
Midnight Mass (part three)
The dead consuming the living, an inverse of the natural process of decomposition. The old consuming the young, an inverse of the natural process of childbirth and parenting. They come out at night, when the sun is asleep, God isn't looking, and the natural order can be challenged. When children are found missing the next dawn, it's a victory of the night over the day, the past over the future, that which should be dead over that which should have gotten to live.

Midnight Mass (part two)
The old priest, Father Pruitt, is not in the hospital. He did not fall ill during his Israel trip, at least not precisely.

Midnight Mass (part one)
After watching the first episode, I was surprised to learn that this wasn't an actual Stephen King project.