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Reflection

For a film about extraordinary courage by someone who does not feel up to the task-a theme we are reading about in the book How we Learn to be Brave by Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde- I cannot recommend enough, The Ninth Day.  It is a film based on a true story from extreme circumstances in which many of us will never find ourselves, yet the mental wrestling the protagonist goes through takes on a spiritual significance that applies to many of us.  
The film can be found on Amazon Prime Video.

Here is info by Wikipedia
The Ninth Day is a 2004 German historical drama film directed by Volker Schlöndorff and starring Ulrich Matthes and August Diehl.

Henri Kremer, a Catholic priest from Luxemburg, is imprisoned in Dachau. He experiences the horrors of the camps,...when one day he is given an unexpected leave of nine days. He returns to his native city, where a young SS officer Gebhardt tells him that he should convince his bishop to cooperate with the Nazis - if he does so, he will be set free.  Gebhardt, himself a former candidate for the priesthood, tries to convince the priest that the role of Judas is just what God wants from him. Kremer is confronted with a hard decision: Should he betray his Church or should he return to the concentration camp?

Scripture

Do not, O Lord, withhold
   your mercy from me;
let your steadfast love and your faithfulness
   keep me safe for ever.
For evils have encompassed me
   without number;
my iniquities have overtaken me,
   until I cannot see;
they are more than the hairs of my head,
   and my heart fails me.

Psalm 40.11, 12

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Image - Cover of 'The Ninth Day' DVD Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6083704