07 June 2026

Catholics No Longer Trust the Church: Warnings From Bishop Strickland & Fr Grichting


Synodality this, Synodal dialogue that. Most Catholics have lost trust in the institutional Church because the human element has failed in its duty to uphold the faith.

What Was Lebkuchen? The Medieval Cookie That Lasted 6 Months Without Spoiling

From Medieval Way


Near the end of the 1200s, in a monastery in southern Germany, a monk opened a wooden chest and pulled out a flat brown cake he had baked roughly six months earlier. It had never been refrigerated or sealed. It had sat in an unheated stone room through the back half of a medieval year. And it was still good. Still soft enough to eat. Still safe. That cake was Lebkuchen, and the medieval world baked it by the thousands as insurance against the months when nothing else would keep.

Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | June


Traditional Catholic morning prayers to help start your day in a godly way! The month of June is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. May our devotion to the mystery of the Sacred Heart of Jesus increase more and more each day. We've included the Memorare of the Sacred Heart and litany of the Sacred Heart. Begin your June with daily 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.

The Catholic Church Just Debunked Its Own Miracle

From Totus Catholica

The headline is misleading. The "miracle" simply didn't pass scientific scrutiny, as all miracles must.


Earlier last year, a parish in Morris, Indiana, found a consecrated host with red spots after it fell during Mass. The story went viral. Within a month, the Archdiocese of Indianapolis announced the result: no human blood, just common bacteria. The miracle was officially rejected by the Catholic Church itself. The Church does not defend every bleeding host story. She is the most ruthless debunker of her own miracles on earth, because the real presence does not need a single visible sign to be true.
The doctrine traces back to manna in the wilderness, the bread of the presence in the tabernacle, and Jesus in John 6;51 refusing to soften his language even as disciples walked away. Justin Martyr in 155 AD already taught that Christians do not receive common bread but the flesh and blood of Jesus. CCC 1374 states it plainly: truly, really, and substantially present. The Church can afford to debunk every fake miracle on earth because the real one is happening right now on ten thousand altars and it never needed to bleed to be true. CHAPTERS: 0:00 The Viral Miracle the Church Rejected 1:50 Why the Church Investigates Its Own Miracles 2:00 Manna and the Bread of the Presence 2:49 John 6;51 and the Language That Could Not Be Softened 3:24 Justin Martyr 155 AD and CCC 1374 3:57 The Talmud and the Temple Signs 4:28 The Foundation Is Not Miracles 5:55 Three Practices at Mass 6:58 Protestant Objection: John 6;63 7:35 Jewish Objection: The Shema and Worship 🌍 Website: https://totuscatholica.org/ 📿 Rosary Guide: https://totuscatholica.org/rosary ✉️ Contact: https://totuscatholica.org/contact 🔍 Examination of Conscience: https://catholicexaminationofconscien... 📚 Free eBooks: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi... 👥 Become a Totus Insider: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi...

Eucharistic Adoration Didn’t Exist Until Corpus Christi Was Established

He means, of course, Eucharistic Adoration as a separate devotion. Christians have known since Holy Thursday that the Holy Eucharist is literally the Body and Blood of Our Lord.


From 
Aleteia

By Philip Kosloski

Prior to the 13th century, Eucharistic adoration was not a popular devotion, even though Catholics understood the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharistic host.

In the past 100 years, Eucharistic adoration has become very popular among Roman Catholics, especially since Pope John Paul II highly promoted this devotion during his pontificate.

He wrote about it in his encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistiapraising it and encouraging Catholics to take part in it and in the processions linked to the feast of Corpus Christi:

In many places, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is also an important daily practice and becomes an inexhaustible source of holiness. The devout participation of the faithful in the Eucharistic procession on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ is a grace from the Lord which yearly brings joy to those who take part in it. 

It's fitting that Pope John Paul II made that connection, as historically speaking Eucharistic adoration was not a popular personal devotion until the feast of Corpus Christi was established in the 13th century.

Development of Eucharistic devotion

While Eucharistic adoration was not part of the early Church, it does not mean that early Christians did not believe Jesus was truly present in the Eucharist. They believed in his Real Presence, under the form of bread and wine, but focused mainly on his role as "food" and how consuming the Eucharist led to communion with him.

As the Church further developed her understanding of the Eucharist, more and more saints felt a desire to adore Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament and not to simply consume him.

This reached a climax in the establishment of the feast of Corpus Christi, where an emphasis was placed on the glory of Jesus' body, present in the Eucharist. What helped further cement this in the faithful's imaginations were reports of Eucharistic miracles, where the host would start bleeding. These miraculous hosts would then be put on display inside the Church and venerated by pilgrims.

Perpetual adoration

Shortly after these events took place, many felt a desire to continually adore Jesus outside of Mass and to remain in his presence.

One of the first places to adopt such a practice was the Cathedral in Lugo, Spain, where perpetual adoration has continued for approximately 1,500 years.

Early on there were even religious orders that were approved to perpetually adore Jesus in the Eucharist, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia:

The Order of the "Religiosi bianchi del corpo di Gesù Christo," a Benedictine reform, united to Cîteaux in 1393, and approved later as a separate community, devoted themselves to the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. Philip II of Spain founded in the Escorial the Vigil of the Blessed Sacrament, religious in successive pairs remaining constantly, night and day, before the Blessed Sacrament.

Eucharistic adoration remains a vital part of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church and is cherished by Catholics around the world.

This Would End the Catholic Crisis Tomorrow (See Note)

From Brian Holdsworth


When Catholic education actually transmits the faith, it produces Catholics — including future priests. The vocation crisis is downstream from a formation crisis, and the solution is not more marketing or bureaucracy, but recovering the kind of Catholic education that already works. Support the channel by visiting: https://brianholdsworth.ca/help 00:00 — The crisis Catholics have normalized The Church in once-strong Catholic countries like Canada is facing a generational collapse in faith, practice, institutions, and priestly vocations and calling that decline “normal” only excuses it. 01:56 — The priest shortage in hard numbers Canada has far fewer seminarians than it needs simply to maintain its current number of active priests, meaning the Church is heading toward a demographic cliff unless something changes urgently. 03:19 — Why strategic plans won’t solve the crisis Diocesan plans, consultants, websites, and marketing campaigns may address symptoms, but the real crisis is not merely vocational — it is a crisis of faith. 05:33 — The failure of Catholic schools Many Catholic schools retain the externals of Catholic identity while failing to transmit the Catholic faith, producing graduates who rarely continue practicing. 07:39 — Why we chose a different path Rather than entrust their children to a weakened Catholic school system, several families built a homeschool co-op and eventually a small Catholic academy rooted in faith, community, prayer, and tradition. 08:35 — The astonishing fruit of a tiny co-op Despite having only around 40 students across all ages, this small Catholic educational community has already produced multiple seminarians and faithful Catholic graduates. 10:09 — What the numbers reveal Compared with a massive Catholic school system, this tiny co-op is dramatically overrepresented in producing seminarians — suggesting that authentic Catholic education actually works. 11:25 — Catholic education is not secular education with a crucifix True Catholic education is not merely modern schooling with religious decoration; it is an entirely different model ordered toward wisdom, faith, and freedom. 11:43 — School as leisure, not work The Catholic tradition sees education as leisure and contemplation, not merely job training or economic productivity. 14:12 — The solution is already in the tradition The Church does not need expensive consultants to reverse the crisis. It needs to recover the educational tradition that successfully transmitted the faith for centuries.

Nota Bene ~ When the Church adopted the educational philosophy of John Dewey, one of the major enemies of Western Culture, it in many ways contributed to the crisis of today.