Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Two Young Girls at the Piano

Two Young Girls at the Piano, Auguste Renoir
Since today's quote was about playing the piano (or fingers at any rate), this seemed like a good picture.

Woah. No musles in our fingers?

In order to allow dexterity and slimness for actions such as piano playng, the finger contains no muscles; tendons transfer force from muscles in the forearm and palm. In all, seventy separate muscles contribute to hand movements.
Dr. Paul Brand, Fearfully and Wonderfully ...

This blew my mind. Which is pretty much what the whole book did anyway.

Monday, January 19, 2026

Koyla (Coal)


A village girl agrees to a marriage to a king she has never met after he sends her a photograph of himself. But the man in the photograph is not the king but his most loyal slave, the handsome but mute Shankar.

Just a perfect viewing experience if you like 1990s Indian movies - and we do. That means this is for the experienced Indian movie viewer. We'd never have liked this seven years ago but now we relished every moment.

This is a villain heavy dramatic thriller with a good dose of Madhuri Dixit's classical dancing, Amrish Puri's over the top villain and, of course, Shah Rukh Khan's inimitable heroic style. You will believe that the hero can be mute (which really bemused us at the beginning of the film).

We really loved the "5 hands" scene which was very skillfully done for genuine laughs. I've never seen Johnny Lever with so few over the top moments, which was interesting. Anyway, it was a hit with us.

Being what you created us to be

You first loved us so that we might love you — not because youneeded our love, but because we could not be what you created us to be, except by loving you.
William of Saint-Thiery, On the Contemplation of God

I've seen this expressed before but never so well.

Snow Magic

Snow Magic, Edward B. Gordon

Edward B. Gordon says:

How the snowfall completely transforms and enchants our usual perspective. Suddenly, no explanation is needed, only wonder-filled observation. Every time, I feel almost as if I have the eyes of a child again.
Agreed! This painting perfectly captures that wonder.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Hawaiian Fisherman

Hawaiian Fisherman by Charles William Bartlett,
color woodblock print, 1916. Via J.R.'s Art Place.

I don't usually like wood prints. However, this is in the style of several book covers that my grandparets had. They were my father's old childhood books and when I was a kid I didn't really read them — but I liked the covers. It takes me back to those days.

One owed something to one's ancestors

When my father had been extravagant, he used to say gaily in self-defense that "one owed something to one's ancestors." Certainly,if it had not been for several of his ancestors, he would not have owed so much to his contemporaries.
C.N. and A.M. Williamson, The Motor Maid

This light, fun book was one of my top reads of 2025. This bit gives you a sense of the humor throughout.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Second Dream of St. Joseph

Today's quote was a lovely contemplation of Mary. Let's pair that with a look at St. Joseph as he isn't often seen.
Second Dream of St. Joseph
by Daniel Mitsui

It's no secret that I really love illustrations of Biblical scenes done in Asian style. It's also no secret that I really love Daniel Mitsui's work in general. And it should also be no secret that I'm a real fan of St. Joseph.

I shared this way back in 2014 but we need to enjoy it again. After you have enjoyed the work at first glance, see what the artist tells us is included that you might have missed.
It depicts, in a Japanese style, the second dream of St. Joseph, in which an angel (traditionally identified as St. Gabriel) warns him to flee into Egypt with the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Christ Child. In this work, I especially imitated the style of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, a late ukiyo-e master. I referenced his series of woodblock prints 100 Aspects of the Moon for many parts of my drawing.

St. Gabriel holds a fan containing a vision of the Flight into Egypt and the Miracle of the Cherry Tree. I attempted to convey a sense of otherworldly urgency by having the angel’s robes and hair blown by a strong wind that affects nothing else in the picture. St. Joseph sleeps in the stable of Bethlehem, next to the gifts of the Magi (in antique Chinese vessels). The text is from Emile Raguet’s Classical Japanese New Testament translation of 1910, and says Gabriel and Arise, and take the child and his mother, and fly into Egypt: and be there until I shall tell thee. For it will come to pass that Herod will seek the child to destroy him.

Mary, most of these wonders depended on you

Mary, you are the vessel and tabernacle containing all Mysteries.
You know what the Patriarchs did not know;
you experienced what was not revealed to the Angels;
you heard what the Prophets did not hear.
In short, everything that was hidden from preceding generations was made known to you;
even more,
most of these wonders depended on you.
St. Gregory the Great, Marian prayer

This is simply a lovely reflection and also something that hadn't occurred to me before.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The Large Cat

The Large Cat by Cornelis Visscher, 1657.
via J.R.'s Art Place
I like cat pictures. And this is a great one.

Notes on Mark: Real Defilement Comes From Within

Martyrdom of the seven Hebrew brothers, Vatican Library, around 1450

MARK 7:14-23
It is such a common idea these days to define someone's actions by their intentions rather than what they eat or wear or other such customs. Barclay reminds us how very unheard of that was in Jesus' day. I really enjoyed his references to Maccabees. Those books are some of my favorites of the Old Testament. The stories of the widow and her sons as well as one of an old man who refuses to give up his faith even though urged to because of his age are some that have really stuck with me. The speech that the old man and the widow each give are really beautiful examples of witnessing to faith.
Although it may not seem so now, this passage, when it was first spoken, was well-nigh the most revolutionary passage in the New Testament. Jesus has been arguing with the legal experts about different aspects of the traditional law. He has shown the irrelevance of the elaborate handwashings. He has shown how rigid adherence to the traditional law can actually mean disobedience to the law of God. But here he says something more startling yet. He declares that nothing that goes into a man can possibly defile him, for it is received only into his body which rids itself of it in the normal, physical way.

No Jew ever believed that and no orthodox Jew believes it yet. Leviticus 11 has a long list of animals that are unclean and may not be used for food. How very seriously this was taken can be seen from many an incident in Maccabean times. At that time the Syrian king, Antiochus Epiphanes, was determined to root out the Jewish faith. One of the things he demanded was that the Jews should eat pork, swine's flesh but they died in the hundreds rather than do so ... Fourth Maccabees (chapter 7) tells the story of a widow and her seven sons. It was demanded that they should eat swine's flesh. They refused. The first had his tongues cut out, the ends of his limbs cut off; and he was then roasted alive in a pan; the second had his hair and the skin of his skull torn off; one by one they were tortured to death while their aged mother looked on and cheered them on; they died rather than eat meat which to them was unclean.

It is in the face of this that Jesus made his revolutionary statement that nothing that goes into a man can make him unclean. He was wiping out at one stroke the laws for which Jews had suffered and died ...

With one sweeping pronouncement Jesus had declared ... that uncleanness has nothing to do with what a man takes into his body but everything to do with what comes out of his heart.
The Gospel of Mark
(The Daily Bible Series, rev. ed.)
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Sources and Notes Index      

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

How do you feel about spiders? Julie's going exploring. Scott's keeping near the shuttle. Nothing is getting Rosamund Hodge to set foot on that planet.

 We discuss Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky in our opener for Season 16. This was selected by special guest Rosamund Hodge who joins us for a discussion that is chock-full of spiders. No one wanted to fall in love with a spider, but we did anyway.

The Japanese Scroll

 

The Japanese Scroll by James Tissot

This is via Lines and Colors where it is pointed out how skillfully Tissot suggests the upside down and backwards contents of the Japanese scroll the woman is admiring. I'd never have noticed that in a thousand years. But I love it!

Sin is always an offense that touches others

It must once again be stressed that no human being is closed in upon himself or herself and that no one can live of or for himself or herself alone. ... Human beings are relational and they possess their lives — themselves — only by way of relationship. ... Sin is loss of relationship, disturbance of relationship, and therefore it is not restricted to the individual. When I destroy a relationship, then this event — sin — touches the other person involved in the relationship. Consequently sin is always an offense that touches others, that alters the world and damages it.
Cardinal Ratzinger, In the Beginning ...

That point about us possing our lives only by way of relationship is revelatory. How do we see ourselves in relation to others? How do they touch our lives and what does that mean to our journey through the day, the month, the year, to the end of our days?

Monday, January 12, 2026

Sin has become a suppressed subject but everywhere ...it has nonetheless remained real.

People today know of no standard; to be sure, they do not want to know of any because they see standards as a threat to their freedom. ...

Thus sin has become a suppressed subejct, but everywhere we can see that although it is suppressed, it has nonetheless remained real. What is remarkable to me is the aggressiveness, always on the verge of pouncing, which we experience openly in our society — the lurking readiness to demean the other person, th hold others guilty whenever misfortune occurs to them, to accuse society, and to want to change the world by violence.
Cardinal Ratzinger, In the Beginning ...

This was a superb, thought provoking book and it should have been on my Best of 2025 list. However, you can enjoy this bit in the fullness of the times in which we live. It was written in 1995 and, sadly, seems even more applicable now than then.

After Christmas

After Christmas” by Fritz von Uhde
via J.R.'s Art Place