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.
15 May 2026
Summa Contra Gentiles Book I: Reasons of Those Who Deny God the Knowledge of Particulars
He Made ChatGPT Learn Everything About Catholicism | Matthew Sanders
Matthew Sanders is a technologist working at the intersection of artificial intelligence and Catholic evangelisation, building digital tools that are shaping how people encounter faith in the modern world.
The Life of Elizabeth I (Pt 3) | The Last Tudor Standing
From History Calling
It’s 17 November 1558, and the LIFE OF ELIZABETH I has just reached its pinnacle. With the death of Mary I, her younger half-sister is now the last Tudor standing and the Queen of England, but much of Europe considers the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn to be illegitimate and she faces an uphill struggle to secure her throne and her country. In this week’s History Calling video, which is the 12th in my Tudor Monarchs’ series, we’ll look at the first segment of the new Queen’s reign. We’ll ask questions including why did Elizabeth I never get married and what religion was Elizabeth I? We’ll also learn how her experience with smallpox nearly killed her and scared her for life and study the infamous relationship between Queen Elizabeth and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, her greatest favourite. The mysterious death of Amy Robsart, Dudley’s wife, in 1560 will also come under scrutiny, as the circumstances surrounding her demise became (and remain) a great scandal of Elizabeth I’s reign. The tangled fates of Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots, which led to the latter becoming a prisoner Queen in her cousin’s country will also feature. Finally, we’ll ask was Elizabeth I really a virgin, or was it all a lie? Other prominent Tudor figures studied in this video will include Robert Cecil, Lord Burghley, one of the Queen’s most trusted and loyal advisors. The story of the Tudors has just reached its most famous and fascinating chapter!
The Relationship Between Science & Catholicism
The Society of Catholic Scientists has grown to more than 700 members. One of them, Dr Aaron Dominguez from the Catholic University of America, tells us how they balance their work while remaining true to their faith.
Who is St Dymphna? Here's 7 Things to Know About the Patroness of Mental Afflictions
By Caroline Perkins
Today, many Catholics look to St. Dymphna as a model of faith and courage, praying to her for protection, healing, and peace in difficult times.Here are seven things to know and share about the life of St. Dymphna:
1) Born in Ireland sometime during the seventh century.
2) Her father was a pagan king. It is said her Christian mother secretly baptized and raised her in the faith.
3) When Dymphna’s mother died, her father became so unhinged that he listened to sinful suggestions that he remarry his own daughter.
4) She fled for Belgium to avoid his outrage over her rejection. Her confessor, Fr. Gerebran, joined her.
5) Dymphna's father and his men later discovered her. She was martyred protecting her purity at age 15. Both she and her confessor became saints!
6) Patroness of mental illness and nervous disorders, including anxiety, depression, autism, and dementia.
7) Many travel to the church named after St. Dymphna in Geel, Belgium. They seek her intercession for healing from mental afflictions.
Here is a prayer calling on St. Dymphna:
Good Saint Dymphna, great wonder-worker in every affliction of mind and body, I humbly implore thy powerful intercession with Jesus through Mary, the Health of the Sick, in my present need. (Mention it.)
Saint Dymphna, martyr of purity, patroness of those who suffer with nervous and mental afflictions, beloved child of Jesus and Mary, pray to Them for me and obtain my request.
(Pray one Our Father, one Hail Mary and one Glory Be.)
Saint Dymphna, Virgin and Martyr, pray for us.
A Prayer Entrusting a Loved One to the Intercession of St. Dymphna:
Lord Jesus Christ,
You have willed that St. Dymphna should be
invoked by thousands of clients as
the patroness of nervous and mental disease,
and have brought it about that her interest
in these patients should be an inspiration to
and an ideal of charity throughout the world.
Grant that through the prayers of this
youthful martyr of purity, those who suffer
from nervous and mental illness everywhere
on earth may be helped and consoled.
I recommend to Thee in particular
(Here mention those you wish to pray for).
Be pleased to hear the prayers of
St. Dymphna and of your Blessed Mother
Help of the sick and Comforter of the afflicted,
on behalf of those whom I recommend to the
love and compassion of Your Sacred Heart.
Give them patience to bear with their affliction and resignation to do Your divine will.
Give them the consolation they need and especially the cure they so much desire, if it be Your will.
May we all serve Your suffering members with a charity which may merit for us the reward of being united forever in Heaven with You, our Divine Head, who lives and reigns with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit forever.
Amen.
St. Dymphna, pray for us!
Benedictine College Goes Viral For Expelling Students For Teaching Catholic Truth
Some truths of the faith are uncomfortable, like the fact that the Old Covenant was fulfilled by Christ and that no one is saved without Christ, no exceptions. For this faith, students at a supposedly good Catholic college are going to be expelled, some right before they would graduate, because they objected to lies taught by a non-Catholic organisation with ties to some shady money from Israel-linked groups.
15 Forgotten Medieval 3-Ingredient Breads Peasants Thrived On For 500 Years
Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | May
The Only Group That Won't Honor Mary Is...'Bible Christians'
St John Baptist de la Salle Was a Trailblazer in Education
From Aleteia
By Philip Kosloski
While there have been many saints in the history of the Church who dedicated their lives to the education of children, St. John Baptist de La Salle was unique in his approach.
He felt drawn not only to educate the poor, but to train educators how to be good teachers in the classroom.
This divine calling led him to found the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (Christian Brothers) in the early 18th century.
No priests, only brothers
De La Salle was ordained to the priesthood in 1678, but he found that it was difficult to devote his time to education. He wanted to give everything to this vocation and so established a new type of religious institute that did not ordain priests.
The Catholic Encyclopedia provides the following reasoning as to why De La Salle chose this path:
Brother Lucard, the Annalist of the institute, thus sums up the matter: "Since the death of Henri L'Heureux, de la Salle was firmly convinced that his institute was to be founded on simplicity and humility. No Brother could, without compromising his congregation, allow himself to be diverted from his functions as a teacher, by devoting himself to special studies, the saying of the Divine Office, or the fulfillment of other duties obligatory on the sacred ministry." Therefore, no Brother can aspire to the priesthood nor perform any priestly function, and no ecclesiastic can become a member of the institute. This is the new rule that de la Salle added, and it is embodied in the Constitution of the institute.
Pope Leo XIV pointed this unique mission out in an address to the Christian Brothers on May 15, 2025:
Saint John Baptist de La Salle did not want there to be priests among the teachers of the Christian Schools, but only “brothers,” so that all your efforts would be directed, with God’s help, to the education of the pupils. He loved to say: “Your altar is the classroom,” thus promoting a reality hitherto unknown in the Church of his time: that of lay teachers and catechists, invested in the community with a genuine “ministry."
De La Salle wanted educators to be fully invested in the poor young people they taught and to give them everything they had.
As many educators can attest, this requires much time and energy, something a priest with many responsibilities is not able to fully give.
De La Salle is also seen as a founder of the modern pedagogy of education, grouping students by ability and not age and incorporating physical activity into the curriculum. With this method, students could work together on the same material, instead of with individual tutors -- thus this was the foundation of the modern classroom setting.
In 1725 the Christian Brothers were officially recognized by the pope, even though many in the Church were in opposition to a group of religious men who were not priests.
The Christian Brothers are still active today in over 80 countries, and one of their most popular saints is Wisconsin-native Blessed James Miller, who is sometimes referred to as a "martyr of education."

