01 May 2026

Cathedrals in the Cornfields: America’s 8 Hidden Catholic Gems (See Note)

From Purely Catholic


America is a vast country, and if you look closely, it’s full of hidden wonders. While massive metropolitan areas are home to soaring cathedrals, some of the most sacred and stunning architecture in the U.S. isn't found in the city…it’s tucked away in the heartland.
Rising out of the endless cornfields and quiet prairies, these historic Catholic churches serve as majestic landmarks in the countryside. Each spire is a testament to the grit and devotion of pioneer families who labored to ensure their descendants would have a beautiful place to gather and celebrate Mass.
In this video, we’re venturing off the beaten path to count down the 8 most beautiful Catholic churches in the smallest towns in America…each with a population of under 1,000 residents.

Note ~ The Basilica of St. Fidelis in Victoria, KS, often called the "Cathedral of the Plains", didn't qualify because Victoria has 1,129 residents!

Vatican Prepares to Excommunicate the SSPX

I think the majority of the adherents of the SSPX will wear it as a badge of honour. To be excommunicated by the Rome of today is nothing less than a guarantee of your Catholicism!


From One Peter Five

By Timothy Flanders, MA

The impending break in communion fills me with sorrow.

Reports are emerging that the Vatican has prepared an excommunication order to come down upon the SSPX should they proceed to consecrate bishops on July 1st, as they have planned. From Miss Diane Montagna:

—-

Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernández has prepared a declaration of schism should the Society of St. Pius X proceed with episcopal consecrations in Écône on July 1. The Vatican is also making pastoral arrangements to welcome those who may leave the SSPX after it ordains new bishops without papal permission. 

This is according to reports by Italian journalist Nico Spuntoni. His comments come amid online rumors about who precisely will be subject to the decree prepared by the Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

“Informed sources on the matter have confirmed to me that the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith is already prepared for a scenario of schism following the likely new consecrations,” Spuntoni confirmed to me recently.

Spuntoni, known for his accurate reporting and for consistently publishing information ahead of official channels, added that, according to his sources, “the Dicastery claims to have been ‘lenient’ in the negotiations, but there are indications of an intention to be ‘firm’ in their response.”

“I don’t know whether this is a strategy or not,” he said. “My sources have not told me whether the excommunication will apply only to the new bishops or also to others.”

Based on the information in his possession, Spuntoni therefore stressed that he could “neither confirm nor deny the rumors circulating about who will be subject to the sanctions.”

However, based on his sources he was able to state that the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith “is concerned about the pastoral care of the persons (i.e. clergy) connected to the Society who do not intend to remain in it after a further break with Rome.”

This is a very regrettable and sad situation. First and foremost, we need to focus on the wounded hearts of Jesus and Mary. Whatever your opinion of the SSPX, we must meditate on the wounds that our sins cause in those two Hearts, and repent of our own evil doing. The impending break in communion fills me with sorrow. It is from this place of sorrow that I write and appeal to our readers to redouble our prayers and penances for some miracle to avert the wrath of God from this situation.

Here at OnePeterFive we will be promoting our cause for June, Sacred Heart Month, calling all good Catholics to put their zeal into Eucharistic reparation. If we, together, hide ourselves in the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus, He Himself will see us through this storm, whatever may come.

My views on the SSPX come from my conviction that this situation is fundamentally a clerical matter, and it is the clerics who must resolve it. I do not have the expertise to die on any hill of disputed teachings about this or that jurisdiction or order or what not. But from my layman view, the idea that consecrating bishops without papal approval is such a large offence – this just strikes me as odd. Sure – we don’t want there to be a parallel episcopacy, which is obviously a divisive phenomenon. But I fail to see why this offense is so grievous as to warrant such a merciless response.

It is indeed supremely lamentable that His Holiness appeared to favour the female “Archbishop” of Canterbury (despite a somewhat mild rebuke) with an audience and a liturgical celebration, whereas the SSPX clerics, it seems, are treated harshly. But on the other hand – are the SSPX clerics being too intransigent since they utterly refused dialogue with a new Pope? I’m not the judge of anybody, much less a cleric, and like I said, I really don’t know enough to die on any particular hill. My only hope is the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus. So let’s meet there, together, and plead for mercy, one and all.

St Joseph the Worker

Today's Holy Mass from SSPX ANZ-District. You may follow the Mass at Divinum Officium.

Friday of the Fourth Week After Easter ~ Dom Prosper Guéranger

Friday of the Fourth Week After Easter


From Dom Prosper Guéranger's Liturgical Year:

We are living in an age when Faith is weak amongst the majority of even them that believe;

℣. In thy resurrection, O Christ, alleluia.

℟. Let heaven and earth rejoice, alleluia.

Praise be to our Risen Jesus, for his having said to us: He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved! (Mark 16:16) Thanks to his infinite mercy, we believe and have been baptized; we are, therefore, in the path of salvation. It is true, that Faith will not save us without good works; but, on the other hand, good works, without Faith, cannot merit eternal salvation. With what transport of joy ought we not to give thanks to God, for his having produced in us, by his grace, this unspeakable gift, (2 Corinthians 9:15) this first pledge of our everlasting happiness! How carefully ought we not to strive to keep it pure, yea and increase it by our fidelity! Faith, like other virtues, has its degrees: we should, therefore, frequently use the prayer addressed to Jesus by his Apostles: Lord! increase our faith! (Luke 17:5)

We are living in an age when Faith is weak amongst the majority of even them that believe; and it is one of the greatest dangers that could befall us in this world. When Faith is weak, charity must needs grow cold. Our Savior one day asked his Disciples, if they thought that he would find faith upon the earth when he should come to judge mankind? (Luke 18:8) Have we not reason to fear that we are fast approaching that awful time, when the want of faith will paralyze men’s hearts?

Faith proceeds from our will moved by the Holy Ghost. We believe, because we wish to believe; and, for this reason, it is a happiness to believe. The blind man, to whom Jesus restored his sight, said to him, when he bade him believe in the Son of God: Who is he, Lord? that I may believe in him. (John 9:36) These same dispositions ought to animate us, when there is question of our making an act of faith — we should believe, in order that we may know that which, without faith, we could not know; then will God manifest himself to both our mind and heart.

You will meet with Christians who seem to make it their business to keep down the Faith of their friends as much as possible. They seem to be jealous of Faith getting too much; are ever talking about the rights of Reason; and will have it that they who are so ready to believe, are guilty of underrating the dignity, range, and divine origin of Reason. Let them that are thus accused, answer: “We are far from denying the existence of that natural light within us, which is called Reason. The teaching of the Church is too express on this point to admit of any doubt; but she also teaches us that this light—even had it retained its primal power, and had not been obscured by original sin—is incapable of discovering, by itself alone, the end for which man was created, and the means whereby that end is to be gained. Faith alone can enable man to attain to such sublime knowledge as this.”

Others, again, maintain that as soon as a Christian comes to the full age of Reason, he has a right to suspend the exercise of his Faith, in order that he may examine for himself whether it be reasonable or not to continue believing. Such an opinion is most false, and has made many an apostate. The Church has ever taught from the days of the Apostles down to our own times, and will so teach to the end of the world—that the child who has received holy Baptism, has also, and at that same instant, received the gift of infused Faith; that he thereby became a member of Christ and child of his Church; and that if, when he comes to the age of Reason, he should be tempted with doubts regarding matters of Faith, he receives grace to resist those doubts by Faith, and that he would be risking his salvation were he to suspend his Faith. This does not imply that the Church forbids him to confirm his Faith by study and science; far from it. This is a totally different thing from suspension of one’s faith; it is, according to the admirable saying of the great St. Anselm, “Faith seeking understanding,” and, we may add, finding it, for God gives this recompense to Faith.

You may probably meet with persons who think it right that there should be found among us a class of men called Free-thinking Philosophers, that is to say, men without Faith, who hold, with regard to God and creatures, doctrines which are wholly independent of Revelation, and who teach a morality that entirely ignores the supernatural element. Is it possible that Catholics can not only countenance and praise such men as these, but even defend them, and be partial towards them?

And what must we say of the sad effects resulting from the living with heretics? Most of us could give instances of the dangerous compromises and deplorable concessions made in consequence of much intercourse with those who are not of the Faith. The terrible line of demarcation specified by St. John, in his second Epistle, (2 John 10) is being forgotten; the very mention of it is offensive to modern ears. A strong indication of this is to be found in the frequency of mixed marriages, which begin with a profanation of a Sacrament, and often, though it may be imperceptibly, lead the Catholic party to religious indifference. Let us listen to the energetic language of that illustrious ascetical writer, Father Faber. “The old-fashioned hatred of Heresy is becoming scarce. God is not habitually looked at as the sole Truth; and so, the existence of Heresies no longer appalls the mind. It is assumed that God must do nothing painful, and his dominion must not allow itself to take the shape of an inconvenience or a trammel to the liberty of his creatures. If the world has outgrown the idea of exclusiveness, God must follow our lead, and lay it aside as a principle in his dealings with us. What the many want they must have at last. This is the rule and the experience of a Constitutional country. Thus, discord in religion, and untruth in religion, have come to be less odious and less alarming to men, simply because they are accustomed to them. It requires courage, both moral and mental, to believe the whole of a grand nation in the wrong, or to think that an entire country can go astray. But Theology, with a brave simplicity, concludes a whole world under sin, and sees no difficulty in the True Church being able to claim only a moderate share of the population of the earth. The belief in the facility of salvation outside the Church is very agreeable to our domestic loves and to our private friendships. Moreover, if we will hold this, the world will pardon a whole host of other superstitions in us, and will do us the honor of complimenting the religion God gave, as if it were some literary or philosophical production of our own. Is this such a huge gain? Many seem amazingly pleased with it, and pay dear for it quite contentedly. Now it is plain that this belief must lower the value of the Church in our eyes. It must relax our efforts to convert others. It must relax our efforts to convert ourselves. Those who use the system of the Church least, will of course esteem it least, and see least in it; and are therefore least fitted to be judges of it. Yet it is just these men who are the most forward and the most generous in surrendering the prerogatives of the Church to the exigencies of modern smoothness and universalism.” (Spiritual Conferences: Heaven and Hell)

Another sign of the decay of the spirit of Faith, even among many of those who do not neglect their Religion is the disregard for, one might almost say the ignorance of holy practices recommended by the Church. How many Catholic houses are there not, where there is never to be seen either a drop of Holy Water, or a blessed Candle, or a Palm? These sacred objects, given to us to be a protection, deserve from us that same reverence and love which our forefathers had when they defended them, even at the risk of their lives, against the Protestants of the 16th Century. What a jeering look of incredulity is evinced by many amongst us, when mention is made of any Miracle that is not found in the Bible! With what an air of contemptuous disbelief they hear or read of anything in connection with the Mystic Life, such as ecstasies, raptures, or revelations! How uneasy they seem, when the subject of the heroic acts of penance done by the Saints, or of the simplest practices of bodily mortification, happens to come across them! How loudly and pathetically do they not protest against the noble sacrifices which some favored souls are inspired to make, whereby they break asunder the dearest ties, and shut themselves out of the world, behind the grille of a Monastery or Convent! The spirit of Faith makes a true Catholic appreciate the beauty, the reasonableness, and the sublimity of all these practices and acts; while the want of this spirit makes them be condemned as extravagant, unmeaning, and folly.

Faith longs to believe; for believing is its life. It limits not itself to the strict Creed promulgated by the Church. It knows that this Spouse of Christ possesses all truths, though she does not solemnly declare them all, nor under the pain of anathema. Faith forestalls the declaration of a dogma; it believes piously, before believing under obligation. A secret instinct draws it towards this as yet veiled truth; and when the dogma is published by a Definition of the Supreme Pontiff, then does this same Faith rejoice in the triumph of the truth which was revealed from the very commencement of the Church; and its joy is great in proportion to the fidelity wherewith it honored the truth, when only generous and loyal hearts embraced it.

Glory, then, be to our Risen Jesus, who requited his Mother’s faith, who strengthened that of the Disciples and the holy women, and who, as we humbly pray, will mercifully reward ours. Let us offer him our homage, in the words of a Sequence from the ancient Missals of Saint Gall’s.

SEQUENCE

Let us proclaim the glory of our Creator and Redeemer!

By his grace, he gave a new existence to them whom he had created aright, yet who were seduced by the cunning of the crafty serpent.

He foretold, that a holy Woman would, one day, bring forth a Fruit,

That should crush the baneful head of the old enemy.

Our times have seen fulfilled these promises that were long forgotten.

Mary, the lovely Branch, put forth a new Flower.

His birth was a prodigy, and miracles marked his life,

Not only when he had grown up, but immediately after his birth.

By the light of the star, and by Simeon’s words, he drew to himself the heart of the Jew or the gift of the Gentile.

He was glorified by the Father’s words, and by the visible form under which the Holy Ghost appeared.

They that saw this Teacher, this Physician of men, were appointed to teach others in his name.

After bestowing on men abundant gifts of salvation, and promulgating, with his own lips, the doctrine of eternal life,

He came to his Passion, in which he was insulted, spit upon, buffeted, scourged, vested as a mock-king, crowned with thorns, and nailed to a Cross.

But, today, by a glorious victory, he rises triumphant from the grave; he takes them that belonged to the generations of old, and leads them, with himself, to heaven; he forms into one fold the then living, but scattered, sheep.

Yea, and to us, though the last of his children, he promises future gifts, and bids us hope. Amen.

St Joseph the Worker: The Blessings and Dignity of Work

A sermon for today. Please remember to say 3 Hail Marys for the Priest.

St Sigismund of Burgundy: Butler's Lives of the Saints

St Joseph the Worker

St Sigismund, King of Burgundy, Martyr


From Fr Alban Butler's Lives of the Saints:

WONDERFUL is the providence of God in the means by which he preserves his elect from the contagion of vice, and conducts them to eternal life. This saint was son of Gondebald, the Arian king of the Burgundians, but embraced the Catholic faith through the instructions of St. Alcimus Avitus, bishop of Vienne.* He succeeded to the kingdom of his father in 516, and in the midst of barbarism lived humble, mortified, penitent, devout, and charitable, even on the throne; a station in which the very name of true virtue is too often scarce known. Before the death of his father, he built the famous monastery of St. Maurice at Agaune, in the Valais, in the year 515, where many holy hermits lived before that time in scattered cells. God permitted this good prince to fall into a snare. He suffered his son Sigeric to be put to death, upon an accusation forged by his second wife, of a conspiracy against his life: but afterwards discovering the calumny, and pierced to the quick with remorse, he retired to Agaune, where he did penance in tears and sackcloth. He made it his prayer to God that he might be punished in this life, to escape the divine vengeance in the next. His prayer was heard: for being taken prisoner by Chlodomir, the barbarous king of the Franks, he was, by his order, drowned in a well at Columelle, four leagues from Orleans, after he had reigned one year. His body was kept honorably at Agaune, till it was removed to the cathedral of Prague by the emperor Charles IV.1 It has been famous for many miracles. See St. Gregory of Tours, Hist. Fr. 1. 3, c. 5 and 6, and Henschenius’s Collections, t. 1, Maij p. 83.

St Joseph the Worker



For centuries, May 1, known as May Day, was celebrated as a traditional springtime festival date in Europe. As the Industrial Revolution changed the face of society, May 1 also became a date on which unions and political activists organized activities to advocate for workers. This day became known as International Workers’ Day, and is especially popular in communist states.

St. Joseph has a traditional feast day on March 19, but for a time, the Church had also honored Joseph during the second week of Easter. In 1955, this feast was transformed to the feast of St. Joseph the Worker and moved permanently to May 1 to highlight Joseph’s patronage of workers and craftsmen.

When pondering Jesus, it is easy for Christians to focus on his divinity and forget the ways in which Jesus shared our humanity. Joseph was a carpenter, and our tradition tells us that Jesus was formed by his foster-father in this same trade, which meant hard work, an attention to detail, patience, and diligence.

Joseph provided for his family as a craftsman who did not earn a lot of money. When they went to the Temple, for example, Joseph offered two doves, which was an allowance for those who could not afford a greater sacrifice. Nevertheless, Joseph was filled with faith—he responded immediately to the promptings of angels in his care for Mary and Jesus, even when he did not understand why. He was also filled with love—he had tender regard for Mary, even when it appeared she was unfaithful to him, and he loved Jesus as his own son.

Relics of St. Joseph rest in the reliquary chapel in the Basilica, including parts of Joseph’s robe and pieces of Jesus’ crib, which would have been made by Joseph. He is depicted in many places around campus, including in today’s featured stained glass image from the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Notre Dame’s campus, and statue from the chapel in Breen Phillips Hall.

St. Joseph, patron saint of workers, you exemplify the dignity of human labor—pray for us!

Collect of St Sigismund of Burgundy, King & Martyr ~ Indulgenced on the Saint's Feast (See Note)

According to the Apostolic Penitentiary, a partial indulgence is granted to those who, on the feast of any Saint, recite in his honour the oration of the Missal or any other approved by legitimate Authority.


V.
 O Lord, hear my prayer.
R. And let my cry come unto thee.
Let us pray.
Grant, we beseech Thee, almighty God: that the venerable feast of Blessed Sigismund, Thy Martyr, may through his intercession be strengthened in love of Thy Name.
Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end.
R. Amen. 

Nota bene ~ St Sigismund is not celebrated on the Universal Calendar, but according to the Martyrology, today is his Feast Day. The Collect is taken from the Common of One Martyr.

Collect of St Joseph the Worker, Confessor & Patron of the Universal Church ~ Indulgenced Today

According to the Apostolic Penitentiary, a partial indulgence is granted to those who, on the feast of any Saint, recite in his honour the oration of the Missal or any other approved by legitimate Authority.


V.
 O Lord, hear my prayer.
R. And let my cry come unto thee.
Let us pray.
God, Creator of all things, who didst lay on the human race the law of labour: graciously grant; that by following the example of Saint Joseph and under his patronage, we may carry out the work thou dost command, and obtain the reward thou dost promise.
Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end.
R. Amen.