- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Total Pageviews
Presidents' 100 for the dinner table
Popular posts from this blog
Thursday, June 18, 2026
JUNE 18 Thursday Third Week after Pentecost International Picnic Day-World Tapas Day Sirach, Chapter 48, Verse 12 When Elijah was enveloped in the whirlwind, Elisha was filled with his spirit; He worked twice as many marvels, and every utterance of his mouth was wonderful. During his lifetime he FEARED no one, nor was anyone able to intimidate his will. Is there anything that threatens or frightens you? Are there bullies or organizations (IRS/FBI/CIA) that scare you? Does the threat of terrorism or the coercing by dark government out of control worry you? Then welcome to the 21 st Century. We need the spirit of Elisha so that all may know that we feared no one in our lifetime and were not daunted by threats nor were we overawed by demonstrations of power and that we are resolute in our following of the gospel. O LORD, you have probed me and you know me; you know when I sit and when I stand; you understand my thoug...
Friday, June 19, 2026 Juneteenth
JUNE 19 Friday Third Week after Pentecost Juneteenth-Saunter Day 2 Chronicles, Chapter 19, Verse 5-7 He appointed judges in the land, in all the fortified cities of Judah, city by city, and he said to them: “Take care what you do, for the judgment you give is not human but divine; for when it comes to judgment God will be with you and now, let the FEAR of the LORD be upon you. Act carefully, for with the LORD, our God, there is no injustice, no partiality, no bribe-taking.” This was what Jehoshaphat said to the judges that he was appointing. Reform always includes justice. The Holy Spirit calls us to be just and merciful to human needs. Today pray for those who are in need and may not ask for help. Today, look for and act to address the real needs of all humans. Hierarch of Needs [1] A team of researchers at Arizona State University, led by evolutionary psychologist Douglas Kenrick, has noticed that most people really like being pare...
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
30 day retreat to Divine Mercy Smoke in this life and not the Next El Cheapo Sweet Jane Cigarillos & Four Freedoms Bourbon The cheap cigar bites. The bourbon warms. Together they teach the lesson Bellarmine knew well: the body fears pain far more quickly than the soul fears sin. God rarely shows us the pain of loss — we are too dull to feel it. But the pain of sense — fire, cold, torment — that we understand. So He allows visions, warnings, and the testimony of the man Bede records: dead, returned, terrified, his life of penance proving his words. Holy fear is mercy. It wakes the soul before judgment does. Prompts Where has comfort made me careless. What pain is God using to rouse me. What sin do I fear less than I should. Introduction to Chronicles 1 Déjà vu [1] , that strange feeling we sometimes get that we've read something before. What we're reading now has already been read. In 1 Chronicles , the author decides to retell the entire history...
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Smoke in this Life Not the Next Rye & Grancatera A man once died, crossed the threshold, and was sent back — not with soft light, but with terror still clinging to him . His penance afterward was the proof. No theatrics. Just the hard discipline of someone who had seen what sin costs. Rye for sharpness. Grancatera for gravity. A pairing meant to remind the living that purification is better chosen than imposed. Tonight’s smoke is not pleasure. It is clarity. JUNE 10 Wednesday within the Octave of Corpus Christi 1 Chronicles, Chapter 14, Verse 17 Thus, David’s fame was spread abroad through every land, and the LORD put the FEAR of him on all the nations. Great leaders are great followers of the Lord. You're Going Down, Philistines [1] Back in Jerusalem, David is sitting pretty. He takes on a few more wives and they start producing princes and princesses. Obviously, the Philistines are worried. They just got rid of Saul and now some other more powerf...
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Sun, June 14 — Healing & Trust Virtue: Healing & Trust Cigar: Balanced, resilient (Corojo) Bourbon: Elijah Craig Small Batch — warm, steady Reflection: Where does mercy restore me. “This mysterious valley was filled with innumerable souls, which, tossed as by a furious tempest, threw themselves from one side to the other. When they could no longer endure the violence of the fire, they sought relief amidst the ice and snow; but finding only a new torture, they cast themselves again into the midst of the flames.” Meditation: Healing begins where panic ends. Trust is the soul’s refusal to flee from the very fire that purifies it. The souls in the valley rush from flame to frost because they cannot yet believe that mercy is found in the wound, not away from it. Ask tonight: Where do I still run from the heat that would heal me. Where do I seek cold comforts instead of Christ’s steadying hand. Where does mercy want to restore me — if I would only stay st...
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 Islamic New Year
SMOKE IN THIS LIFE, NOT THE NEXT June 16 — Relief of the Souls in Purgatory Choose a cheap, honest night‑smoke — the kind that burns quick and sharp, like the valley Drithelm saw where the late‑repentant are purified. They died confessing, not defiant — saved, but unfinished. Better to burn now in mercy than later in justice. Prayer O my God, we beg of Thee in union with the Immaculate Heart of Mary, through the merits of the Precious Blood offered in every Mass throughout the world, to grant conversion to sinners and to all who will die this day the grace of repentance and a happy death. If it be Your Will, accept this offering to console the Heart of Jesus in agony for souls who delayed repentance until the end. Have mercy on the holy souls in Purgatory, especially the forgotten. Do not delay their deliverance, but let the purifying flame consume their defects so they may stand in Your divine presence. Amen. The late‑repentant suffer now so they may shine later. ...
Monday, June 15, 2026
🔸 Monday Night at the Movies- June 2026 – Prophets & Pilgrims Prophecy in June is a pilgrimage through the Church’s feasts. These films follow the soul from guilt to purification, from conscience to renunciation, and finally to a vocation lived in motion. Each week’s feast sharpens the film’s meaning and reveals a different face of the prophet’s call. Jun 1 – The Informer (1935) St. Justin Martyr A prophet begins in the ruins of his own failure. Gypo’s betrayal and collapse mirror Justin’s insistence on truth: falsehood destroys, repentance clarifies. Jun 8 – Stromboli (1950) Sacred Heart / Immaculate Heart Karin’s volcanic exile becomes purification. As the Hearts of Jesus and Mary burn with love, Stromboli burns away pride and forces a reckoning with God. Jun 15 – A Man for All Seasons (1966) St. Barnabas Barnabas stands firm in the Spirit; Thomas More does the same. Here the pilgrimage becomes confrontation — conscience refusing to bow before power. Jun 22 – The Abdi...
Saturday, June 20, 2026
June 13 Smoke in this Life not the Next The Small Fire Half a glass of wine for steadiness. A cheap cigar for honesty. Maria d’Oignies for the flame that purifies. She teaches that holiness is built from small, steady offerings — the kind a man can make in the quiet of his own evening. Let the wine remind you of restraint, the cigar of simplicity, and her life of the fire God can kindle in an ordinary heart. Reflection Question: What small, steady offering is God asking me to place on the fire tonight? shortest night of the year NO WAY OUT (1950) Richard Widmark • Linda Darnell • Sidney Poitier Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz A hospital ward becomes a crucible, and America’s racial sickness is dragged into the light. No Way Out is not merely noir — it is a wound filmed in stark black‑and‑white, a story where hatred, fear, and conscience collide in rooms too small to contain them. Widmark’s venom, Darnell’s desperation, and Poitier’s calm, disciplined dignity...
Friday, June 12, 2026
The chant “Deus Vult” draws its power from the collision of two worlds: the serene discipline of Gregorian prayer and the raw urgency of medieval battle. The phrase — “God wills it” — was not originally a cry of conquest but a declaration that evil would not have the final word. In the hymn’s modern presentations, the low drones, monastic intervals, and martial cadence evoke a people who believed that spiritual warfare was as real as steel and blood. It is the sound of men who prayed before they fought, and who understood that victory was never theirs, only God’s. The Church today teaches the same truth without the swords. The Catechism is blunt: evil is real, personal, and active (CCC 409, 1707). Every Christian lives “in a dramatic struggle between good and evil,” and the battlefield is now the human heart, the culture, and the defense of the vulnerable. The medieval cry becomes interior: not a call to take territory, but a call to take responsibility. “Deus vult” becomes ...
Comments
Post a Comment