Burgos or Hostal Lar

§  Oct 14: Burgos → Hornillos del Camino (~21 km)

·         🌾 Symbolic Act: “Meseta Offering”—place a stone or prayer in the wide fields as a sign of surrender.

o   🛏️ Stay: Albergue El Alfar

§  Oct 15: Hornillos → Castrojeriz (~20 km)

o   🏚️ Symbolic Act: “Hidden Grace” in Hontanas—pause at the village entrance and offer a silent prayer.

§  🛏️ Stay: Albergue Ultreia

§  Oct 16: Castrojeriz → Frómista (~25 km)

o   🌉 Symbolic Act: “Itero Bridge Blessing”—recite the Beatitudes while crossing the medieval bridge.

§  🛏️ Stay: Albergue Estrella del Camino

§  Oct 17: Frómista → Carrión de los Condes (~20 km)

·         🕊️ Symbolic Act: “Canal Reflection”—walk beside the Canal de Castilla in silence, reflecting on flow and grace.

o   🛏️ Stay: Albergue Santa María

§  Oct 18: Carrión → León (via Sahagún, bus/train or multi-day walk)

·         🏛️ Symbolic Act: “Monastic Arrival”—enter León with a prayer of integration and chant at Santa María de Carbajal.

o   🛏️ Stay: Albergue Santo Tomás de Canterbury or Hospedería Monástica Pax


🌿 Leafing the World Behind: Day 11 (Alternate Path)
Saint: St. Francis of Assisi
Theme: Cooperation Through Humility and Brotherhood
Virtue: Simplicity
Virtue Connection: Communion
Symbolic Act: Share food with another creature—human or animal
Location: A table, trail, vineyard, or garden—anywhere life gathers


🕊️ Introduction: On Cooperation
To leave the world behind is not to isolate—it is to reconnect. Today we do not assert dominance; we practice kinship. Cooperation, in this rhythm, is not strategy—it is sacrament. It is the humble recognition that we belong to one another.

This pilgrimage is not a solo ascent—it is a communal descent into love. Each day, we leaf behind pride and separation, so that what remains is brotherhood: gentle, joyful, and shared.

Cooperation, in this rhythm, is not control—it is communion. It is the courage to walk together.


🌺 Saint of the Day: St. Francis of Assisi
Born into wealth, Francis chose poverty. Born into privilege, he chose kinship. He kissed lepers, preached to birds, and called the sun his brother. His humility was not weakness—it was wonder.

He founded the Franciscan order, rebuilt the Church, and lived with radical simplicity. His cooperation was cosmic: he saw all creation as family. He did not dominate—he danced.

He once said, “What we are looking for is what is looking.” His life was a mirror of divine humility—a brother to all, a servant of joy.

Francis’s witness reminds us: cooperation is not compromise—it is communion.


🛡️ Virtue Connection: Communion
Communion is the virtue that sees unity in diversity. It is not uniformity—it is harmony. Francis’s simplicity made space for others. He did not need to be first—he needed to be faithful.

Like St. Clare of Assisi and Bl. Carlo Acutis, Francis lived in joyful interdependence. He did not fear weakness—he embraced it as a doorway to love.

Let his witness remind you: cooperation without humility becomes control. But cooperation with humility becomes brotherhood.


🍞 Symbolic Act: Share Food with Another Creature
Prepare or offer food—simple, real, and shared. Give it to a neighbor, a friend, a bird, a dog, or even the soil. Let it be a gesture of kinship, not charity.

As you share, pray: “Lord, let me live as brother. Let my humility be joy. Let my cooperation be communion.”

If no creature is nearby, imagine the act in prayer. The gesture is the same: sharing as sacrament.


🔥 Reflection Prompt
Where have you resisted cooperation out of pride?
What creature has taught you humility?
Can you name one person whose brotherhood has healed your isolation?

Write, walk, or pray with these questions. Let St. Francis’s witness remind you: cooperation is not weakness—it is wonder. It is the humility to belong, the simplicity to share, the joy of being one among many.



OCTOBER 11 Saturday

FEAST DIVINE MATERNITY-Day of the Girl

 

Acts, Chapter 10, Verse 36-38

You know the word [that] he sent to the Israelites as he proclaimed PEACE through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all, what has happened all over Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John preached, how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the holy Spirit and power. He went about doing good and healing all those oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.

 

With the election cycle upon us let us take these verses to heart.

 

Why should I fear evil in the future or the injustice of our nation on the faithful?

 

Instead, we should look seriously at the candidates for their faith in God and their virtues. Look and see which of the candidates have the virtues of our Lady:

 

humility, generosity, chastity, patience, temperance and love of fellow man.

 

It is not the economy in coin; but the bankruptcy of our cultural heart that is killing this nation that sacrifices the future of children for the future of the mother. No amount of future happiness or gain in liberty is worth the life of an innocent. Know that life is greater than liberty and liberty is greater than wealth.

 

Beloved: Teach and urge these things. Whoever teaches something different and does not agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the religious teaching is conceited, understanding nothing, and has a morbid disposition for arguments and verbal disputes. From these come envy, rivalry, insults, evil suspicions, and mutual friction among people with corrupted minds, who are deprived of the truth, supposing religion to be a means of gain. Indeed, religion with contentment is a great gain. For we brought nothing into the world, just as we shall not be able to take anything out of it. If we have food and clothing, we shall be content with that. Those who want to be rich are falling into temptation and into a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires, which plunge them into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is the root of all evils, and some people in their desire for it have strayed from the faith and have pierced themselves with many pains. But you, man of God, avoid all this. Instead, pursue righteousness, devotion, faith, love, patience, and gentleness. Compete well for the faith. Lay hold of eternal life, to which you were called when you made the noble confession in the presence of many witnesses. (Tm. 6:2-12)

 

If we truly wish to make our nation great again; we ourselves must grow in holiness and then in turn our families will, which in turn our communities will; and thus, our nation will have a rebirth.

 

Copilot’s Take 

October 11: Divine Maternity, Day of the Girl, and the Race That Matters

On October 11, the calendar marks a striking convergence: the Feast of the Divine Maternity of Mary, the International Day of the Girl, and the Ironman World Championship in Kailua-Kona. Each event honors a form of strength—maternal, youthful, and athletic—but only one offers the path to lasting renewal: the fiat of Mary, who bore the Prince of Peace.

Acts 10:36–38 reminds the faithful that Jesus, anointed with the Holy Spirit and power, went about healing and proclaiming peace. In a time of political tension and cultural unrest, this passage offers a clear directive: do not fear the future or the injustice that threatens the faithful. Instead, discern wisely. Look to candidates not for their charisma or economic promises, but for their embodiment of virtue—especially the virtues of Our Lady: humility, generosity, chastity, patience, temperance, and love of neighbor.

The International Day of the Girl invites a deeper examination of national priorities. The cultural narrative often sacrifices the future of children for the fleeting desires of adults. Life is greater than liberty, and liberty is greater than wealth. The true bankruptcy of the nation is not economic, but moral—a loss of heart that cannot be repaired by policy alone.

1 Timothy 6:2–12 offers a sobering exhortation: reject the traps of greed and conceit and instead pursue righteousness, devotion, faith, love, patience, and gentleness. The Ironman athletes in Hawaii may compete for a fading crown, but Christians are called to a race of eternal consequence. Competing well for the faith means rising each day with gentleness, speaking truth without venom, and protecting the innocent without compromise.

October 11 becomes a liturgical hinge—a civic novena, a spiritual checkpoint. If the nation is to be made great again, it must begin with holiness. Holiness in the individual leads to holiness in the home, which leads to holiness in the community. Only then can the nation experience true rebirth—not through slogans or wealth, but through sanctity and conscience.

This reflection is not a retreat from civic engagement, but a call to deeper participation. The race worth running is not for power, but for mercy. And the strength worth cultivating is not in the body alone, but in the soul that says yes to God, as Mary did, and in doing so, says yes to the world.

Feast of the Divine Maternity[1]

“On this occasion the heavenly Lady was full of the Holy Ghost and moreover bore within Her, as His Mother, the Divine Word, who proceeds from the Father and the Holy Ghost. Saint Joseph received special enlightenment and the plenitude of divine graces, and altogether renewed in fervor of spirit he said:

“Blessed art Thou, Lady, among all women, fortunate and preferred before all nations and generations. May the Creator of heaven and earth be extolled with eternal praise, since from his exalted kingly throne He has looked upon Thee and chosen Thee for his dwelling place and in Thee alone has fulfilled the ancient promises made to the Patriarchs and Prophets. Let all generations bless Him: for in no one has He magnified his name as He has done in thy humility; and me, the most insignificant of the living, He has in his divine condescension selected for thy servant.” In these words of praise and benediction Saint Joseph was enlightened by the Holy Ghost, in the same manner as Saint Elizabeth, when she responded to the salutation of Our Queen and Mistress. The light and inspiration received by the most holy spouse was wonderfully adapted to his dignity and office. The heavenly Lady, upon hearing the words of the holy man, answered in the words of the Magnificat, as She had done on her visit to Saint Elizabeth, and She added other canticles. She was all aflame in ecstasy and was raised from the earth in a globe of light, which surrounded Her and transfigured Her with the gifts of glory. At this heavenly vision Saint Joseph was filled with admiration and unspeakable delight; for never had he seen his most blessed Spouse in such eminence of glory and perfection. Now he beheld Her with a full and clear understanding, since all the integrity and purity of the Princess of heaven and mystery of her dignity manifested themselves to him. He saw and recognized in her virginal womb the humanity of the infant God and the union of the two natures of the Word. With profound humility and reverence, he adored Him and recognized Him as his Redeemer, offering himself to his majesty. The Lord looked upon him in benevolence and kindness as upon no other man, for He accepted him as his foster-father and conferred upon him that title. In accordance with this dignity, He gifted him with that plenitude of science and heavenly gifts which Christian piety can and must acknowledge.

Bible in a Year Day 98 Israel asks for a King

Fr. Mike draws our attention to Samuel's sons who turned away from God as they ruled over Israel and how the people of Israel rejected God from being their king. Today's readings are 1 Samuel 6-8 and Psalm 86.

International Day of the Girl

International Day of the Girl aims to recognize girls' rights and the unique challenges that they face around the world.  Every day, young girls everywhere face challenges involving their rights, access to education, inequality, discrimination, domestic violence and child marriage. Gender inequality is so prevalent in the world that the United Nations introduced a Gender Inequality Index (GII) to measure gender disparity in countries.

Day of the Girl Facts & Quotes

·         It is estimated that over 100 million women from the world are missing. Female infanticide and selective abortion are still commonly practiced in Asia and have led to uneven ratios of men and women all over Asia.

·         In India, there are laws that prevent expecting mothers from finding out the sex of the baby due to selective abortions and discrimination against baby girls.

·         One-third of girls in the developing world are married before the age of 18, increasing the risk of HIV, unwanted pregnancy and discontinued education.

·         To call woman the weaker sex is a libel; it is man's injustice to woman. If by strength is meant brute strength, then, indeed, is woman less brute than man. If by strength is meant moral power, then woman is immeasurably man's superior. Has she not greater intuition, is she not more self-sacrificing, has she not greater powers of endurance, has she not greater courage? Without her, man could not be. If nonviolence is the law of our being, the future is with woman. Who can make a more effective appeal to the heart than woman? - Mahatma Ghandi

Day of the Girl Top Events and Things to Do

·         Get active for girls on social media. Use one of UNICEF's recommended social networking hashtags: #dayofthe girl, #mylifeat15, #girl4president and #girlhero!

·         Take out a girl in your life (your daughter, niece, granddaughter, family friend). Take her out to do her favorite activity on her special day.

·         Watch movies that empower young girls and portray strong female characters.
1) Brave (2012)
2) Bend it like Beckham (2002)
3) Anne of Green Gables (1985)
4) Mulan (1998)

·         Attend one of many events held nationally and internationally. Look for an event organized in your local community by schools and girl clubs, if not attend the online event. The online event involves sharing baby photos of yourself (if you're a girl), or daughters, sisters and other girl family members and discuss your/their dreams while growing up.

 

October 11---Ironman World Championship (Kailua-Kona, HI)

See some of the world’s most elite athletes compete in the big daddy of Ironman events. More than 2,000 athletes from around the world will set out on a 140.6-mile triathlon race from Kona, HI. Come as a participant, spectator or volunteer because this is one competition you won’t soon forget.  

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: End Sex Trafficking, Slavery

·         Religion in the Home for Preschool: October

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary

Domus Vinea Mariae

Domus Vinea Mariae
Home of Mary's Vineyard