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.
07 February 2026
What is Corporatism?
The Life of His Majesty the King Louis XVI of France ~ (1754–1793)
Introduction to Moral Philosophy: 6. Moral Reasoning
A Pilgrimage to the "Small Cells" of St Romuald
The Camaldolese, founded by St Romuald, whose Feast is today, are an eremitical reform of the Benedictine tradition, in an attempt to return to "true Benedictinism".
From Aleteia
By Bret Thomas, OFS
The founder of the Camaldolese Order sought refuge in small cells, as he was convinced that silence was necessary for recollection and large monasteries were too distracting.St. Louis Romuald (Now: Romualdo) was the founder of the Camaldolese Order and an important figure in 11th-century “eremitical monasticism.”
He was born in Ravenna in 952 to a noble family. After a bloody family feud involving his father, he entered the monastery of Sant'Apollinare in Classe. He later went to Venice, where he placed himself under the spiritual guidance of the hermit Marino, and met one of the most important reforming monks of the 10th century, Abbot Guarino.
Then he returned to Ravenna, where he was made abbot. After leaving that role, he began journeying tirelessly founding and reforming monasteries and hermitages up and down the Italian peninsula.
His rule in evangelization was: quiet tongue and preaching life.
He frequently sought refuge in small cells, convinced that silence was necessary for recollection and large monasteries were too distracting. This would become a hallmark of his spirituality.
Around 1012, he arrived in the forest of Casentino, in the Tuscan Apennines. Here he met the nobleman from Arezzo, Count Maldolo, who owned land in the ancient forest. Fascinated by the spirituality of Romuald, the count gave him possession of his properties for prayer and contemplation. The name, Camaldoli, derived from the Latin name of the area, Campus Maldoli, the field of Maldolo.
He set up a monastery near the river. The rule he wrote was similar to the Benedictine Rule. However, in Camaldoli, the distinct dual charism of the new order St. Romuald was founding came to be.
In Camaldoli, he added a second form of life to the traditional monastic form: that of hermitage. About three kilometers (2 miles), from the monastery, he erected a series of cells. In this, the form of life of the Camaldolese Order consisted of two forms of life: one monastic life whereby monks live in community, the other dedicated to hermitage where hermits spend most of their lives in small cells.
After founding the community of Camaldoli, St. Romuald went to the Marches region, where he lived and died in a small cell on June 19, 1027. He was canonized by Clement VIII in 1595.
Launch the slideshow
Camaldoli is small. There is essentially one street, next to a river, centered around the monastery. Apart from a few restaurants, there is a post office and small police command.
The monastery complex boasts a large church (renovated during the Baroque era), a guesthouse, an impressive library, and a museum that includes the ancient pharmacy with herbal medicines and medical books from centuries past, when the sick went to the hospital run by the monks seeking cures for the body as well as the soul. There is also a printing press from the Renaissance era.
From the monastery, the hermitage complex is either a short drive or a vigorous 45-minute uphill climb. There is a well-kept walking path, the same one the monks took over the centuries, connecting the two sites.
Tours of the hermitage are given several times a day during the warm summer months. Visitors can enter one of the cells that consist of an herb garden outside, a surprisingly large room to the left (once a storage area for firewood, though now the cells are heated with gas), small living quarters, and a prayer space.
The living area consists of a desk, a small bed, and a coat rack for the hermit’s cowl or prayer shawl. There is a slat through which the hermits received their meals in the past; today they gather in the refectory to share meals in common.
The hermitage church is also from the Baroque era and the monks gather once a day for Mass. They still pray the liturgy of the hours solitarily in their cells.
Pictured: Servant of God Cherubin Kozik, Camaldolese monk, martyred by the Nazis, 1942
Lindisfarne, 793 AD: The Violent Raid That Birthed The Viking Age
From Chronicle - Medieval History
In 793 AD, the holy island of Lindisfarne was subjected to one of the most infamous Viking raids on Britain. Heathen men plundered the sacred monastery in an event that shook Christian Europe. Dan Snow travels across the tidal causeway to Lindisfarne to discover the rich culture of this holy place before the Vikings raided - a beautiful site of pilgrimage and artistry. He also goes to Jarrow to discover more about the powerful Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Northumbria and its great religious and historical writers such as St Bede the Venerable.
Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | February
Protestants Pray This Mary Prayer Frequently... It Backfired
From Totus Catholica
The words you reject as "Catholic invention" are actually straight from Luke 1 - word for word. Gabriel greets Mary: "Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you." Elizabeth blesses her: "Blessed are you among women." These are the exact opening words of the Hail Mary. You've probably sung these verses at Christmas without realising you were speaking the same prayer Catholics pray. So the real question isn't whether the Hail Mary is biblical - it obviously is. The question is whether speaking those biblical words to Mary counts as worship or something else entirely. 📌 The Point: Mary's intercession participates in Christ's mediation as subordinate cooperation, not competition - like asking a living Christian to pray for you, but extended beyond death through the communion of saints. 📖 Core Sources Scripture: Luke 1:28 - Gabriel's greeting: "Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you" (Greek: kecharitomene - one who has been graced by God in a unique way) Luke 1:42 - Elizabeth filled with the Holy Spirit: "Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb" 1 Timothy 2:5,6 - "There is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus" - immediately followed by Paul's command that "intercessions" be made for all people Hebrews 12:1 - Saints in heaven "worship God continually" Early Church Evidence: St. Irenaeus (c. 180 AD) - Mary as "new Eve" whose obedience undid the first Eve's disobedience: "What the Virgin Eve had bound fast through unbelief, the Virgin Mary set free through faith" Subtuum Precidium Prayer (c. 250 AD, papyrus fragment from Egypt housed in Manchester) - Christians addressed Mary as Theotokos (mother of God) asking for her protection - shows Marian intercession invoked nearly two centuries before Council of Ephesus (431 AD) Catholic Teaching: CCC 495 - Calling Mary "mother of God" affirms that the child she bore is truly divine, one person with both divine and human natures CCC 956 - The communion of saints is not broken by death; those in heaven continue to intercede for the Church on earth CCC 2676 - Marian prayer flows from Mary's closeness to Christ, not from any power she possesses independently Vatican II, Lumen Gentium - "Mary's maternal role in salvation flows forth from the superabundance of the merits of Christ, rests on his mediation, depends entirely on it, and draws all its power from it" Three Levels of Honour (Safeguards Against Idolatry): Latria (adoration) belongs to God alone Dulia (veneration) is the respect given to saints Hyperdulia (special honour) is given to Mary because of her unique role as mother of God 📺 Chapters 0:00 - You've Been Praying This Mary Prayer Every Sunday (Luke 1:28, 1:42) 0:44 - The Real Question: Worship or Something Else Entirely? 2:14 - Scripture & the Early Church: Gabriel, Elizabeth, and Irenaeus 3:40 - The Church's Teaching: Latria, Dulia, Hyperdulia (Three Levels) 5:46 - Objection: "There Is One Mediator" (1 Timothy 2v5) 6:38 - Second Objection: "Not Explicitly Commanded in Scripture" 7:08 - Conclusion: Every Prayer to Mary Is Ultimately a Prayer Through Mary to Her Son 🌐 Connect 📿 https://totuscatholica.org/rosary 🌍 https://totuscatholica.org/ ✉️ https://totuscatholica.org/contact 🔍 https://catholicexaminationofconscien... 💬 Question If Gabriel's greeting to Mary ("Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with you") and Elizabeth's blessing ("Blessed are you among women") are found in Luke 1 - which every Christian reads - how is the Hail Mary a "Catholic invention" rather than a biblical meditation? Does asking Mary to pray for you violate Christ's unique mediation, or does it participate in it like asking any living Christian to intercede?
