Thursday, April 16, 2026

JD Vance Chose Trump Over Pope Leo: Of Course He Did

 


Let us dispense with the surprise.

Vice President JD Vance siding with Donald Trump over the Pope is not a scandal. It is not even a deviation. It is the most predictable outcome imaginable in a political order where power, not principle, governs allegiance.

A Manufactured “Peace”

The backdrop to this moment is a conveniently timed announcement: a so-called ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.

Not peace, pause.

A 10-day arrangement, reportedly negotiated without meaningful participation from Hezbollah, the very force that exercises real deterrence on the ground. The Lebanese state, represented by Joseph Aoun and Nawaf Salam, appears, at least to its critics, peripheral, if not entirely symbolic, in the actual balance of power.

This is not diplomacy in the classical sense. It is choreography.

A temporary arrangement designed to achieve optics, not resolution, positioning Washington for the next round of negotiations, likely tied to Iran, energy routes, and the fragile equilibrium surrounding the Strait of Hormuz.

Reality Beneath the Optics

No serious actor in the region is under illusion.

Iran understands the pattern.
Hezbollah operates within it.
Israel acts despite it.

Ceasefires, in this context, are not endpoints; they are intermissions.

Meanwhile, Washington must balance contradictions:

  • Confrontation with Iran

  • Economic dependence on global energy flows

  • Strategic engagement with Xi Jinping

This is not strategy, it is containment of consequences.

Vance: The Instrument, Not the Architect

Into this enters Vance.

Reports, fair or not, paint a picture of a man outmatched at the table: reliant on calls, lacking technical command, overshadowed by negotiators who arrived prepared to conclude rather than perform.

Whether exaggerated or not, the perception matters.

Because in politics, perception is often more decisive than reality.

And the perception is this:
Vance was not leading, he was being deployed like a parachute over troubled lands. 

Then Comes the Vatican

The geopolitical strain bleeds into the theological.

Trump clashes with Pope Leo XIV, an American pontiff portrayed here as critical of war and Western militarism. The symbolism is potent:

  • A political leader asserting dominance

  • A religious authority invoking moral restraint

And between them stands Vance, a Catholic convert with a public identity tied, in part, to faith.

The question becomes unavoidable:

When power and doctrine collide, where does loyalty settle?

The Decision

He chose Trump.

Of course he did.

Because in the hierarchy of modern political life:

  • Faith is professed

  • Power is obeyed

To side with the Pope would be to risk political isolation.
To side with Trump is to preserve relevance within the machinery that sustains his position.

This is not hypocrisy. It is alignment with incentives.

The Cost of That Choice

But such alignment is never neutral.

It signals:

  • That religious identity, however sincerely held, is subordinate to political necessity

  • That moral authority carries weight only when it does not obstruct power

  • That even a public conversion to Catholicism does not immunize one from the gravitational pull of political allegiance

For Vance, the immediate cost may be minimal.

The longer-term cost is less visible, but more profound:
a quiet erosion of credibility, particularly among those who believed his faith was more than ornamental.

A Familiar Pattern

This moment is not unique.

It is part of a broader pattern in which:

  • Institutions weaken

  • Allegiances harden

  • Complexity is reduced to loyalty tests

The individual, whether politician, citizen, or believer, is forced into increasingly narrow choices.

Not between right and wrong, but between power and consequence.

Final Observation.

Vance choosing Trump over the Pope is not shocking.

What would have been shocking is the alternative.

Because the modern political order does not reward defiance of power, it absorbs it, disciplines it, or eliminates it.

And so the choice was made.

Quietly. Predictably. Inevitably.

Not as a rupture, but as a confirmation:

In our time, the decisive authority is not moral, nor theological, but political.

And those who operate within that system understand this long before the public does.

In short, the man is byproduct of some political machinations and the end would tell the truth.

Mass Readings and Reflection April 16th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 5:27–33)

Psalm: (Psalm 34)

Response: The Lord hears the cry of the poor.

Alleluia:

Alleluia, alleluia.
You believe in me, Thomas, because you have seen me;
blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 3:31–36)

Reflection:

Where does our loyalty lies? The central truth emerges with striking clarity:m from all the readings today. And that's, our ultimate loyalty belongs to God alone.

Human authority has a powerful pull. It offers approval, security, advancement, and favor. Sometimes people even like to play God when dealing with others. Because of this, many bend their conscience to please those in power, remaining silent in the face of wrongdoing or even defending what they know is unjust. Loyalty, in such cases, becomes servitude.

The apostles stand as a direct contradiction to this pattern. Confronted by authority that could imprison or kill them, they do not hesitate. Their answer is neither diplomatic nor cautious, it is absolute:
“We must obey God rather than men.”

This is not rebellion for its own sake. It is rightly ordered obedience. Authority is legitimate only insofar as it aligns with truth and the will of God. The moment it demands what is contrary to God, it forfeits its claim over the conscience.

There is a subtle danger here. People often justify misplaced loyalty with phrases like: “I must protect my position,” or “I cannot offend those above me.” But in doing so, they gradually surrender their moral freedom. They become, in effect, instruments, moved not by truth, but by fear or gain.

The apostles remind us of a sobering reality:
we will not answer to human beings at the end of our lives, we will answer to God.

No authority, no patron, no earthly benefactor will stand in our place at judgment. Their favor will not defend us; their approval will not justify us.

Therefore, the call is clear and demanding:

  • Stand for truth, even when it costs you.

  • Refuse to silence your conscience for the sake of approval.

  • Seek to please God above all, even if it provokes opposition.

To live this way requires courage, the kind that is not loud, but steadfast. The kind that chooses righteousness over convenience.

Like the apostles, we must ask for the grace to remain firm:
to obey God,
to speak truth,
and to remain faithful, no matter the cost.

Amen 

God bless you πŸ™ 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Pictures of the Day April 15th 2026

From Forest Hills Hospital to Uniondale on the Island 🏝

God alone is righteous Man πŸ™πŸ™πŸ™ 











Fight to Live or Give Up and Die: Your Choice

Life is war.

Every day, we battle what no one else can see.
Pain. Fear. Doubt.
Stand your ground.
Take the hit.
Get back up.
Face whatever comes.
Do not surrender. Fight.

Conversations I Wish I had at 18 y/o age

Bro,

I hope you're doing well.

Since our last communication, I have been thinking about you. You mentioned listening to televangelists and prosperity preachers like Joel Osteen. I've read and listened to him quite a bit in the past. Please consume him with caution. His preachings are extremely lightweight and loaded with New Age undertones.

You are highly gifted. I would suggest that when you are taking a break from cracking medical texts, you engage with the classics and theology. They will fortify your mind and spirit.

Texts like those below will strengthen your faith and walk with God. You will be a much sharper weapon of God. You already have everything in you. And when you learn, teach others. That is part of the corporal works of mercy: to instruct the ignorant.

FOUNDATIONAL CLASSICS

1. Confessions — Saint Augustine of Hippo
Raw, intellectual, and deeply personal conversion story.
Teaches sin, grace, memory, and God’s relentless pursuit.
Forms humility and self-knowledge.

2. Summa Theologica -Saint Thomas Aquinas
The intellectual backbone of Catholic theology.
Covers God, morality, Christ, sacraments, and virtue.
Not for speed-this is lifelong study.

3. The Imitation of Christ -Thomas Γ  Kempis
Pure interior life, humility, detachment, discipline.
Short, piercing reflections; best read daily.

4. Introduction to the Devout Life-Saint Francis de Sales
Practical holiness in everyday life.
Balanced, wise, psychologically sharp.

5. The Spiritual Combat-Lorenzo Scupoli
Brutally honest about temptation and self-will.
A manual for mastering the interior battlefield.

6. Uniformity with God's Will -Saint Alphonsus Liguori
Teaches total surrender to divine providence.

7. The Interior Castle -Saint Teresa of Ávila
The soul as a castle with stages toward union with God.
A profound map of spiritual growth.

8. Dark Night of the Soul -Saint John of the Cross
Explains spiritual dryness and purification.

These books in PDF format can be accessed online all for free.

God bless you πŸ™

Mass Readings and Reflection on Wednesday April 15th, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 5:17–26)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 34)

Response: The lowly one called, and the Lord heard him.

Gospel: (John 3:16–21)

Reflection:

From the first readings, the apostles went about preaching the Gospel, they experienced both growth and resistance. Many believed, were baptized, and joined the community. The Church was expanding day by day. Yet, their mission was not without suffering. They were arrested, persecuted, and imprisoned.

This reveals a fundamental truth about the Christian life: serving Christ brings both blessings and trials.

Scripture reminds us in Ecclesiasticus 2:1:
“If you aspire to serve the Lord, prepare yourself for an ordeal.”

This ordeal includes testing, temptation, hardship, and even persecution. Many Christians become discouraged when suffering comes, as if faith should exempt them from pain. But what did we expect? Christ Himself was rejected, mocked, and crucified.

He tells us clearly in (Matthew 10:38)
“Whoever does not take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me.”

The cross, then, is not optional. It is the reality of discipleship. It includes the struggles, sacrifices, and contradictions we endure for the sake of Christ.

But Christianity is not a message of despair. It is not all Good Friday, and it is not all Easter Sunday, it is both. The suffering we endure is always accompanied by grace, and it is always ordered toward resurrection.

In today’s first reading, the apostles are imprisoned for preaching the truth. Yet, God intervenes. An angel opens the prison doors and sets them free. And what do they do? They do not run away. They return immediately to the temple and continue preaching.

This is courage. This is faith. This is conviction.

They understood something profound:
Difficulties for Christ may batter us, but they will never shatter us.

Saint Paul echoes this truth in 2 Corinthians 4:8–9:
“We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned: struck down, but not destroyed"

God bless you. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Mass Readings and Reflection for Tuesday April 14, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 4:32–37)

The Word of the Lord.
Thanks be to God.

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 93)

Response: The Lord is king, robed in majesty.

Gospel: (John 3:7–15)

Reflection:

From the readings we can see that after the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the apostles’ testimony, the number of believers grew. Many were baptized and came to be called Christians. But the name Christian is far more than a title, it expresses our very essence.

To be Christian is to be like Christ. And Christ reveals God, who is a communion of Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Therefore, Christianity is inherently communal. To claim to be Christian and yet reject community is a contradiction.

The early Church lived this truth. They were united in heart and soul, sharing everything in common. No one was in need because all contributed and all received according to their needs. It did not matter how much one brought; what mattered was the spirit of unity and generosity. They lived as a true family.

Even in early liturgical practice, people brought bread and wine for the Eucharist. But disparities arose, the rich brought much, the poor little. To preserve unity, this practice was corrected so that all would partake equally of the same Bread and the same Chalice. The Eucharist itself became a sign of equality and unity in Christ.

This is the ideal of Christian community: not competition, not superiority, but shared life.

However, over time, challenges emerged:

  • Laziness: Some relied on the common fund without contributing.

  • Craftiness: Others withheld resources while pretending generosity.

  • Insincerity: Dishonesty began to erode trust.

  • Neglect: Needs were not always met fairly, leading to frustration.

  • Desire for supremacy: Some sought power, control, and status.

These realities fractured the spirit of community. Instead of unity, division arose. Today, this breakdown is even more visible. Christians deceive one another, exploit one another, neglect one another. Some live in isolation, unknown even to those around them. Others attempt to belong but are driven away by gossip and division.

So we must ask: Where is our Christian identity?

Christ Himself gave the answer: “By this all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” (John 13:35)

In the time of persecution under Nero, even enemies marveled at Christians, saying, “See how they love one another.” Their unity and love endured even unto death.

Can the same be said of us today?

Christianity is not merely a label. It is a way of life, a call to live as a family, as a community. The suffering of one must be the suffering of all; the joy of one must be the joy of all.

Let us return to that original vision of the Church:

  • A people united in love

  • A community that shares and cares

  • A family bound not by blood, but by baptism

May we receive the grace to live not just as Christians in name, but as Christians in truth, deeds, living in unity, charity, and authentic community.

Amen.

God bless with Fr. Blessed πŸ™Œ 

Monday, April 13, 2026

Mass Reading and Reflection April 13th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 4:23–31)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 2)

Response: Blessed are all who trust in you, O Lord.

Alleluia

Alleluia, alleluia.
If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 3:1–8)

Reflection:

The Gospel passage we have just listened to tells us about the visit of Nicodemus to Jesus. Nicodemus came to Him at night. He was a wealthy man, we recall that when Jesus died, it was this same Nicodemus who brought a mixture of aloes and myrrh to anoint His body, a very costly offering  (John 19:39). Only a wealthy man could have done that.

Nicodemus was also a Pharisee, one of those who strongly adhered to and defended the Mosaic Law. More than that, he was a ruler of the Jews, a member of the Sanhedrin, the council that judged religious matters.

So why would such a man go to Jesus?
The Pharisees were often opposed to Him. They saw Him as a threat, not a friend.

Yet Nicodemus came.

Why?
Verse 2 gives us the answer:
“Rabbi, we know that you have come from God as a teacher, for no one can do these signs unless God is with him.”

Nicodemus calls Jesus Rabbi-teacher, master.
This is significant. A ruler humbling himself to recognize truth. While others accused Jesus of working by the power of the devil, Nicodemus acknowledged that Jesus came from God.

But Jesus does not allow Nicodemus to remain at the level of admiration.
He challenges him: You must be born again, of water and the Spirit.

Nicodemus does not understand.
And yet, we see in him something powerful: a sincere desire for truth.

Though the Gospel does not explicitly describe his baptism, we see his transformation:

  • He defended Jesus before the Pharisees (cf. John 7:50–51)

  • He honored Jesus at His death with costly ointment (cf. John 19:39)

Nicodemus moved from curiosity… to conviction… to courage.

He became, in essence, a Pharisee who turned into a disciple.

What do we learn?

In the face of truth:

  • Your position does not matter

  • Your title does not matter

  • Your group does not matter

What matters is your willingness to accept the truth.

Do not cling to your opinions simply because of pride.
Do not defend your stance just because of status.

Nicodemus had everything, wealth, influence, authority, yet he humbled himself.

He saw the truth…
and he followed it, even when it meant standing apart from his group.

A Question for Us

Can we do the same?

  • Can you recognize the truth when it confronts you?

  • Can you let go of your own ideas when they contradict the truth?

  • Can you stand alone, if necessary, for what is right?

Nicodemus did.

While others rejected Jesus, he acknowledged Him.
While others mocked, he defended.
While others abandoned, he honored.

Be humble enough to give away your opinion and accept the truth.
Stand out from the group when necessary.

Let us pray for the grace:

  • To recognize truth

  • To accept it

  • And to stand by it, no matter the cost

Amen.

By Fr.Blessed 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Divine Mercy Sunday April 12th, 2026

 

First Reading: (Acts 2:42–47)

Psalm: (Psalm 118)

“His steadfast love endures forever.”

Second Reading: (1 Peter 1:3–9)

Alleluia

“Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe.”

Gospel: (John 20:19–31)

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Mass Reading and Reflection for Saturday April 11th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 4:13–21)

Psalm: (Psalm 118)

The Lord is my strength and my might; He has become my salvation.

Alleluia

Alleluia, alleluia.
This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (Mark 16:9–15)

Reflection:

Today’s message is about faith that moves from fear to bold witness.

In the Gospel, the disciples struggle with belief. Even after hearing that Jesus is risen, they doubt. Fear keeps them hidden, and uncertainty clouds their faith. Jesus rebukes them, not to condemn, but to awaken them. Faith is not based on seeing, but on trusting the truth revealed by Christ.

This same transformation is seen in the First Reading. Peter and John, once fearful, now stand with courage before powerful authorities. Though uneducated and ordinary, they speak with conviction. Why? Because they have encountered the risen Christ.

Their response is powerful:

“We cannot keep from speaking about what we have seen and heard.”

True faith cannot remain silent.

The Reflection reminds us that faith is not mere knowledge. If we see something, we know it, we do not need faith. But faith is trusting in what we do not see, grounded in the authority of Christ.

Like the disciples, we may begin with fear, doubt, or hesitation. We may choose the “safe option,” avoiding risk or witness. But an encounter with the risen Lord changes everything. Fear gives way to courage. Silence gives way to proclamation.

A simple but profound image captures this: the “exit sign” in a church. What we receive inside the church, Word, Eucharist, prayer, must come alive when we leave. Faith is not meant to remain inside walls; it must be lived.

So the challenge is clear:

  • Do we merely say we believe, or do we truly trust and live it?

  • Do we give God our leftovers, or our first and our best?

The risen Christ gives us a new beginning. Like the apostles, we are sent, not because we are perfect or qualified, but because we are called.

And so, like Peter and John, may we have the courage to say with our lives:

We cannot remain silent.

Amen.

God bless you