Jud’s Prayer Group Collapses Under Fear
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Martha confronts Jud about his failed "coup," defending Monsignor Wicks and questioning Jud's sincerity. Jud challenges her own fear of Wicks, suggesting the church is built on fear, not faith.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Implied rage and contempt, channeled through Martha’s actions and the flock’s reactions. His emotional state is one of cold, calculating dominance—he doesn’t need to be present to control the room.
Wicks is physically absent but looms over the scene like a specter. His influence is felt through Martha’s text (‘What the holy heck’), the flock’s immediate panic, and Martha’s defiant loyalty. The group’s collapse is a direct response to their fear of his reprisal, and Jud’s challenge to Martha (‘Could you confess your deepest sin to Wicks without fear?’) is a proxy confrontation with Wicks himself. The firelight flickers as if reacting to his unseen presence, casting long shadows that mirror his oppressive grip on the church.
- • To maintain absolute control over the church and its members.
- • To crush any dissent or challenge to his authority.
- • That fear is the most effective tool for maintaining power.
- • That the flock’s obedience is more valuable than their spiritual growth.
Begins with passionate idealism, shifts to frustrated defensiveness as the group fractures, then descends into defiant confrontation with Martha before collapsing into defeated isolation. His emotional arc mirrors the group’s unraveling: hope → betrayal → despair.
Jud sits at the center of the group, physically and emotionally exposed as he shares his traumatic past as a boxer who killed a man. His posture is open—arms gesturing, voice trembling with vulnerability—as he frames the prayer group as a sanctuary from Wicks’ control. When Martha texts Wicks, Jud’s frustration boils over, his voice sharpening as he defends the group’s legitimacy, only to watch the flock abandon him. By the end, he’s slumped, head in hands, his defiance crumbling into defeat as Martha’s accusation of a ‘coup’ lingers in the air.
- • To create a space of authentic confession and vulnerability, free from Wicks’ oppressive influence.
- • To challenge the flock’s complicity in Wicks’ tyranny by modeling transparency and grace.
- • That the church should be a place of healing and sustained grace, not fear and control.
- • That Wicks’ leadership has corrupted the flock’s ability to trust and confess freely.
Confused and uncomfortable, her emotional state shifts to resigned compliance as she prioritizes alignment with Wicks’ expectations over moral courage. She’s not angry or defiant, just exhausted by the church’s hypocrisy.
Vera stands near the door, her posture tense as she listens to Jud’s confession. She expresses confusion about the group’s official status, then quickly aligns with Cy to leave, her compliance with Wicks’ expectations evident. She doesn’t engage in the conflict, but her exit is a vote of no confidence in Jud’s leadership. Her hands clutch her purse tightly, a physical manifestation of her internal conflict—loyalty to the church vs. discomfort with its corruption.
- • To avoid drawing attention to herself or her family’s secrets.
- • To maintain her position within the church hierarchy without challenging it.
- • That survival within the church requires silence and obedience.
- • That her role as a congregant is to support the institution, not question it.
Starts with skeptical amusement, shifts to mild curiosity about Wicks’ reaction, then defaults to fearful compliance as the group scatters. His emotional range is limited, reflecting his role as a follower, not a leader.
Lee sits with arms crossed, his skepticism evident from the start. He picks apart Jud’s wording (‘Contraction of the simple future tense meaning you haven’t yet told him?’), then asks to see Martha’s text from Wicks, his curiosity piqued but ultimately fleeting. He’s one of the first to leave, his departure signaling the group’s collective cowardice. His body language is closed-off, his tone laced with performative machismo.
- • To avoid drawing Wicks’ ire by associating with Jud’s ‘coup.’
- • To maintain his peripheral status in the church hierarchy without rocking the boat.
- • That challenging Wicks is a losing game, so it’s better to stay silent.
- • That his own survival depends on avoiding conflict with the powerful.
Boredom masking sadistic glee as he watches Jud’s plan implode. His emotional state is one of opportunistic triumph—he’s not angry or fearful, just eager to exploit the chaos for his own gain.
Cy slumps in his chair, scrolling on his phone with feigned disinterest as Jud speaks. He interrupts to ask if Wicks knows about the group, his tone mocking, then films the entire collapse on his phone. He lingers in the doorway to taunt Jud (‘I’ll probably post it tomorrow’), his smirk never wavering. His body language is lazy, but his eyes are sharp, calculating the group’s humiliation as content for his ARMORY OF GOD channel.
- • To gather incriminating or humiliating content for his ARMORY OF GOD channel.
- • To undermine Jud’s authority and position himself as the true voice of the church’s ‘warriors.’
- • That vulnerability is weakness to be exploited, not protected.
- • That his influence grows when others are exposed as frauds or failures.
Starts with confusion, shifts to mild sympathy for Jud, but defaults to compliance as he leaves with the others. His emotional state is one of resigned exhaustion—he’s seen this dynamic play out before and knows better than to challenge it.
Doctor Nat sits near Jud, his initial confusion (‘Why wouldn’t you tell him?’) giving way to a brief moment of sympathy as he comforts Jud after the group’s collapse (‘Nice try guy’). He’s one of the first to leave, but his exit is softer than the others—he pats Jud’s shoulder, a gesture of reluctant solidarity. His medical bag sits untouched beside him, symbolizing his role as both healer and complicit participant in the church’s dysfunction.
- • To avoid drawing Wicks’ ire by associating with Jud’s rebellion.
- • To maintain his role as the church’s ‘warrior’ and healer, even if it means enabling its corruption.
- • That challenging Wicks is a losing battle, so it’s better to stay silent.
- • That his medical skills are more valuable to the church than his moral courage.
Uncomfortable and fearful from the outset, her emotional state hardens into resigned compliance as the group collapses. She’s not angry, just terrified of Wicks’ reprisal.
Simone sits quietly, her wheelchair positioned slightly apart from the group. She expresses discomfort early (‘This feels kinda weird’), and when Martha texts Wicks, she’s the first to voice her fear (‘I don’t want to piss him off’). She leaves abruptly, her exit underscoring the flock’s prioritization of self-preservation over spiritual growth. Her hands grip the wheels of her chair tightly as she turns away.
- • To avoid attracting Wicks’ attention or wrath.
- • To disengage from the conflict as quickly as possible.
- • That Wicks’ power is absolute and resistance is futile.
- • That her physical vulnerability makes her especially susceptible to his control.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Cy’s phone is the digital weapon that turns the group’s humiliation into content for his ARMORY OF GOD channel. He films the entire collapse—Jud’s vulnerable confession, Martha’s text to Wicks, the flock’s panicked exit—his thumb hovering over the record button like a predator stalking prey. The phone’s camera lens becomes a metaphor for the church’s surveillance state, capturing the moment Jud’s rebellion is exposed and weaponized. Blanc later snatches it to reveal Nat’s confession, but in this event, it’s Cy’s tool for mockery and control.
Martha’s phone is the catalyst for the group’s unraveling. She pulls it from her pocket with deliberate slowness, her thumbs tapping out a text to Wicks that reads like a betrayal in real-time. The ding of the sent message is the auditory cue that shatters the fragile trust Jud has built, and Wicks’ reply (‘What the holy heck’) is read aloud with relish, sealing the group’s fate. The phone becomes a symbol of institutional loyalty—Martha’s weapon of choice in enforcing Wicks’ will. After the event, it remains in her possession, a tool of control she wields without hesitation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The rectory’s main room is a pressure cooker of ideological conflict, its firelight casting long shadows that mirror the flock’s fractured loyalties. The space, usually a sanctuary, becomes a battleground where Jud’s idealism clashes with Martha’s enforcer mentality. The flickering flames reflect the group’s unstable emotions—hope, fear, betrayal—while the heavy wooden furniture grounds the scene in institutional weight. The room’s intimacy amplifies the humiliation of the group’s collapse, as if the walls themselves are judging their complicity. By the end, the rectory feels less like a home and more like a tomb, echoing Jud’s accusation that the church is a ‘whitewashed tomb.’
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude is the invisible puppeteer of this event, its influence manifesting through Martha’s loyalty, the flock’s fear, and Wicks’ absent tyranny. The organization’s power dynamics are on full display: Martha acts as its enforcer, Cy as its opportunistic propagandist, and the flock as its complicit victims. Jud’s failed rebellion is a direct challenge to the church’s hierarchical control, and his accusation that it’s a ‘whitewashed tomb’ lays bare the institution’s moral rot. The event underscores the church’s ability to crush dissent through fear, even when its leader isn’t physically present.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"JUD: Welcome to our first Father Jud prayer group, thank you all for being here. And this is all about breaking down walls between us and Christ, us and each other, us and the world. When I was seventeen I was a boxer. I killed a man in the ring. I built up so many walls of anger, addiction, violence. It was only when I felt safe enough to put my dukes down, open my arms, confess my deepest sin, that was the day that Christ saved my life. He didn't transform me, he sustains me, every day it's daily bread right? I think that's what the church should be, that's what I want this church to be for me and all of you."
"MARTHA: I'm so sorry your little coup failed this afternoon, Father. / JUD: My coup Martha? Really? / MARTHA: If we want to pray or need to confess something we can do it with Monsignor Wicks. / JUD: Can you? Cause you all seem scared to death of the guy. Could you walk into that church of your own free will and confess your deepest sin to Wicks, Martha? Without fear? Cause if not, this whole place is a whitewashed tomb. / MARTHA: (defiant) Yes I could."
"CY: I'll probably post it tomorrow, can I tag you? / JUD: I'd prefer you didn't. / CY: I probably will anyway. / JUD: I know."