20 February 2026

Catholic Economics

From the Spiritual Life Center of Wichita


Dusty Gates addresses Catholic theories regarding subsidiarity, private property, and the proper goals of economy.

The Holy Rosary

Friday, the Sorrowful Mysteries, in Latin with Cardinal Burke.

Hitler's Royal Nemesis - The King on the Horse

From Mark Felton Productions


In 1940, Denmark was invaded by Germany. Unlike most European monarchs, the Danish king decided to stay in Copenhagen. Through a strange daily ritual, he became a focal point of Danish resistance to German rule.

Metaphysics: 3. The Subject Matter of Metaphysics

With Ralph McInerny (R+I+P), PhD, late Professor of Philosophy, Director of the Jacques Maritain Centre, & Michael P. Grace Professor of Medieval Studies, Notre Dame.

Lent Is the Perfect Time To Conquer Your Selfish Desires

Pope St Leo the Great said, "As we approach then the beginning of Lent, ... let us prepare our souls for fighting with temptations".


From Aleteia

By Philip Kosloski

The more we conquer our selfish desires, the more likely we will be able to direct our thoughts towards God.

Few of us like to admit that we are selfish. We tend to keep a pearly image of ourselves, thinking that we really aren't that bad of a person.

While we may not be a murderer or a thief, we likely are tempted to be prideful and sometimes think that our way is the best way possible.

Whatever selfish tendency we may have, Lent remains a perfect time to work on those lower qualities of our personality and strive to focus our attention more on God.

Conquering our inner demons during Lent

St. Leo the Great gives his reasoning in a homily as to why we need to take advantage of Lent as a time of personal spiritual renewal:

For we have many encounters with our own selves: the flesh desires one thing against the spirit, and the spirit another thing against the flesh. And in this disagreement, if the desires of the body be stronger, the mind will disgracefully lose its proper dignity, and it will be most disastrous for that to serve which ought to have ruled.

We often forget that we are a body-soul composite being, which means that what we do with our bodies affects our souls. If we are selfish in our desires and let them rule, then our soul will suffer and we will have a difficult time resisting temptation.

St. Leo the Great then explains that if we are able to subdue our inner passions, we will be able to conquer those temptations and rightly order our lives:

But if the mind, being subject to its Ruler, and delighting in gifts from above, shall have trampled under foot the allurements of earthly pleasure, and shall not have allowed sin to reign in its mortal body, reason will maintain a well-ordered supremacy, and its strongholds no strategy of spiritual wickednesses will cast down: because man has then only true peace and true freedom when the flesh is ruled by the judgment of the mind, and the mind is directed by the will of God.

He then goes on to write, "As we approach then, dearly-beloved, the beginning of Lent, which is a time for the more careful serving of the Lord, because we are, as it were, entering on a kind of contest in good works, let us prepare our souls for fighting with temptations, and understand that the more zealous we are for our salvation, the more determined must be the assaults of our opponents."

If we are to do anything during Lent, let us seek to stamp out our selfish tendencies by rightly ordering our lives, letting God rule over us with his loving compassion.

Catholics Demand Pope Leo XIV Stop a Monster Priest

Pope Leo Punishes a Bishop For Defending Celibacy


Is Pope Leo worse than Francis?

SSPX Issue Brutal Response To Rome's Demand To Halt Consecrations


The wording of the response is professional but contains direct jabs at Cardinal Fernandez.

7 Banned Medieval Vegetables Big Agriculture Wants To Erase

From Medieval Way


Medieval gardens grew over 100 different vegetables. Your grocery store carries about 30. And most of those 30 are the same plant bred into different shapes. Broccoli, cauliflower, kale, Brussels sprouts, cabbage are all the same species, wearing a different costume. Seven vegetables that fed Europe for centuries have been quietly pushed out of seed catalogues, removed from commercial farming, and in some cases made illegal to sell as food. Not because they failed. Because they couldn't be shipped, stored, or mass-produced fast enough to make corporations money.

Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | February


Traditional Catholic morning prayers -- an excellent way to start your day off strong! The month of February is devoted to the Holy Family -- Jesus, Mary, and St. Joseph. It is my hope that these prayers increase your devotion to Our Lord and His Holy Family. Begin each day with morning prayer! This video is a compilation of many traditional morning prayers Catholics say, and should not be considered a replacement for those who have an obligation to pray the Divine Office morning prayers.

Wait!… Isaiah Predicted The Pope's Keys? (The Proof is Wild)

From Totus Catholica


Isaiah 22 Makes ZERO Sense... Until You See the Pope's Exact Title Isaiah 22 describes the exact office Jesus gave to Peter 7 centuries before Christ - a chief steward who holds the keys of the house of David, whose decisions cannot be reversed, and who is called "a father" to God's people. When Jesus tells Peter, "I will give you the keys of the kingdom," He's deliberately invoking this ancient Davidic office. 📌 The Point: The pattern is too precise to ignore - one steward, one keyholder, one father under the king. The question isn't whether the papacy is biblical, but whether we're willing to see what Scripture reveals. 📖 Core Sources Isaiah 22:20-22 - The Davidic Chief Steward: God removes corrupt steward Shebna, appoints faithful Eliakim: "I will call my servant Eliakim... he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and to the house of Judah and I will place on his shoulder the key of the house of David. He shall open and none shall shut and he shall shut and none shall open" Three elements: the key, binding authority, title "father" The office of chief steward was second only to the king himself (like Joseph under Pharaoh) - real administrative power to admit or exclude, make decisions that could not be overturned Matthew 16:18,19 - Jesus Fulfils the Pattern: Peter: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God" Jesus: "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church... I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven" Any first-century Jew hearing "keys of the kingdom" would immediately think of Isaiah 22 - Jesus wasn't inventing new imagery, He was invoking the ancient office of chief steward in the house of David The parallel is exact: One receives keys One has binding authority that cannot be reversed One is given a new name (Simon → Peter, like Abram → Abraham) The Pope's Title: Word "pope" comes from Latin "papa" (father) - when Catholics call the pope "holy father," we're applying the biblical designation God gave to the chief steward in Isaiah 22 ⛪ Early Church Evidence St. Irenaeus (c. 180 AD, disciple of Polycarp who knew Apostle John): "The blessed apostles having founded and built up the church committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate. To him succeeded Anacletus and after him Clement... In this order and by this succession the ecclesiastical tradition from the apostles has come down to us" St. Maximus the Confessor (7th century): "The apostolic see has received universal and supreme dominion, authority and power of binding and loosing over all the holy churches of God throughout the whole world" CCC 880-881: When Christ instituted the Twelve, He placed Peter at the head. "The Lord made Simon alone, whom He named Peter, the rock of His church. He gave him the keys of His church and instituted him shepherd of the whole flock" 🛡️ Objections Answered "Call no man your father" (Matthew 23:9)? If taken literally, we couldn't call biological fathers "father." Paul calls himself spiritual father (1 Cor 4:15: "I became your father in Christ Jesus"). Jesus was condemning the Pharisees' prideful love of titles, not legitimate spiritual fatherhood. Since God Himself calls the chief steward "father" in Isaiah 22, the title can't be inherently wrong "Christ holds the key of David" (Revelation 3:7)? Catholics agree Christ is ultimate, but delegation doesn't equal displacement. God worked through Moses while also sending His Spirit to the 70 elders. Christ's supremacy doesn't eliminate His appointed representatives - it establishes them Paul rebukes Peter (Galatians 2)? Catholic doctrine never claimed that popes are personally sinless. Papal infallibility is narrow - only when the pope speaks ex cathedra to define faith/morals for the universal Church. Peter's behaviour was personally sinful but involved no official teaching 📺 Chapters 0:00 - Isaiah 22: The Office Jesus Gave Peter (700 Years Before Christ) 2:42 - Eliakim: Keys, Authority, Title "Father" 4:48 - Matthew 16: Jesus Invokes Isaiah 22 6:23 - Early Church: Irenaeus, Maximus Recognized This 8:18 - Objections: "Call No Man Father," Galatians 2 10:18 - Typology Too Precise to Be Coincidental 🌐 Connect 📿 https://totuscatholica.org/rosary 🌍 https://totuscatholica.org/ ✉️ https://totuscatholica.org/contact https://catholicexaminationofconscien...

Lent With Frodo Baggins

"The Ring is destroyed on March 25. This is the feast of the Annunciation, the feast of the Incarnation, the date on which God becomes man; the date on which the Word becomes flesh. This is intriguing enough in itself, but it’s also, according to tradition, the historical date of the Crucifixion. Taken together with the Resurrection, the Incarnation and Crucifixion destroy the power of sin, redeeming us from its dominion."


From Aleteia

By Joseph Pearce

Let’s look a little closer at Tolkien’s bestselling epic so that we can unlock its Lenten spirit.

What on earth or in Middle-earth does The Lord of the Rings have to do with the penitential season of Lent? The answer might surprise us.

J. R. R. Tolkien, the author of The Lord of the Rings and a lifelong practicing Catholic, said that “The Lord of the Rings is, of course, a fundamentally religious and Catholic work.” Fundamentally Catholic? Of course? Really? 

Let’s look a little closer at Tolkien’s bestselling epic so that we can unlock its Lenten spirit.

The key that unlocks the Lenten spirit and the Catholicism of The Lord of the Rings is the date on which the Ring is destroyed. We are told that the Ring is destroyed on March 25. This is the feast of the Annunciation, the feast of the Incarnation, the date on which God becomes man; the date on which the Word becomes flesh. This is intriguing enough in itself but it’s also, according to tradition, the historical date of the Crucifixion. Taken together with the Resurrection, the Incarnation and Crucifixion destroy the power of sin, redeeming us from its dominion. As a Catholic steeped in the history of the Middle Ages, Tolkien knew this. But what’s the connection between the Incarnation, the Crucifixion and the destruction of the Ring?

The Ring is the One Ring to rule them all and in the darkness bind them. Original Sin is the One Sin to rule them all and in the darkness bind them. The power of the One Ring and the power of the One Sin are both destroyed on the same date. This means that the Ring is in some sense synonymous with sin itself. Putting on the Ring is the act of sin. If we wear the Ring habitually, we become addicted to its power. We become its slaves. We shrivel and shrink into a shrunken wreck. We gollumize ourselves.

If, however, we bear the Ring but don’t wear it, we are bearing the burden of sin without sinning. Ring bearers are cross bearers!

As the one ordained to bear the burden of the Ring, the burden of sin, Frodo Baggins can be seen as a Christ figure, a cross bearer. It’s no wonder that Frodo leaves Rivendell on December 25 and arrives at Mount Doom (Golgotha) on March 25. His journey is the life of Christ from birth to death! In accompanying his master, Samwise Gamgee is the loyal disciple. His journey is the journey we are all called to take, especially in this season of Lent.