Musings of an Old Curmudgeon
The musings and meandering thoughts of a crotchety old man as he observes life in the world and in a small, rural town in South East Nebraska. I hope to help people get to Heaven by sharing prayers, meditations, the lives of the Saints, and news of Church happenings. My Pledge: Nulla dies sine linea ~ Not a day without a line.
26 March 2026
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This Eucharistic Prophecy in Exodus Shatters Protestant Theology!
Founder of Boys Town Is Named "Venerable" by Pope Leo XIV
Father Flanagan was the St John Bosco of the 20th century. He did more to advance the care of orphans and troubled youth than almost anyone else.
From Aleteia
By Philip Kosloski
Fr Edward Flanagan was a holy priest who radically changed the understanding of education for disadvantaged youth and how this challenge is viewed in the United States and beyond.This is the first major step in the cause for canonization, as it confirms that he lived a holy life and is worthy of imitation.
The next step for his cause will be the recognition of two miracles through his intercession, which would make way for his beatification and then canonization.
Who was Fr. Flanagan?
Fr. Flanagan was born in 1886 in Ireland and came to the United States in 1904 with his sister.
He then attended Mt. St Mary’s University in Emmitsburg, MD, where he graduated in 1906 with a BA degree and then in 1908 with an MA degree. He then entered St. Joseph’s Seminary in New York and was ordained a priest in 1912, after having also studied in Rome.
Only a few years into his priesthood, Fr. Flanagan was given permission by his bishop to open a home for homeless boys in Omaha, Nebraska. Larry Peterson describes what happens next in an article for Aleteia:
On December 12, 1917 (The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe), Father Flanagan moved five boys into his first boys’ home. It was called “The City of Little Men.” By June of 1918, there were 32 boys and by Christmas there were more than 100. By the spring of 1919 the capacity of 150 was reached and bigger facilities were in order.
Fr. Flanagan was able to acquire a farm, which he then called, “The Incorporated Village of Boys Town.”
Fr. Flanagan is most well-known for saying, “There is no such thing as a bad boy.” His work inspired even Hollywood, which filmed a movie inspired by his work in 1938.
One of the most enduring parts of Fr. Flanagan’s legacy was his “Boys Town Method” of education, which includes the following:
- Teaching social skills that contribute to a positive learning environment
- Empowering children to make good decisions
- Correcting inappropriate behaviors by teaching and practicing appropriate alternative behaviors
- Reducing the frequency and severity of referrals through a data-driven referral process framework
- Praising students more and punishing them less
Fr. Flanagan believed every boy (and girl) are not inherently bad and can be encouraged to do good. His model has been used around the world and has changed the lives of countless children.
The Bishop Killed by Pirates While Protecting His Parishioners • St Luigi Versiglia
From Our Catholic Heroes
Saint Luigi Versiglia was an Italian bishop who worked in China. He was a disciplined man who cared deeply about his flock. He worked with Servant of God Carlo Braga and died with Saint Callisto (or Callistus) Caravario. Callisto and Luigi were killed while protecting their parishioners from pirates. They were canonized in 2000 and their feast day is February 25. --- Wikipedia: "Luigi Versiglia, S.D.B. (5 June 1873 – 25 February 1930) was an Italian Catholic prelate and professed member from the Salesians of Don Bosco who served as the first apostolic vicar of Shaoguan from 1920 until his murder. He was also a former novice master noted for his strict austerities and discipline but for his loving and compassionate care of the poor and defenceless. He led the first Salesian expedition to China in 1906 and remained there until his death, functioning for the people in various capacities such as a gardener and barber."
Here’s the Way to Save La Grande Trappe Monastery from Closing
Mr Horvat has a simple solution to the looming closure of La Grande Trappe and other dying monasteries: return to the traditions of your founders!
From CrisisBy John Horvat II
The Vikings once raided and plundered medieval monasteries for their riches, but no plot to destroy them holds a candle to self-inflicted destruction wrought by modernism.
The Vikings frequently sacked monasteries across Europe since they were isolated, poorly defended, and held vast wealth, artifacts, and livestock. With prayer and penance, the monks eventually prevailed and converted the Vikings.
Today, something different is happening. A new round of sacking is taking place. However, no Vikings or barbarians are despoiling the convents and abbeys. The monks and nuns themselves are, perhaps unwittingly, the agents of their self-destruction.
The Devastation of Modern Spirituality
It is easy to trace the origins of this new enemy. Modern spiritualities introduced after the Second Vatican Council attacked traditional forms of worship, hollowed out everything of substance, and left countless communities devastated. Viking theologians tore down everything in their paths.
Like a Viking lightning raid, old monastic traditions were overturned. Schedules, fasts, and prayer vigils were abandoned. Churches were gutted of their old adornments, “wreckovated” in a manner far more thorough than the ignorant barbarians. Social justice causes replaced the focus on prayer and penance.
Aging monks and nuns are now left with places made for once flourishing establishments, with no one to replace them. One by one, communities are falling apart, and their properties are put to other purposes. In France, two monasteries or convents close each month.
Aging monks and nuns are now left with places made for once flourishing establishments, with no one to replace them….In France, two monasteries or convents close each month.Tweet ThisThe Demise of La Grande Trappe
The seriousness of this crisis was recently made dramatically clear when the monks of La Trappe Abbey in Normandy announced that they may leave their monastery in 2028. The shock was so great that Pope Leo XIV held a confidential meeting with its abbot immediately after the announcement.
This Cistercian abbey is not just any abbey. It is a storied monastery that has housed monks for 900 years. It is known as “La Grande Trappe,” since it was the place where Abbot Armand de Rancé carried out the Trappist reform of the Cistercian order in 1662. As a result, all Reformed Cistercians are informally known as Trappists.
The Trappist community, after “following a long discernment,” decided that the lack of vocations and the heavy burden of maintaining the property made it consider leaving the site in 2028. They propose to walk away, as barely twenty aging monks live where once a hundred flourished.
A Long History
This is not the first time that La Trappe has faced an existential crisis. The abbey was founded in the 12th century, around 1122, in honor of the granddaughter of William the Conqueror. It survived wars and plagues, the French Revolution, and everything that the devil could throw at it. The abbey was even closed for a while and given up for lost. However, fervent abbots and monks always saved it from destruction.
Its story is inspiring.
During the Middle Ages, La Trappe united itself to St. Bernard’s Cistercian Order of Cîteaux. It was part of a vast network of abbeys associated with Cîteaux that flourished in a golden age of great fervor and holiness.
In the 15th century, however, things changed. The abbey was prey to English troops during the wars between France and England. Thus, it suffered greatly due to its location near the scene of so much strife.
In the 16th century, the abbey was held in commendam, meaning it was considered vacant and administered by another person—one not living in it but benefiting from its revenues. The abuse of this canonical state often led to mismanagement of properties like La Trappe, where the monks barely survived.
With the coming of the French Revolution, the government expelled the monks and confiscated their abbey in 1792. Some eighty monks accepted the inevitable by moving to other accommodations or returning to the world. Their names are lost in history.
However, Abbot Augustin de Lestrange, with 24 other monks, went into exile at La Valsainte in Fribourg, Switzerland, where they resolved to observe the exact and literal observance of the Rule of St. Benedict and the usages of Cîteaux. Despite the desperate conditions of this exile, they overcame all obstacles because they were consumed with the love of God and the Cross.
With Valsainte as its base, the community attracted so many monks that the abbot sent some out to found other establishments in Spain, England, Belgium, and Piedmont.
Everything finally changed for the better when Abbot Armand de Rancé initiated a reform of the abbey by returning to the austerity and purity of a rule of silence, prayer, manual labor, and seclusion from the world.An Incredible Odyssey
When the anti-Catholic French revolutionaries invaded Switzerland in 1798, they expelled the Trappists. Thus began an incredible odyssey in which the monks roamed the globe in search of a permanent home. The trek took them to America, Germany, and even Russia. Amid the incredible suffering and hardship of their wanderings, their numbers grew all the while.
Indeed, in 1813, the Trappist abbot purchased the land on Fifth Avenue where St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City now sits from the Jesuits to create a school and orphanage. Their stay was cut short by the fall of Napoleon, which allowed the now-augmented group of monks to return to France, only to find their beloved La Trappe in ruins.
The monks rebuilt the abbey atop the old one. By the time of the abbot’s death in 1827, 700 monks had joined the roving and now restabilized order. This new reform, as it was called, soon led to the establishment of 20 monasteries in the United States, Canada, Syria, and other places.
As long as the monks maintained their fervor, penances, silence, and fasts, they prospered. The more difficult the life, the more the monasteries were filled. As long as they were focused on a love for God and the Blessed Mother, there was no problem of recruitment.
Tragic Ending
The final chapter in this long saga is the post-1960s reform that modified the fast, simplified the rule, and suppressed the perpetual silence. The reforms, notes the Encyclopedia Britannica, “placed greater emphasis on individuality, [and] has resulted in diversity among the various Trappist monasteries, whereas previously all abbeys observed a uniform set of rules and traditions.”
Here entered the “new barbarian” spiritualties and novelties with their Viking theologians, who overturned everything and wrought great havoc. Whereas the roving monks of strict observance attracted hundreds, the postmodern monks of “diversity” saw hundreds flee the cloister. The noise that invaded the silence kept out recruits searching for sublime truth.
The lesson of this story is very clear. If the monks of La Grande Trappe wish to see their abbey revived, there is no need for “long discernment.” They must embrace their tradition in all its awesome and splendorous rigor, as they did before. What will attract the young Gen Zers, now converting, will be an appeal to the sublimity of religious life, not an “emphasis on individuality.”
It is time to expel the barbarian spiritualities with their Viking theologians that sack the abbeys—and so many parishes. Above all, it is time to return to the all-consuming love of God and the Blessed Mother that makes all things possible.
Pictured: Abbot Armand Jean le Bouthillier de Rancé, OCSO, Founder of the Trappists

