Saturday, March 27, 2021

Lovin' this Spring Weather

Lovin' this Spring weather.  I feel like a caterpillar emerging from his cocoon, turning into a butterfly.

Yep, a butterfly.

As regular readers know, I get cabin fever by late January, early February, chomping at the bit for warmer weather to be outside.  It is like I come back to life, emerging from the artificially lit den of the house in winter, into a sunny yard where birds come to feed on bird seed, the garden becomes green and productive, and I start to spread my wings again in the Great Outdoors.




The bird feeder is working great.  Not too many squirrels trying to shimmy up that narrow pole to the bird feeder, but instead they like to congregate around its base to eat seeds that fall to the ground after birds have taken their share.  The other day though, the Mrs. showed me a pic she took of about a dozen crows that had swept down trying to dominate the bird feeder.  Not the most Spring-like bird to observe, but this morning I was listening to them, and they make a nice song sound that is rather pleasant to the ear.

Plus a good crow caller device is good for scouting out turkey nests as I discovered hunting turkey last season.  Note to self, Spring turkey season is almost here.  Hmm.  But I digress...

I've got visions dancing in my head of a second bird feeder, a concrete water feeder, a statue of St. Francis (or St. Joseph) to accompany our front yard statue of Our Lady, and of course my Spring garden.  Couldn't track down today a rototiller to rent, but I bought a bunch of seeds and supplies.  Will plant something smaller, and buy a new small rototiller online to expand the garden in May for the summer.   Watching videos, and reading reviews, there are some really good small rototillers for under $200.  No need for a Troybuilt, but that is on my wish list one day.  And there will soon enough be trips to Blue Hole Spring, fishing, hiking, and if I can coax my not-as-much-into-outdoor-sports-as-I-am wife, a camping trip.



My Go-To Book for Gardening
Last I Checked, Angelus Press Sold This
Seems Trad Catholics Like to Garden!

Will be going for a week in a month to New Mexico, to Sante Fe, then the Pecos Wilderness nearby.  May camp at least one night, the other night staying in a cabin.

Hope you and yours are enjoying the blessing of Spring as well.  Next week is Holy Week (we plan to attend the Triduum in T-town, but Holy Saturday at the Society chapel in OKC).  Then it will be Easter! 

Friday, March 26, 2021

Saint Archbishop Lefebvre, Ora Pro Nobis

Reading yesterday varying comments about the death anniversary of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, some things came to mind.

Before a Saint is canonized, there is first typically a movement that calls for their canonization, and which invokes the person's intercession as a Saint, before official approval.  This has always been a part of the tradition of the Church, and it is legitimate.  It is part of the process towards canonization.

Such is the case with the international movement, led of course by the Society of St. Pius X founded by Archbishop Lefebvre, to invoke him as a Saint and have, one day, the Vatican declare him as such.

I once asked Fr. Ghela, SSPX about this in the Philippines, and this was the explanation he gave about invoking yet-to-be-canonized deceased Catholics as saints, based on pious belief, and that the Society has been promoting the canonization of the Archbishop, sending continuing evidence to Rome of miracles that result after the faithful pray to the Archbishop.  Terminally ill cancer patients, fully cured, for example.

And when you read the life of Archbishop Lefebvre (LINK), you can't help but wonder if his cause for canonization is in fact a worthy one.  

I personally believe it is, and pray to Saint Archbishop Lefebvre every night along with my go-to list of saints--as I believe he is a saint.

++Lefebvre (two crosses for an Archbishop) heroically defended the Catholic Faith, the Catholic Mass, and Catholic Tradition, to the point of persecution by and large by the hierarchy.  This alone makes him a modern day St. Athanasius figure.   He above all other Prelates preserved the traditional life of the Catholic Church during these times.  Without him, arguably there would be little if any TLMs in the world, or a Fraternity of St. Peter (which according to its statutes, is based on the design and charism of the SSPX from which it came into existence, except being canonically regular).   

If there is any doubt in your mind, I encourage you to read his biography I posted above.  Pope Francis after all, it is said, read it twice.   I read it once myself, and was nearly moved to tears how edifying was the life of this great bishop saint, who trads should consider, imo, the patron saint of not only the TLM movement, but the Catholic Church during these times.  

He was a man of extraordinary faith, courage, virtue, and holiness in his life, especially in defending the Faith.  His love of Christ and the Church was so great that he willingly allowed himself to be persecuted until his death.  He was also very kind, gentle, and humble, despite how certain detractors have portrayed him.  A simple man of extraordinary action. 

St. Archbishop Lefebvre, pray for us!




Thursday, March 25, 2021

New Bird Feeder. Thoughts on Women.

Who would have thought a squirrel could climb up a pole like this, reach across, and snag some bird seed.



The Mrs. did, when last Saturday we bought this hook stand, for lack of a better term, and a new bird feeder, shaped like a wide house, red, tin roofed, two basket cages on the side, and two trays for the seeds in front and back.  

"There's no way, honey," I said.  I was sure I was right   Or so I thought  

After some rain, finally birds starting using the feeder yesterday, which was a pleasant welcome as Spring sets in, this being one of my favorite times of year.

But stepping outside the door this morning on the way to work, I caught a squirrel red-handed going up the pole, and then jumping to hang on the feeder like a rock climber dangling in mid air, nibbling on some seeds it got in its claws. 

Well I was proven wrong.  Women know best.

In a sense.

Men and women being designed differently in our anatomy, our brains are different.  By comparison, the male brain is more left-brained dominant, logical, rational, looking out across the landscape of one's life in a pastoral view of everything that needs to be tended to.

Women, on the other hand, are more right-brained dominant, intuitive, emotionally intelligent, and in tune with the intimate details of one's surroundings.

Including whether or not a squirrel would or even could shimmy up that slippery, narrow pole.

That or perhaps she has a better handle than I do on the acrobatic aptitude of squirrels. 

Such is one of my many daily lessons I continuously learn.  Not so much what a squirrel is capable of doing to one's lawn ornaments/bird feeder, but the difference between men and women, and I suppose people in general.

"Man and woman, God created them," Holy Writ tells us.  

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

FSSP Father of 7, Boulder Police Officer (RIP). GoFundMe Donation Link Here.

By now you've likely heard about the mass shooting at a Boulder grocery store killing ten people, including one police officer, himself described as acting "heroic" by the Boulder police department.

This man, father, and husband of 7 children, was shot and murdered by a clearly radical Muslim committing an act of terror on American soil.   These radical Muslims need to be sent back to their anti-freedom, anti-Christian countries.   It must be said.

If that is too politically incorrect, then google can shut this blog down if it wants (they own blogger after all).

Officer Eric Talley's life now taken will be a sad reminder of how radical, anti-Christian Islam has been allowed by the political Left to infiltrate our country and put terror into the hearts of families going to get groceries.

And Eric and his family are traditional Catholics who attend the traditional Latin Mass at the FSSP.  This also makes him a Catholic hero, in my book.

Having attended the FSSP for a sum total, over the years, of over nine years, this hit home for me, and I am sure the other FSSP parishioners here in the Tulsa area.

The silver lining in this tragedy is this man showed heroic virtue and a life of Catholic, Christian faith.

Read about him here:  LINK.

And please consider donating to help his surviving wife and large family here, Lent being a special time for Almsgiving:

DONATE HERE

May Eric Talley rest in peace.

Kyrie eleison.


 

Monday, March 22, 2021

Catholicism Banned to the Crypt: in St. Peter's Basilica of All Places

Well, I can't say as I'm shocked by this story abuzz across the Catholic blogosphere recently.  What is left of traditional Catholicism, it seems, is now banned to the crypt under St. Peter's basilica, that church once visually representing the physical epicenter of the Church.  This comes from some liturgically leftist snob Vatican bureaucrat, who according to Cardinal Burke et al overstepped his legal bounds.   

Dollars to doughnuts Francis allows the suppression to stand.   History repeats itself after all.

Ad orientem?  In Latin?  Emphasizing the Sacrifice of the Mass?  Sacred Liturgy?  Even using the 1962 missal?  Say it ain't so.

Protestantism however can and must be practiced in the sanctuary at ground level people, per the new rule.

The Old Religion (Catholicism) needs to wise up and join the crowd.  Until then, down to the basement with you, you uptight restorationists with your little pilgrimage groups gathered around side altars making a ruckus silently using your Latin Mass missals.

Just make sure you sign up to offer your Mass at either 7:30 am or 9:00 am.   Downstairs in the crypt out of sight.  If those spots are already taken, then you can go back upstairs, don your New Age alb, and sing Kumbaya like the rest of us normal people.

---

Satire aside, I have to say this should by now be of no surprise for Catholics who are aware of the Crisis in the Church.   These scandals are just part of the larger Scandal which is the New Religion.

The Motu Proprio for all its worth on its own merits, with obvious exceptions of many priests learning the TLM, has largely been ignored by most Bishops and priests, in effect still persecuting not only tradition-minded Catholics as, in their mind, religious Weirdos, but the traditional Catholic Faith/Mass itself.  

In my own experience, only in Dioceses with Bishops and senior clergy supporting Tradition does a Motu Proprio Mass community stand a chance in the long term, to meet all the most basic needs of practicing Catholic families.  

This book is the best to explain the history of this contemporary Crisis, imo:  Iota Unum.

Truth be told those partisans since the Council pushing a Regime of Novelty on the Church, have high-jacked most of the Hierarchy, who have effectively relegated, or allowed to be relegated, the True Mass and True Faith to the crypt.

Figuratively, and as of now in the church of St. Peter, literally.   The sad irony.

Well, maybe visiting priests and their groups just need to set up temporary altars outside the Basilica to offer the Mass of the Saints, on the side walk, if the city allows it.   Maybe by visiting Bishops like +Burke or +Schneider who can't get penciled in for a Crypt Mass in the traditional rite.  

That would be a fitting optic, don't you think, of what has already occurred these last 50 years.  An effective Witness.

We are to bear Witness after all.

Catholicism banned to the crypt in St. Peters. Sigh.  So be it, we will still keep the orthodox Faith of Christ, even if they try and banish us to the wilderness.  We will not hide our light under a bushel.

No sir.



Saturday, March 20, 2021

Evolution and the Catholic Faith, A Discussion with Pon de Replay

I've been talking online recently to a reader of this blog, Pon de Replay, who I've also known over the years in the Catholic forums, about the question of evolution in relation to Catholicism.  I let him know, with his tacit approval, I would be writing a post here commenting on that discussion, without giving anything too personal about him.  Pon, as I call him, left the Catholic Church several years ago, by his own admission abandoning belief in Catholicism, or any sense of the Christian God, seemingly identifying with agnosticism.  

He was once a devoted, traditional Catholic attending the Traditional Latin Mass, with all the theology and devotion typical of those Catholics who are attached to this Rite.  Yet I have found him to be a gentleman exhibiting still a Christian spirit in the way he thinks and interacts with others.  As I've told him, I pray for his reversion, and would hope to one day convince him that he need not turn away from Christ or the Church because of evolution.

Yet, Pon slowly over the course of years, being a very intellectual man, began to question certain core tenets.   Believing in evolution, he came to the conclusion that if evolution is true, then the Church's claims on a) an all good God, b) who created man, c) as two first parents, Adam and Eve had to be--in his mind--an irreconcilable contradiction.

The main reasons he gives are that, according to evolution, Homo sapien evolved from multiple lines of hominids.  That is, higher level primates in different regions and times gradually changed species to Homo sapien, i.e. an upright animal capable of reason and wisdom.  That is, according to Pon, there could not be just one set of first parents, but many.

The second objection given, related to an evolutionary view of nature, is from theodicy, that is that sub-discipline of theology that tackles the problem of evil.  Pon, like many people today, cannot reconcile the immeasurable amount of evil and suffering in the world with an all good God who creates and sustains this world.  That is, for Pon in particular, how can an all good God allow so much suffering in the animal kingdom for millions of years as part of an evolutionary process, through disease, mass extinctions, and animal conflict?

I've asked these questions myself, without entertaining any actual doubt on my own end, but I do understand where people like Pon are coming from, and have known a number of Catholics or Protestant Christians who abandoned their faith principally over evolution.

As for myself, I do not believe in the theory of evolution.  But I do not reject it in itself either.  It's a scientific theory that in my opinion should not be taught as anything more than a hypothesis, there being scientific evidence to discredit it as well as scientific evidence to back it up.   I am agnostic on exactly how God created the world and man, that is in scientific terms, while I as a traditional Catholic accept the inerrancy of Scripture from the books of Genesis through the book of the Apocalypse.  

And it is not dogma, de fide teaching, or a requirement of the Magisterium to take the Creation stories literally.

We are, as I understand it, required to believe that:  a) God created man, b) He created two first parents, one individual male and one individual female, c) they were in a state of natural perfection, d) all humans descend from these first two parents, and e) they committed original sin which we inherit, meriting punishment on the world.

I am not sure if is de fide, but I believe it is the common opinion that any disorder or suffering in the cosmos, including disease and death among animals, is a result of original sin on creation, rendering it in a fallen state.

Which then brings us back to Pon's objection.  He came to the conclusion that through a process of natural selection, on an Earth with an apparently very long history, lower forms of life gradually evolved into higher forms of life, eventually primates, and from primates eventually the human race emerged.   Yet, if you imagine Earth circa say 4 million years ago, when sub-rational hominids were still dragging their knuckles on the ground and grunting, through evolutionary processes, spread out in varying locations, it stands to reason--IF evolution were true, as Pon believes--then there would have been multiple evolutionary lines resulting essentially at different moments in time in many first parents emerging from hominid.

For Pon and other formerly theistic evolutionalists, this would apparently fly in the face of a dogma of only two first parents, and thus discrediting Divine Revelation as a whole.

In my undergrad studies majoring in biology, I was required to spend a good deal of time studying evolution, and it seemed to dominate much of our lectures, not only as a scientific theory but as a natural philosophy of the world, and for some anti-religious zealot professors a final proof for them that the claims of religion and the existence of God are backward foolishness.

But I do not recall reading any strong evidence that Homo sapien emerged necessarily from multiple lines.   What I do recall is reading about scientific evidence--mind you this was from a creationist book I read at the time to counter the anti-religious litanies I was subjected to by professors--that genetic studies point to there being actually, in fact, two original individual Homo sapiens from which the human race emerged.

Which the Bible names as Adam and Eve (meaning the First Man, and First Woman).

Yet, beyond those studies now eons ago, I have been decidedly ignorant of further complexities of evolutionary science.   Perhaps if I find the right book on this subject, I can give Pon a better scientific rebuttal.  

The second main objection of Pon, that I suspect is a common one of formerly practicing Catholics who left the Faith over evolution, is that, for him, the level of suffering found on Earth, in particular among animals, would seem to fly in the face of the idea of an all good God, that is the idea of a loving Father who feeds and takes care of the birds of the air, as Our Lord counseled.  

My response to Pon was/is to reference Fr. Stanley L. Jaki's great work The Savior of Science, in which he describes the pitfalls of pre-Christian or anti-Christian versions of science, being an apologist of the truest natural science finding its ideal in Christ and the Faith, without which human reason falls ultimately short.

Jaki, a Benedictine priest, held PhD's in Physics and Theology, devoting much of his writings to a Christian philosophy of science, and critiquing the errors often found in modern science (for example, modern cosmologists like Hawking arguing for an infinite universe).   When addressing evolution, he did not go so far as to argue it is true, but rather that one could in theory hold it to be true without contradicting Catholic orthodoxy and the true meaning of Scripture, and the fundamental teachings on creation.   Further, he underlines the central problem with evolution, in that it tends not to be just a natural scientific theory, but an erroneous philosophy of nature.  Going beyond natural selection, and Darwin's study of tortoises on the famous Galapagos islands, "Darwinism," which Jaki says characterizes mainstream evolutionary thought, is fundamentally atheistic and chaotic.  It cannot see the handiwork of an Intelligent Designer creating a cosmos dominated by design, order, stability, and purpose, but rather a sees a cosmos dominated by chaos and disorder.  

That I firmly believe is the starting point for the millions like Pon who have set aside religion in the name of science.   The starting point being, opening one's eyes, looking outward across the natural landscape, and falsely seeing a world of disorder, disease, and death as the prime causes of existence, instead of a beautiful design.  

The kind of design described in the simple Biblical description of God creating all things like Him, and on the last day Man in His own image.  And the kind of design that natural science itself reveals, in the marvelous beauty and order found in such things as: a star, solar system, ecosystems of life on Earth depending on one another, or the wonders of the human body.

The problem then I think is not about science, but philosophy, and one's personal philosophy about existence.

I do not hold anything like this view, but I can sympathize with the emotional and personal experience of the agnostic evolutionist.  The Bible says this life is a "valley of tears."  And God in the Old Testament showed several times just how Just he could be to deal with an unrepentant People.  

Job, himself largely innocent, who suffered I think more than any other Old Testament figure, in his indescribable agony still kept his faith and confidence in the all good God.  A testimony if there ever was one of how God's justice is in harmony with his love and goodness.

So of course, without a personal faith in a personal God, without the Revelations of Christ, through reason and science alone, mixed with the harsh realities of life, one could naturally take the cynical view of existence.

As I told Pon, for me the answer is simple and completely solves the barriers he has.  God has proven the trustworthiness of Divine Revelation, Jesus Christ, and the Catholic Church through a long history of verifiable miracles, without which St. Augustine himself confessed he would not have faith.

Therefore, there can be no true contradiction between natural science and Catholic dogma, I urged/urge him to believe.  Whatever is proposed that is in contradiction, can be revised and seen from many, many different angles, that is different scientific hypotheses, to reconcile the science with the Faith.

Case in point, the origin of man.  God could have, if He wanted to, evolved two first parents from hominids giving them alone--at first--rational souls.   It is a logical process in theory.  At some point in time Homo sapien did not exist, but hominids did.  But IF evolution is true and humans came from hominid, then logically at some point on the historical timeline the first Homo sapien was born, i.e. to create the new species that is different than hominid.

The other hominid lines could have--at a later date (perhaps hours or days later even, in some other sector of the African jungle)--developed into Homo sapiens, they themselves given at some point immaterial souls.

There was though one snag in that possibilty:  the Church teaches all humans descend from the first two parents, that is from one singular hereditary history going back to one individual male, and one individual female.

At that point the anti-religious evolutionist could very well exclaim the final judgment "Ah ha!  There you have it!  The Bible is in error.  We did not all come from one hereditary line, but from many.  Case closed."

This only forgets the immeasurable complexity of how the Creator created the word and man, which the Bible itself does not go into complete detail about.  There is much that is a natural mystery, that will remain as such to both the believer and the scientist.   We simply do not completely know, and i would argue, in the end cannot know for certain, all the complexities of natural history on Earth leading up to man's creation, or how exactly God created man.

God's Providence could have very well directed, after the emergence of Adam and Eve, that their descendants would mate with the other hominid lines at the point they were becoming human (gaining supernaturally genetic material from the line of Adam and Eve first), so that they too were human beings because their genetic changes manifested from them).  

In other words, there are many possible mechanisms God could have used to create man by means of evolution, such that there were still two first parents, and by some process all humans have descended at least in part from their genetic line.

That is IF evolution were true.  Which I do not actively believe (nor outright reject).

As to Pon's problem with evil in the world, and animal suffering, vs. an all good God, I would concede that without Christ or the Bible, that would be an understandable error to fall into.

But when the veracity of Revelation is proven, in particular by the history of miracles, then it all comes full circle.  The answer is clear, yet a mystery.

It is clear that God allows all disorder, suffering, disease, and death, including among animals, as part of His economy of salvation.  Man fell into original sin.  The result was some relative amount of suffering in the world, yet transient and nothing compared to the eternal bliss of heaven.  God allowed Adam and Eve's "happy fault" so that out of the apparent chaos that followed original sin, He will redeem us.  Through our suffering we are able to come back to our perfect state with Him, but in an even higher supernatural state and end above the original design.  

Therein lies the mystery--that encircling the Savior on the Cross--and through that Redemptive Act--all of creation moves, the sun and planets and stars, all living things, past, present and future towards the final end which is salvation and eternal union with God.

And that it is in the Father sending His only begotten Son, to die for us as the sacrificial victim, that all makes sense and finds its purpose and completion.

Even in the suffering of animals, since animals having no soul or free will, and therefore no self-awareness, are in fact not really suffering at all, that is in the sense we as humans understand "suffering" as a state of pain or hardship that penetrates a conscious soul. Everything that must die, whether a star, tree, or dog, does so as part of the plan of redemption, with everything in the end being offered up as a sacrifice for our sins.

In the end of time, God will destroy the Earth and all nature, and recreate it.  And for the Just who die in friendship with God, they will know no suffering, disease, or death.  For eternity.

Hope this reflection helps Pon in your own reflection.  Blessed Lent.

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Astronomical Explanation for Change of Seasons

Thanks again to Pon de Replay, a reader here, and occasional poster in the Catholic forums I’ve gotten to know over the years, for pointing out to me my mistake commenting on the change of seasons, going from winter to spring.  

Here I had always ignorantly thought in my several decades of life on this planet that the reason the earth’s temperature changes from hot to cold, and vice versa, at least in certain parts of the world (vs. it being always cold in Antarctica, but always hot in the Philippines, for example), was because the distance of the earth from the sun changes.  

Not sure if that was the impression I got in my 8th grade earth science class, but it always seemed intuitive that winter temps are due to the earth moving further away from the sun.  However, as verified by the omniscient Google search engine, Pon (as I am want to call him) was in fact correct.   The earth warms and cools on a twelve month cycle around the sun because, drum roll please, the earth tilts.  

In fact, the earth is closest to the sun in January.  

As it tilts on its axis away from the sun, it generally gets colder, and vice versa.  Who woulda thunk.  Blows my mind self-reflecting on what other false assumptions I may have made about all things pertaining to the weather and astronomy.  

Note to self: brush up on your basic astronomy Okie Trad.  Maybe watch a YT video one night over a bowl of popcorn (or in my case eating keto, over a freshly popped bowl of microwaved pork rinds) that explains the four seasons.  

Thanks again Pon for your astute observation. You are a scholar and a gentleman.  


Any constructive feedback or just want to drop a friendly hey, email me at:

JosephOstermeir@gmail.com. 

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Spring is Approaching

For the first time in her life, my wife being from a country that I think has literally never seen snow, made snow angels, we Okies getting slammed a few weeks ago with a penitential winter storm and sub-zero temps.   She found the experience amusing, having to, I kid her, compulsively post it to her FB friends group as she is want to do.  Boy that winter storm was brutal for us here in Oklahoma, in that we're just not much prepared for that kind of harsh weather.  And what makes this state a bermuda-triangle-like spot on the American map is that we get strange, extreme shifts in the weather.  Just a couple days after rare minus zero temps, it was a sunny 70 degrees in February.




Which brings us into March.  I expect probably we've seen our last taste of Old Man Winter this year, but then again you never know in Okahoma.  April of 2018 we went to OKC to see the zoo one Saturday, should have checked the weather before leaving, because on our way it got cold and it snowed the rest of the day.  Oklahoma.

Anyways, I welcome this time of year, with the world coming back to life as planet Earth gets tilts closer to the Sun once again (note:  thanks Pon de Replay, a reader, for the astronomical correction;  I must've been staring too much at the girls that day in 8th grade Earth science class).  It's always a funny thing the change of seasons, how you feel about it.  It is a quarterly reminder that everything this side of the afterlife changes, with peaks and valleys, feast and famine, and pleasant vs. unpleasant weather.  Me, I am a bit sensitive to weather extremes.  The deep humidity of the South here can dampen my mood, like smothering my brain with a hot soggy towel.  July and August tends to dull the mind and senses, into a dehydrated, hot brain stupor alleviated by the cooler weather of Fall.




And so this time also is a kind of relief.  My favorite season is Fall with the cool, crisp temps, decrease in humidity, Fall colors, campfires and outdoor adventures like deer hunting.  But Spring is my second favorite season.  By January into February, cabin fever has kicked in, not to mention a touch of seasonal affective disorder if I had to diagnose myself.  Days being too short, sunlight too dim, and biological life too stagnant.  

So I welcome the warmth of the Sun, the flowering plants, birds and insects coming back out, and the outdoor plans for which better weather calls.  The barbeques, picnics, Saturday get-aways to swim at old Blue Hole Spring.   You feel like a tired old bear emerging from his hibernation, emerging from his cave, taking a good yawn, gazing up at the Sun, and then going back out into the world to collect honey.  As for me, I will be planting a Spring garden later this month in the front yard so the neighbor's can see it grow, about 8' x 40', half of which will be rows of tomatoes, zucchini, carrots, and cucumbers, and the other half entirely sweet potatoes.  




The unfolding of Spring is upon us.  Next Sunday we have to remember to set our clocks forward, Spring bringing a "springing" forward of the clock.  The evenings will be longer and grow longer as we enter into Spring.  We plan maybe Saturday a trip to the OKC zoo.  Also a trip to Green leaf lake to rent a canoe, and see the Batfish submarine museum in Muskogee on our way home, a must see for the family.   Also, a day trip out to Clear Creek monastery should be soon forthcoming, which I find relaxing, the drive to and through the Clear Creek valley being spectacular, praying with the monks, buying some of their cheese and holy cards, and stopping at the Amish bakery on the way home.  There is something rejuvinating and educational about just getting out of the city once in a while, taking a drive to a nearby place to site-see, see a museum or old Catholic church, and sample the local food.

Such is the cycle of life I am sure the Good Lord uses as part of His plan of redemption.  Deo gratias.


For constructive feedback or just to say hello, contact me at the email below, which I do not check daily.

JosephOstermeir@gmail.com