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.
23 June 2026
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The Unexpected Discovery Inside a Friar’s Habit
From Aleteia
By Cerith Gardiner
A simple household task led to a discovery that has captured hearts far beyond southern India.A small bird in southern India recently made a housing decision that St. Francis of Assisi would almost certainly have approved of.
Faced with all the trees, ledges, branches, and hiding places available around a Capuchin monastery in Kerala, a bulbul bird carefully selected the hood of a friar's habit as the ideal place to raise her family. And you have to admire her taste.
The discovery was made by Fr. Jinu Mandiyil after he hung his habit out to dry and returned a few days later expecting to find a clean robe. Instead, he found a nest tucked inside the hood, complete with tiny chicks waiting for their next meal.
Apparently, while the friar had been going about his daily business, a mother bird had been busy conducting a property search. And it seems she had very particular tastes.
Rather than evict his unexpected tenants, Fr. Jinu decided to leave the habit exactly where it was. The Capuchin community watched as the mother bird returned again and again to feed her young, disappearing into the folds of the garment before darting away once more.
At Aleteia we found it difficult not to smile at the image. Of all the places a bird could have chosen, it picked the hood of a Franciscan friar.Yet, the timing makes the story even sweeter.
This year marks the 800th anniversary of the death of St. Francis of Assisi, whose love of creation remains one of the most charming aspects of his legacy. Francis saw every creature as a brother or sister, spoke of Brother Sun and Sister Moon, and famously preached to birds. So if the beloved saint was watching, he was probably delighted, and no doubt encouraging his feathered friend!
After Shalom World News shared the story online, one commenter immediately thought of a verse from Psalm 84:
"Even the sparrow has found a home, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may have her young."
We can't help but smile at the comparison. Somewhere in Kerala, a mother bird spent her days searching for the perfect place to raise a family and eventually settled on the hood of a Franciscan friar. It was an unconventional choice, but let's not forget, house-hunting is not easy these days.
Now the chicks have grown, the mother bird has moved on, and Fr. Jinu will finally be reunited with his habit. Yet it is difficult not to feel that St. Francis would have wholeheartedly approved of the arrangement. After all, if a bird was looking for shelter, why not choose the wardrobe of one of his spiritual sons?
Cardinal McElroy Heretically Blathers About Accepting Sin at Depraved Gathering
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Medicine Cannot Become Servant of Death, Says Pope
From Aleteia
By I. Media
Marking the 100th birthday of Jérôme Lejeune, the French geneticist who discovered the cause of Down syndrome, Pope Leo made a passionate defense of life.A doctor should never allow himself "to decide the fate of a particular embryo or an elderly person! Medicine can never become the servant of programmed death!" This was the warning issued by Leo XIV, who received members of the Jérôme Lejeune Foundation on June 22, 2026, at the Vatican to mark the centenary of the French geneticist’s birth (June 13, 1926– April 3, 1994).
During the audience, the Pope praised the work of this doctor who pioneered research into Down syndrome. Reading his speech in French, he encouraged healthcare professionals to follow Dr. Lejeune's example and choose “the courage of truth.”
In front of an audience of 80 people, including Professor Jérôme Lejeune’s children, the head of the Catholic Church paid tribute to this “man of science and wisdom” who became “the forerunner of modern genetics” through his discovery of the chromosomal abnormality responsible for trisomy 21. He emphasized Lejeune’s compassion for children with disabilities, whom he called “the poorest of the poor,” as well as his fight for “the life and dignity of the most vulnerable, even at the cost of his career.”
Indeed, realizing that his scientific discovery “would be used to eliminate people with trisomy 21 before their birth,” Jérôme Lejeune became their advocate, “denouncing the violation of the Hippocratic Oath and this new form of eugenics, which he described as ‘chromosomal racism.’” He added that his defense of “the life of every human person” before “institutions and sovereigns throughout the world” led to him “being treated harshly in certain scientific circles.”
“A person’s worth does not depend on what they produce”
The Pope warned against the danger of using technology “against medicine” when it “escapes all essential ethical control and is governed by considerations of efficiency, profitability or utility.” “The value of a person does not depend on what they achieve or produce,” he emphasized.
Ahead of his apostolic journey to France, and while the law on end-of-life care — establishing a ‘right to die’ — is currently being debated in France's National Assembly, Leo XIV affirmed that “medicine can never become the servant of planned death.”
“No doctor should ever allow themselves, on the basis of laboratory algorithms, to decide on the life of a particular embryo or an elderly person,” he insisted.
Among the delegation, which included people with Down syndrome and their carers, these words evoked a strong emotional response. Marion, the Foundation’s advocacy officer, praised the speech as “magnificently well prepared.” She expressed the hope that the Pope’s words would carry weight in the context of the “terrible debates” resuming this Monday at the Palais Bourbon, which could lead to the legalization of euthanasia.
To healthcare professionals: Reject the “lie”
Throughout his address, Léon XIV also recalled that Professor Lejeune had been honoured by several popes: Paul VI appointed him a member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences; and the Frenchman was instrumental in the creation of the Pontifical Academy for Life during the pontificate of John Paul II, with whom he formed a friendship.
The Pope encouraged the Lejeune Foundation to continue its commitment to research, care, and “the unconditional defense of the human person.” He praised the institution’s initiatives in research into genetically-based intellectual disabilities, in the field of training, and its work with public authorities.
Finally, Leo XIV expressed the hope that Jérôme Lejeune, whose cause for beatification is currently underway at the Vatican – he has been recognized as ‘Venerable’ since 2021 – would inspire "the courage to speak the truth in the many young people and professionals seeking coherence." He urged them to unite, “without rigidity, reason and faith, words and deeds, non-judgement of others and the rejection of falsehood.”
[Note: A full, official Vatican translation of the French text into English will be added to this article when available. For now, quotes are an Aleteia translation.]
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