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Nineveh 90 Consecration-

Nineveh 90 Consecration-
day 35

54 Day Rosary-Day 54

54 Day Rosary-Day 54
54 DAY ROSARY THEN 33 TOTAL CONCENTRATION

Nineveh 90

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

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

 

The Song of Bernadette (1943) is one of those rare films that manages to be both reverent and cinematically powerful — a work of art that treats the life of Saint Bernadette Soubirous with tenderness, realism, and a surprising amount of dramatic tension. Since you’ve been weaving classic films into your devotional and hospitality framework, this one fits beautifully into that tradition.

The Song of Bernadette (1943)

A luminous portrait of humility, suffering, and the mystery of grace

Plot Summary

Set in 1858 in the small French town of Lourdes, the film follows Bernadette Soubirous, a poor, asthmatic miller’s daughter whose life changes when she encounters “a beautiful Lady” in the grotto of Massabielle. What begins as a private vision quickly becomes a public controversy. Bernadette’s simplicity and sincerity collide with the skepticism of civil authorities, the caution of Church leaders, and the fervor of the townspeople.

As the apparitions continue, Bernadette is asked to perform seemingly impossible tasks — to dig in the mud, to drink from a nonexistent spring, to relay messages she barely understands. The miraculous spring emerges, healings begin, and the world descends upon Lourdes. Yet Bernadette herself remains untouched by pride, choosing the hidden life of a nun rather than the fame of a visionary.

The film closes with her final illness, where her long-hidden physical suffering becomes the last offering of her life — a quiet martyrdom of love.

Catholic Themes & Lessons

1. Humility as the Vessel of Grace

Bernadette is not chosen because she is strong, educated, or impressive. She is chosen because she is small.
Her poverty, illness, and lack of status become the very conditions through which God works.

Lesson: God delights in using the overlooked to reveal His glory.

2. Suffering as Participation in Christ

The film does not romanticize Bernadette’s pain. Her asthma, her bone disease, her humiliations — all become a hidden participation in the Cross.
Her final line, “I am happier than you,” is not triumphalism but union.

Lesson: Suffering offered in love becomes redemptive.

3. The Discernment of Apparitions

The Church’s caution is portrayed with nuance.
The priests and bishops are not villains; they are guardians of truth.
Their discernment protects both Bernadette and the faithful.

Lesson: Authentic faith welcomes miracles but tests spirits.

4. The Danger of Spiritual Jealousy

One of the film’s most striking subplots is the nun who resents Bernadette’s visions.
Her envy blinds her to Bernadette’s hidden suffering.

Lesson: Holiness is not measured by gifts but by love.

5. The Marian Way: “Penance, Penance, Penance”

The Lady’s message is simple and severe.
Conversion.
Prayer.
Sacrifice.

Lesson: Lourdes is not primarily about healing — it is about repentance.

Hospitality Pairing (Classic Film + Spiritual Table)

Drink: “The Grotto Spring”

A simple, clear, Marian-inspired cocktail using your bar stock:

  • Vodka (1.5 oz)
  • White wine (1 oz, chilled)
  • Limoncello (0.5 oz)
  • Shake lightly and serve over crushed ice
  • Garnish with a thin lemon peel shaped like a small flame — symbol of the Lady’s radiance

The drink is intentionally light, clean, and bright — a contrast to the heavy, smoky cocktails of the 1940s.

Meal Pairing: “Peasant’s Table of Lourdes”

A humble French-country plate:

  • Rustic bread
  • Simple cheese (goat or soft cow)
  • A small bowl of vegetable soup
  • A handful of grapes (your hospitality signature)

This echoes Bernadette’s poverty and the simplicity of the Soubirous family.

Reflection Prompt for Devotional Use

Where in my life is God asking me to be small, obedient, or hidden — and do I resist because I want to be seen?

What suffering have I been carrying alone that could become an offering if united to Christ?

Dara’s Corner-Try “Codfish Cakes

·         Spirit Hour: Try a wine from St. Bernadette area near Lourdes or a white rose

·         Carnival Time begins in Catholic Countries.

·         Thomas Edison, born on February 11, 1847

·         National Cardiac Rehabilitation Week

·         Bucket List trip: Greenland

·         American Heart Month

·         National Latte Day

·         Plan winter fun:

·         Soak in hot springs

·         Hit the snow slopes

·         Ride a snowmobile

·         Go for a dog sled ride

·         Ride a hot air balloon

·         How to celebrate Feb 11th

·         Rise and shine, time to kickstart your day in style! Begin by honing your inner rockstar for National Get Out Your Guitar Day. Strum a tune or two, maybe even pen your own song – the world is your stage!

·         In between jam sessions, channel your inner inventor for National Inventors’ Day. Get crafty with household items, maybe whip up a DIY gadget. Embrace your innovation!

·         Take a break from your inventions to celebrate Satisfied Staying Single Day. Treat yourself to a luxurious spa day, binge-watch your favorite show guilt-free, revel in the freedom of solo living.

·         Feeling social? It’s National Make a Friend Day – reach out to that neighbor you’ve been meaning to chat with, or catch up with an old pal over a latte for National Latte Day.



Expand your social circle and nurture those connections.

·         As the day winds down, don your best white shirt in honor of National White Shirt Day. Class and sophistication never go out of style.

·         Before you cozy up for the night, reflect on the achievements of grandmothers worldwide for Grandmother Achievement Day. Whip up a batch of peppermint patties or share a heartwarming story – celebrate the incredible women who paved the way.

·         So, seize the day, embrace the weird and wonderful mishmash of holidays, and make it a day to remember!

🌍 Dara’s Corner: Aboard The World
Ordinary Time | February 12 – February 18, 2026
Theme: Courage, Clarity & the Quiet Strength of Commitment
Coordinates: South Australia Coast → Adelaide → Spencer Gulf → At Sea


🌤️ Day 1 — February 12 | Approaching South Australia
Title: The Courage to Continue
• Ritual: Pilgrims place a hand over their heart and name one commitment they refuse to abandon
• Scripture: Joshua 1:9 — “Be strong and courageous… for the Lord your God is with you.”
• Meal: Greek yogurt with berries, toasted almonds, black tea
• Reflection: “Courage is not loud—it is steady.”
• Hospitality Arc: Ask someone what they’re committed to—and honor their perseverance


🌬️ Day 2 — February 13 | Entering Gulf Waters
Title: The Gulf of Clarity
• Ritual: Pilgrims write one question they need clarity on and hold it to the light
• Scripture: Proverbs 20:5 — “The purposes of a person’s heart are deep waters…”
• Meal: Vegetable couscous, lemon broth, mint tea
• Reflection: “Clarity often rises slowly, like tide.”
• Hospitality Arc: Share with someone a question you’re living with—not a question you’re solving


🌆 Day 3 — February 14 | Docked in Adelaide (Valentine’s Day)




Title: The Heart That Discerns
• Ritual: Pilgrims walk a short garden path or shoreline, naming one relationship that needs gentleness
• Scripture: Colossians 3:14 — “Above all, clothe yourselves with love…”
• Meal: Grilled lamb, roasted vegetables, local Shiraz
• Reflection: “Love is discernment practiced with tenderness.”
• Hospitality Arc: Offer someone a word of kindness they didn’t expect
Local Inspiration:
Adelaide’s gardens, wine country, and coastal calm invite a spirituality of gentleness and relational renewal.


🌧️ Day 4 — February 15 | Spencer Gulf
Title: The Softening Rain
• Ritual: Pilgrims sit for two minutes naming one place in their life that needs softening
• Scripture: Ezekiel 36:26 — “I will remove your heart of stone…”
• Meal: Pumpkin soup, seeded crackers, warm ginger water
• Reflection: “Softening is not weakness—it is readiness.”
• Hospitality Arc: Ask someone where they feel themselves softening—and bless it


🌅 Day 5 — February 16 | At Sea Toward the Bight
Title: The Long Look
• Ritual: Pilgrims gaze at the horizon for one full minute, naming one long-term hope
• Scripture: Hebrews 10:23 — “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope…”
• Meal: Spinach omelet, citrus slices, herbal tea
• Reflection: “Hope stretches the soul toward its future.”
• Hospitality Arc: Invite someone to speak their long-term hope aloud


🌊 Day 6 — February 17 | Southern Ocean Swell
Title: The Deep Resolve
• Ritual: Pilgrims place both hands on the ship’s railing, grounding themselves in one resolve for the year
• Scripture: Psalm 57:7 — “My heart is steadfast, O God…”
• Meal: Baked cod, quinoa, cucumber salad, sparkling water
• Reflection: “Resolve is the quiet spine of the soul.”
• Hospitality Arc: Affirm someone’s resolve—name the strength you see in it


🌄 Day 7 — February 18 | At Sea, Turning Eastward
Title: The Turning Point
• Ritual: Pilgrims turn their bodies slowly from west to east, naming one direction they feel called to shift
• Scripture: Isaiah 30:15 — “In returning and rest you shall be saved…”




• Meal: Roasted chicken, sweet potatoes, chamomile tea
• Reflection: “Turning is not reversal—it is alignment.”
• Hospitality Arc: Ask someone what direction they feel drawn toward—and bless their turning

February 11 Wednesday

Feast Of Our Lady of Lourdes

 Leviticus, Chapter 25, Verse 17

Do not deal unfairly with one another, then; but stand in FEAR of your God. 

I, the LORD, am your God.

 

Fairness is a word that means physical beauty. In a sense God is asking us to not do those things that mar the physical beauty of another. This means is essence that we need to nourish each other and to give to share with other the gifts we receive from God. This means to respect each person as a person, physically, mentally, and emotionally; to provide for their welfare. One of the greatest ways we can honor our creator is in how we deal fairly with our spouses.

 Of course — here is the full piece you and I crafted earlier on the Church’s obedience to Christ mirroring a wife’s obedience to her husband. I’m presenting it cleanly, without additions, exactly as the standalone reflection you intended.


The Church’s Obedience to Christ and the Icon of Marriage

(For February 11 — Our Lady of Lourdes)

The modern world recoils at the word obedience, especially when applied to marriage. Yet Scripture does not blush. St. Paul speaks plainly: “Wives, be subject to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the Church.” This is not humiliation, nor domination, nor erasure of dignity. It is an icon — a living sacrament — of something far greater.

The Church herself is the Bride. She receives everything from Christ: her life, her mission, her holiness, her very identity. She does not invent truth; she receives it. She does not negotiate the Gospel; she proclaims it. She does not direct Christ; she follows Him. Her obedience is not servile but radiant — the obedience of love, the obedience of one who trusts the Bridegroom who has already died for her.

In this light, the wife’s obedience is not a concession to patriarchy but a participation in the mystery of the Church. It is the posture of the heart that says: I trust you to lead us toward God. And the husband’s headship is not tyranny but cruciform responsibility: Love your wives as Christ loved the Church and gave Himself up for her. The husband leads by dying first. He commands nothing he has not already bled for.

When this order is lived rightly, it becomes luminous. The world sees in the home what it cannot see in the streets: a living parable of Christ and His Bride. The husband’s strength becomes a shelter, not a weapon. The wife’s trust becomes a crown, not a chain. Together they reveal the Gospel in a language older than words.

The rebellion of our age is not against men but against Christ. The world rejects the wife’s obedience because it rejects the Church’s obedience. It rejects the husband’s headship because it rejects Christ’s headship. But the divine order remains, unthreatened and unashamed.

To restore marriage, we must restore the Church’s posture before her Lord. To heal the home, we must heal the Bride. And to understand obedience, we must look not to politics or power struggles but to the Cross — where the Bridegroom gives everything, and the Bride receives everything.

This is the obedience that saves the world.

Together For Marriage[1]

 Marriage works. It makes people happier, live longer, and build more economic security. Children with married parents perform better in school. Click here for new research on "Why Marriage Matters: Thirty Conclusions from Social Science." Deep down, everyone wishes they could have a rewarding lifelong commitment with their spouse. But in the midst of challenges, we forget how marriage can benefit our personal lives. We are losing our determination and the skills to keep marriages healthy and strong. Marriage breakdown is costly to our kids and to society at large. Divorce and unwed childbearing cost the U.S. taxpayers a whopping $112 billion annually. In these economic challenging times, building stronger marriages helps build a stronger nation.

 Copilot’s Take

The dynamics surrounding the shutdown reveal a familiar pattern of modern evil: the slow normalization of unfairness, the manipulation of public fear, and the erosion of trust between people who should be bound by shared responsibility. Leviticus’ command not to deal unfairly becomes a mirror for this moment, exposing how political actors can treat citizens as leverage rather than as persons with dignity, livelihoods, and families. The Church’s witness—especially under the mantle of Our Lady of Lourdes—reminds the world that evil often hides in indifference, in the willingness to let others suffer for strategic gain, and in the refusal to honor the beauty of the human person. In contrast, covenantal fidelity, whether in marriage or civic life, becomes a quiet but powerful resistance to such manipulation, modeling the justice and reverence that public life so often lacks.

 

Our Lady of Lourdes[2]

 

Today marks the first apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1858 to fourteen-year-old Marie Bernade (St. Bernadette) Soubirous. Between February 11 and July 16, 1858, the Blessed Virgin appeared eighteen times and showed herself to St. Bernadette in the hollow of the rock at Lourdes. On March 25 she said to the little shepherdess who was only fourteen years of age: "I am the Immaculate Conception." Since then, Lourdes has become a place of pilgrimage, and many cures and conversions have taken place. The message of Lourdes is a call to personal conversion, prayer, and charity.

The Message of the Virgin of Lourdes[3]

One of the better-known apparitions of Our Lady took place in Lourdes, France in 1858. This shrine continues today to be one of the most popular Marian shrines in the world. Thousands of people visit this shrine every year, a special place of devotion to Our Lady, where many miracles have occurred.

Beginning with her first apparition of February 11, 1858, Mary appeared eighteen times to Bernadette Soubirous, a girl of only fourteen years of age. When Bernadette asked the Lady who She was, she received the reply, "I am the Immaculate Conception." Less than four years before, on December 8, 1854, Pius IX had raised the teaching about the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady to be dogma of faith with these words:

By the authority of Our Lord Jesus Christ, of the blessed apostles Peter and Paul, and our own authority, we declare, pronounce, and define: the doctrine which hold that the Most Blessed Virgin Mary was from the first moment of her conception, by the singular, grace and privilege of almighty God, and in view of the merits of Christ Jesus the Savior of the human race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin, is revealed by God and therefore, firmly and constantly to be believed by all the faithful. (The Christian Faith #709).

It is under the title of the Immaculate Conception that Our Lady is especially honored in our own country.

This message can be summed up in the following four points:

1. It is a heavenly confirmation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception that had just been defined by the Church a few years before.

2. It is an exaltation of the virtues of Christian poverty and humility that are perceived in Bernadette.

3. The spiritual message is that of personal conversion. Our Lady tells Bernadette that the important thing is to be happy in the next life. To attain this, we must accept the cross in this life.

4. Mary stresses the importance of prayer, especially the rosary. Our Lady appeared with a rosary hanging from Her right arm. Penance and humility are also part of the message, as well as a message of mercy for sinners and compassion for the sick.

Things to Do

·         Watch “The Song of Bernadette”, a masterpiece filmed in 1943.

·         Bring flowers (roses would be appropriate) to your statue of Our Lady at your home altar, especially if you have a statue of Our Lady of Lourdes.

·         Obtain some Lourdes holy water and give the parental blessing to your children.

·         Give extra care to the sick in your community — cook dinner for a sick mother's family, bring your children to the local nursing home (the elderly love to see children), send flowers to a member of your parish community who is ill.

·         Today’s recipes:

o   Cassoulet

o   French Style Shepherd's Pie

o   Initial Cookies

o   Minced Chicken (or Turkey) a la King

o   Soupe Basque

National Marriage Week-Marriage Retreat[4]

Here is a virtual Marriage Retreat. Join us by taking a few moments each day, together with your spouse, to reflect and pray. This retreat will help you further reflect on what makes marriage unique as established by God, between a man and woman, as the basis for family and society. For more instruction or inspiration, visit foryourmarriage.org or marriageuniqueforareason.org.

 

·         Plan to do the retreats weekly; perhaps on the day of the week you were married.

·         Enjoy a good home cooked meal together after your retreat; use a recipe for the saint of the day. Available at Catholicculture.org. Say Grace together and ask to the saint of the day’s intervention.

 

Bible in a Year Day 224 The Weeping Prophet

Fr. Mike introduces us to the prophet Jeremiah, who is also known as the Prophet of Doom and the Weeping Prophet. He explains what makes Jeremiah different than the other prophets, and encourages us to cling closely to him as we hear about his difficult call. Today's readings are Jeremiah 1, Ezekiel 27, and Proverbs 14:5-8.

Daily Devotions

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

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary

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