At the end of the Mass presided over by the Holy Father
at Fatima, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Secretary of State, made this
announcement in Portuguese, which is given here in English
translation:
Brothers and Sisters in the Lord!
At the conclusion of this solemn celebration, I feel bound
to offer our beloved Holy Father Pope John Paul II, on behalf of all
present, heartfelt good wishes for his approaching 80th Birthday and to
thank him for his vital pastoral ministry for the good of all God's Holy
Church; we present the heartfelt wishes of the whole Church.
On this solemn occasion of his visit to Fatima, His Holiness
has directed me to make an announcement to you. As you know, the purpose
of his visit to Fatima has been to beatify the two "little shepherds."
Nevertheless he also wishes his pilgrimage to be a renewed gesture of
gratitude to Our Lady for her protection during these years of his papacy.
This protection seems also to be linked to the so-called third part of the
"secret" of Fatima.
That text contains a prophetic vision similar to those found
in Sacred Scripture, which do not describe photographically the details of
future events, but synthesize and compress against a single background
facts which extend through time in an unspecified succession and duration.
As a result, the text must be interpreted in a symbolic
key.
The vision of Fatima concerns above all the war waged by
atheistic systems against the Church and Christians, and it describes the
immense suffering endured by the witnesses of the faith in the last
century of the second millennium. It is an interminable Way of the
Cross led by the Popes of the twentieth century.
According to the interpretation of the "little shepherds,"
which was also confirmed recently by Sister Lucia, "the Bishop clothed in
white" who prays for all the faithful is the Pope. As he makes his way
with great difficulty towards the Cross amid the corpses of those who were
martyred (Bishops, priests, men and women Religious and many lay people),
he too falls to the ground, apparently dead, under a hail of
gunfire.
After the assassination attempt of 13 May 1981, it appeared
evident that it was "a mother's hand that guided the bullet's path",
enabling "the Pope in his throes" to halt "at the threshold of death"
(Pope John Paul II, Meditation from the Policlinico Gemelli to the
Italian Bishops, Insegnamenti, XVII, 1 [1994], 1061). On the
occasion of a visit to Rome by the then Bishop of Leiria-Fatima, the Pope
decided to give him the bullet which had remained in the jeep after the
assassination attempt, so that it might be kept in the shrine. By the
Bishop's decision, the bullet was later set in the crown of the statue of
Our Lady of Fatima.
The successive events of 1989 led, both in the Soviet Union
and in a number of countries of Eastern Europe, to the fall of the
Communist regimes which promoted atheism. For this too His Holiness offers
heartfelt thanks to the Most Holy Virgin. In other parts of the world,
however, attacks against the Church and against Christians, with the
burden of suffering they bring, tragically continue. Even if the events to
which the third part of the "secret" of Fatima refers now seem part of the
past, Our Lady's call to conversion and penance, issued at the start of
the twentieth century, remains timely and urgent today. "The Lady of the
message seems to read the signs of the times—the signs of our time—with
special insight... The insistent invitation of Mary Most Holy to penance
is nothing but the manifestation of her maternal concern for the fate of
the human family, in need of conversion and forgiveness" (Pope John Paul
II, Message for the 1997 World Day of the Sick, No. 1,
Insegnamenti, XIX, 2 [1996], 561).
In order that the faithful may better receive the message of
Our Lady of Fatima, the Pope has charged the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith with making public the third part of the "secret", after the
preparation of an appropriate commentary.
Brothers and sisters, let us thank Our Lady of Fatima for
her protection. To her maternal intercession let us entrust the Church of
the Third Millennium.
Sub tuum praesidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genetrix!
Intercede pro Ecclesia. Intercede pro Papa nostro Ioanne Paulo II.
Amen.
Fatima, 13 May 2000
(1) From the diary of John XXIII, 17 August 1959:
"Audiences: Father Philippe, Commissary of the Holy Office, who brought me
the letter containing the third part of the secrets of Fatima.I
intend to read it with my Confessor".
(2) The Holy Father's comment at the General Audience of 14
October 1981 on "What happened in May: A Great Divine Trial" should be
recalled: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, IV, 2 (Vatican City,
1981), 409-412.
(3) Radio message during the Ceremony of Veneration,
Thanksgiving and Entrustment to the Virgin Mary Theotokos in the Basilica
of Saint Mary Major: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, IV, 1
(Vatican City, 1981), 1246.
(4) On the Jubilee Day for Families, the Pope entrusted
individuals and nations to Our Lady: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo
II, VII, 1 (Vatican City, 1984), 775-777.
(5)
(6) In the "Fourth Memoir" of 8 December 1941 Sister Lucia
writes: "I shall begin then my new task, and thus fulfil the commands
received from Your Excellency as well as the desires of Dr Galamba. With
the exception of that part of the Secret which I am not permitted to
reveal at present, I shall say everything. I shall not knowingly omit
anything, though I suppose I may forget just a few small details of minor
importance".
(7) In the "Fourth Memoir" Sister Lucia adds: "In Portugal,
the dogma of the faith will always be preserved, etc.
...".
(8) In the translation, the original text has been
respected, even as regards the imprecise punctuation, which nevertheless
does not impede an understanding of what the visionary wished to
say.
He resigned because he is the Catholic Church's greatest living intellectual. He is not designed to put out the fires of corruption. Who knows if he knew it was this bad or not, but he knows it is a great waste of his time. Read his profound comentary below which, as Pope, he had to renounce. It couldn't have been pleasant for him. Imagine giving up your opinions so you can lead the Catholic Church, only to be consumed by the wages of its great sins.
A careful reading of the text of the so-called third
"secret" of Fatima, published here in its entirety long after the fact and
by decision of the Holy Father, will probably prove disappointing or
surprising after all the speculation it has stirred. No great mystery is
revealed; nor is the future unveiled. We see the Church of the martyrs of
the century which has just passed represented in a scene described in a
language which is symbolic and not easy to decipher. Is this what the
Mother of the Lord wished to communicate to Christianity and to humanity
at a time of great difficulty and distress? Is it of any help to us at the
beginning of the new millennium? Or are these only projections of the
inner world of children, brought up in a climate of profound piety but
shaken at the same time by the tempests which threatened their own time?
How should we understand the vision? What are we to make of
it?
Before attempting an interpretation, the main lines of which
can be found in the statement read by Cardinal Sodano on 13 May of this
year at the end of the Mass celebrated by the Holy Father in Fatima, there
is a need for some basic clarification of the way in which, according to
Church teaching, phenomena such as Fatima are to be understood within the
life of faith. The teaching of the Church distinguishes between "public
Revelation" and "private revelations." The two realities differ not only
in degree but also in essence. The term "public Revelation" refers to the
revealing action of God directed to humanity as a whole and which finds
its literary expression in the two parts of the Bible: the Old and New
Testaments. It is called "Revelation" because in it God gradually made
himself known to men, to the point of becoming man himself, in order to
draw to himself the whole world and unite it with himself through his
Incarnate Son, Jesus Christ. It is not a matter therefore of intellectual
communication, but of a life-giving process in which God comes to meet
man. At the same time this process naturally produces data pertaining to
the mind and to the understanding of the mystery of God. It is a process
which involves man in his entirety and therefore reason as well, but not
reason alone.Because God is one, history, which he shares with
humanity, is also one. It is valid for all time, and it has reached its
fulfilment in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. In Christ,
God has said everything, that is, he has revealed himself completely, and
therefore Revelation came to an end with the fulfilment of the mystery of
Christ as enunciated in the New Testament. To explain the finality and
completeness of Revelation, the Catechism of the Catholic Church
quotes a text of Saint John of the Cross: "In giving us his Son, his only
Word (for he possesses no other), he spoke everything to us at once in
this sole Word—and he has no more to say... because what he spoke before
to the prophets in parts, he has now spoken all at once by giving us the
All Who is His Son. Any person questioning God or desiring some vision or
revelation would be guilty not only of foolish behaviour but also of
offending him, by not fixing his eyes entirely upon Christ and by living
with the desire for some other novelty." (No. 65; Saint John of the
Cross,The Ascent of Mount Carmel, II, 22)
Because the single Revelation of God addressed to all
peoples comes to completion with Christ and the witness borne to him in
the books of the New Testament, the Church is tied to this unique event of
sacred history and to the word of the Bible, which guarantees and
interprets it. But this does not mean that the Church can now look only to
the past and that she is condemned to sterile repetition. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church says in this regard: "...even if Revelation is
already complete, it has not been made fully explicit; it remains for
Christian faith gradually to grasp its full significance over the course
of the centuries" (No. 66). The way in which the Church is bound to both
the uniqueness of the event and progress in understanding it is very well
illustrated in the farewell discourse of the Lord when, taking leave of
his disciples, he says: "I have yet many things to say to you, but you
cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you
into all the truth; for he will not speak on his own authority... He will
glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you"
(Jn 16:12-14). On the one hand, the Spirit acts as a guide who
discloses a knowledge previously unreachable because the premise was
missing—this is the boundless breadth and depth of Christian faith. On the
other hand, to be guided by the Spirit is also "to draw from" the riches
of Jesus Christ himself, the inexhaustible depths of which appear in the
way the Spirit leads. In this regard, the Catechism cites profound
words of Pope Gregory the Great: "The sacred Scriptures grow with the one
who reads them" (No. 94; Gregory the Great,Homilia in Ezechielem I,
7, 8). The Second Vatican Council notes three essential ways in which the
Spirit guides in the Church, and therefore three ways in which "the word
grows": through the meditation and study of the faithful, through the deep
understanding which comes from spiritual experience, and through the
preaching of "those who, in the succession of the episcopate, have
received the sure charism of truth." (Dei Verbum, 8)
In this context, it now becomes possible to understand
rightly the concept of "private revelation," which refers to all the
visions and revelations which have taken place since the completion of the
New Testament. This is the category to which we must assign the message of
Fatima. In this respect, let us listen once again to the Catechism of
the Catholic Church: "Throughout the ages, there have been so-called
'private' revelations, some of which have been recognized by the authority
of the Church... It is not their role to complete Christ's definitive
Revelation, but to help live more fully by it in a certain period of
history" (No. 67). This clarifies two things:
1. The authority of private revelations is essentially
different from that of the definitive public Revelation. The latter
demands faith; in it in fact God himself speaks to us through human words
and the mediation of the living community of the Church. Faith in God and
in his word is different from any other human faith, trust or opinion. The
certainty that it is God who is speaking gives me the assurance that I am
in touch with truth itself. It gives me a certitude which is beyond
verification by any human way of knowing. It is the certitude upon which I
build my life and to which I entrust myself in
dying.
2. Private revelation is a help to this faith, and shows its
credibility precisely by leading me back to the definitive public
Revelation. In this regard, Cardinal Prospero Lambertini, the future Pope
Benedict XIV, says in his classic treatise, which later became normative
for beatifications and canonizations: "An assent of Catholic faith is not
due to revelations approved in this way; it is not even possible. These
revelations seek rather an assent of human faith in keeping with the
requirements of prudence, which puts them before us as probable and
credible to piety." The Flemish theologian E. Dhanis, an eminent scholar
in this field, states succinctly that ecclesiastical approval of a private
revelation has three elements: the message contains nothing contrary to
faith or morals; it is lawful to make it public; and the faithful are
authorized to accept it with prudence (E. Dhanis,Sguardo su Fatima e
bilancio di una discussione, in La Civiltà Cattolica 104
[1953], II, 392-406, in particular 397). Such a message can be a genuine
help in understanding the Gospel and living it better at a particular
moment in time; therefore it should not be disregarded. It is a help which
is offered, but which one is not obliged to use.
The criterion for the truth and value of a private
revelation is therefore its orientation to Christ himself. When it leads
us away from him, when it becomes independent of him or even presents
itself as another and better plan of salvation, more important than the
Gospel, then it certainly does not come from the Holy Spirit, who guides
us more deeply into the Gospel and not away from it. This does not mean
that a private revelation will not offer new emphases or give rise to new
devotional forms, or deepen and spread older forms. But in all of this
there must be a nurturing of faith, hope and love, which are the
unchanging path to salvation for everyone. We might add that private
revelations often spring from popular piety and leave their stamp on it,
giving it a new impulse and opening the way for new forms of it. Nor does
this exclude that they will have an effect even on the liturgy, as we see
for instance in the feasts of Corpus Christi and of the Sacred
Heart of Jesus. From one point of view, the relationship between
Revelation and private revelations appears in the relationship between the
liturgy and popular piety: the liturgy is the criterion, it is the living
form of the Church as a whole, fed directly by the Gospel. Popular piety
is a sign that the faith is spreading its roots into the heart of a people
in such a way that it reaches into daily life. Popular religiosity is the
first and fundamental mode of "inculturation" of the faith. While it must
always take its lead and direction from the liturgy, it in turn enriches
the faith by involving the heart.
We have thus moved from the somewhat negative
clarifications, initially needed, to a positive definition of private
revelations. How can they be classified correctly in relation to
Scripture? To which theological category do they belong? The oldest letter
of Saint Paul which has been preserved, perhaps the oldest of the New
Testament texts, the First Letter to the Thessalonians, seems to me to
point the way.The Apostle says: "Do not quench the Spirit, do not
despise prophesying, but test everything, holding fast to what is good"
(5:19-21). In every age the Church has received the charism of prophecy,
which must be scrutinized but not scorned. On this point, it should be
kept in mind that prophecy in the biblical sense does not mean to predict
the future but to explain the will of God for the present, and therefore
show the right path to take for the future. A person who foretells what is
going to happen responds to the curiosity of the mind, which wants to draw
back the veil on the future. The prophet speaks to the blindness of will
and of reason, and declares the will of God as an indication and demand
for the present time. In this case, prediction of the future is of
secondary importance. What is essential is the actualization of the
definitive Revelation, which concerns me at the deepest level. The
prophetic word is a warning or a consolation, or both together. In this
sense there is a link between the charism of prophecy and the category of
"the signs of the times", which Vatican II brought to light anew: "You
know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky; why then do you not
know how to interpret the present time?" (Lk 12:56). In this saying
of Jesus, the "signs of the times" must be understood as the path he was
taking, indeed it must be understood as Jesus himself. To interpret the
signs of the times in the light of faith means to recognize the presence
of Christ in every age. In the private revelations approved by the
Church—and therefore also in Fatima—this is the point: they help us to
understand the signs of the times and to respond to them rightly in
faith.
In these reflections we have sought so far to identify the
theological status of private revelations. Before undertaking an
interpretation of the message of Fatima, we must still attempt briefly to
offer some clarification of their anthropological (psychological)
character. In this field, theological anthropology distinguishes three
forms of perception or "vision": vision with the senses, and hence
exterior bodily perception, interior perception, and spiritual vision
(visio sensibilis - imaginativa - intellectualis). It is clear that
in the visions of Lourdes, Fatima and other places it is not a question of
normal exterior perception of the senses: the images and forms which are
seen are not located spatially, as is the case for example with a tree or
a house. This is perfectly obvious, for instance, as regards the vision of
hell (described in the first part of the Fatima "secret") or even the
vision described in the third part of the "secret." But the same can be
very easily shown with regard to other visions, especially since not
everybody present saw them, but only the "visionaries." It is also clear
that it is not a matter of a "vision" in the mind, without images, as
occurs at the higher levels of mysticism. Therefore we are dealing with
the middle category, interior perception. For the visionary, this
perception certainly has the force of a presence, equivalent for that
person to an external manifestation to the senses.
Interior vision does not mean fantasy, which would be no
more than an expression of the subjective imagination. It means rather
that the soul is touched by something real, even if beyond the senses. It
is rendered capable of seeing that which is beyond the senses, that which
cannot be seen—seeing by means of the "interior senses." It involves true
"objects," which touch the soul, even if these "objects" do not belong to
our habitual sensory world. This is why there is a need for an interior
vigilance of the heart, which is usually precluded by the intense pressure
of external reality and of the images and thoughts which fill the soul.
The person is led beyond pure exteriority and is touched by deeper
dimensions of reality, which become visible to him. Perhaps this explains
why children tend to be the ones to receive these apparitions: their souls
are as yet little disturbed, their interior powers of perception are still
not impaired. "On the lips of children and of babes you have found
praise," replies Jesus with a phrase of Psalm 8 (v. 3) to the criticism of
the High Priests and elders, who had judged the children's cries of
"hosanna" inappropriate (cf. Mt 21:16).
"Interior vision" is not fantasy but, as we have said, a
true and valid means of verification. But it also has its limitations.
Even in exterior vision the subjective element is always present. We do
not see the pure object, but it comes to us through the filter of our
senses, which carry out a work of translation. This is still more evident
in the case of interior vision, especially when it involves realities
which in themselves transcend our horizon. The subject, the visionary, is
still more powerfully involved. He sees insofar as he is able, in the
modes of representation and consciousness available to him. In the case of
interior vision, the process of translation is even more extensive than in
exterior vision, for the subject shares in an essential way in the
formation of the image of what appears. He can arrive at the image only
within the bounds of his capacities and possibilities. Such visions
therefore are never simple "photographs" of the other world, but are
influenced by the potentialities and limitations of the perceiving
subject.
This can be demonstrated in all the great visions of the
saints; and naturally it is also true of the visions of the children at
Fatima. The images described by them are by no means a simple expression
of their fantasy, but the result of a real perception of a higher and
interior origin. But neither should they be thought of as if for a moment
the veil of the other world were drawn back, with heaven appearing in its
pure essence, as one day we hope to see it in our definitive union with
God.Rather the images are, in a manner of speaking, a synthesis of
the impulse coming from on high and the capacity to receive this impulse
in the visionaries, that is, the children. For this reason, the figurative
language of the visions is symbolic. In this regard, Cardinal Sodano
stated: "[they] do not describe photographically the details of future
events, but synthesize and compress against a single background facts
which extend through time in an unspecified succession and duration". This
compression of time and place in a single image is typical of such
visions, which for the most part can be deciphered only in retrospect. Not
every element of the vision has to have a specific historical sense. It is
the vision as a whole that matters, and the details must be understood on
the basis of the images taken in their entirety. The central element of
the image is revealed where it coincides with what is the focal point of
Christian "prophecy" itself: the centre is found where the vision becomes
a summons and a guide to the will of God.
The first and second parts of the "secret" of Fatima have
already been so amply discussed in the relative literature that there is
no need to deal with them again here. I would just like to recall briefly
the most significant point. For one terrible moment, the children were
given a vision of hell. They saw the fall of "the souls of poor sinners."
And now they are told why they have been exposed to this moment: "in order
to save souls"—to show the way to salvation. The words of the First Letter
of Peter come to mind: "As the outcome of your faith you obtain the
salvation of your souls" (1:9). To reach this goal, the way indicated
—surprisingly for people from the Anglo-Saxon and German cultural world—is
devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. A brief comment may suffice to
explain this. In biblical language, the "heart" indicates the centre of
human life, the point where reason, will, temperament and sensitivity
converge, where the person finds his unity and his interior
orientation.According to Matthew 5:8, the "immaculate heart" is a
heart which, with God's grace, has come to perfect interior unity and
therefore "sees God." To be "devoted" to the Immaculate Heart of Mary
means therefore to embrace this attitude of heart, which makes the
fiat—"your will be done"—the defining centre of one's whole life.
It might be objected that we should not place a human being between
ourselves and Christ. But then we remember that Paul did not hesitate to
say to his communities: "imitate me" (1 Cor 4:16; Phil 3:17;
1 Th 1:6; 2 Th 3:7, 9). In the Apostle they could see
concretely what it meant to follow Christ.But from whom might we
better learn in every age than from the Mother of the
Lord?
Thus we come finally to the third part of the "secret" of
Fatima which for the first time is being published in its entirety. As is
clear from the documentation presented here, the interpretation offered by
Cardinal Sodano in his statement of 13 May was first put personally to
Sister Lucia. Sister Lucia responded by pointing out that she had received
the vision but not its interpretation. The interpretation, she said,
belonged not to the visionary but to the Church. After reading the text,
however, she said that this interpretation corresponded to what she had
experienced and that on her part she thought the interpretation correct.
In what follows, therefore, we can only attempt to provide a deeper
foundation for this interpretation, on the basis of the criteria already
considered.
"To save souls" has emerged as the key word of the first and
second parts of the "secret," and the key word of this third part is the
threefold cry: "Penance, Penance, Penance!" The beginning of the Gospel
comes to mind: "Repent and believe the Good News" (Mk 1:15). To
understand the signs of the times means to accept the urgency of penance –
of conversion – of faith. This is the correct response to this moment of
history, characterized by the grave perils outlined in the images that
follow. Allow me to add here a personal recollection: in a conversation
with me Sister Lucia said that it appeared ever more clearly to her that
the purpose of all the apparitions was to help people to grow more and
more in faith, hope and love—everything else was intended to lead to
this.
Let us now examine more closely the single images. The angel
with the flaming sword on the left of the Mother of God recalls similar
images in the Book of Revelation. This represents the threat of judgement
which looms over the world. Today the prospect that the world might be
reduced to ashes by a sea of fire no longer seems pure fantasy: man
himself, with his inventions, has forged the flaming sword. The vision
then shows the power which stands opposed to the force of destruction—the
splendour of the Mother of God and, stemming from this in a certain way,
the summons to penance. In this way, the importance of human freedom is
underlined: the future is not in fact unchangeably set, and the image
which the children saw is in no way a film preview of a future in which
nothing can be changed. Indeed, the whole point of the vision is to bring
freedom onto the scene and to steer freedom in a positive direction. The
purpose of the vision is not to show a film of an irrevocably fixed
future. Its meaning is exactly the opposite: it is meant to mobilize the
forces of change in the right direction. Therefore we must totally
discount fatalistic explanations of the "secret," such as, for example,
the claim that the would-be assassin of 13 May 1981 was merely an
instrument of the divine plan guided by Providence and could not therefore
have acted freely, or other similar ideas in circulation. Rather, the
vision speaks of dangers and how we might be saved from
them.
The next phrases of the text show very clearly once again
the symbolic character of the vision: God remains immeasurable, and is the
light which surpasses every vision of ours. Human persons appear as in a
mirror. We must always keep in mind the limits in the vision itself, which
here are indicated visually.The future appears only "in a mirror
dimly" (1 Cor 13:12). Let us now consider the individual images
which follow in the text of the "secret." The place of the action is
described in three symbols: a steep mountain, a great city reduced to
ruins and finally a large rough-hewn cross. The mountain and city
symbolize the arena of human history: history as an arduous ascent to the
summit, history as the arena of human creativity and social harmony, but
at the same time a place of destruction, where man actually destroys the
fruits of his own work. The city can be the place of communion and
progress, but also of danger and the most extreme menace. On the mountain
stands the cross—the goal and guide of history. The cross transforms
destruction into salvation; it stands as a sign of history's misery but
also as a promise for history.
At this point human persons appear: the Bishop dressed in
white ("we had the impression that it was the Holy Father"), other
Bishops, priests, men and women Religious, and men and women of different
ranks and social positions. The Pope seems to precede the others,
trembling and suffering because of all the horrors around him. Not only do
the houses of the city lie half in ruins, but he makes his way among the
corpses of the dead.The Church's path is thus described as a Via
Crucis, as a journey through a time of violence, destruction and
persecution. The history of an entire century can be seen represented in
this image. Just as the places of the earth are synthetically described in
the two images of the mountain and the city, and are directed towards the
cross, so too time is presented in a compressed way. In the vision we can
recognize the last century as a century of martyrs, a century of suffering
and persecution for the Church, a century of World Wars and the many local
wars which filled the last fifty years and have inflicted unprecedented
forms of cruelty. In the "mirror" of this vision we see passing before us
the witnesses of the faith decade by decade. Here it would be appropriate
to mention a phrase from the letter which Sister Lucia wrote to the Holy
Father on 12 May 1982: "The third part of the 'secret' refers to Our
Lady's words: 'If not, [Russia] will spread her errors throughout the
world, causing wars and persecutions of the Church. The good will be
martyred; the Holy Father will have much to suffer; various nations will
be annihilated.'"
In the Via Crucis of an entire century, the figure of
the Pope has a special role. In his arduous ascent of the mountain we can
undoubtedly see a convergence of different Popes.Beginning from Pius
X up to the present Pope, they all shared the sufferings of the century
and strove to go forward through all the anguish along the path which
leads to the Cross. In the vision, the Pope too is killed along with the
martyrs. When, after the attempted assassination on 13 May 1981, the Holy
Father had the text of the third part of the "secret" brought to him, was
it not inevitable that he should see in it his own fate?He had been
very close to death, and he himself explained his survival in the
following words: "... it was a mother's hand that guided the bullet's path
and in his throes the Pope halted at the threshold of death" (13 May
1994). That here "a mother's hand" had deflected the fateful bullet only
shows once more that there is no immutable destiny, that faith and prayer
are forces which can influence history and that in the end prayer is more
powerful than bullets and faith more powerful than
armies.
The concluding part of the "secret" uses images which Lucia
may have seen in devotional books and which draw their inspiration from
long-standing intuitions of faith. It is a consoling vision, which seeks
to open a history of blood and tears to the healing power of God. Beneath
the arms of the cross angels gather up the blood of the martyrs, and with
it they give life to the souls making their way to God. Here, the blood of
Christ and the blood of the martyrs are considered as one: the blood of
the martyrs runs down from the arms of the cross. The martyrs die in
communion with the Passion of Christ, and their death becomes one with
his. For the sake of the body of Christ, they complete what is still
lacking in his afflictions (cf. Col 1:24). Their life has itself
become a Eucharist, part of the mystery of the grain of wheat which in
dying yields abundant fruit. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of
Christians, said Tertullian. As from Christ's death, from his wounded
side, the Church was born, so the death of the witnesses is fruitful for
the future life of the Church. Therefore, the vision of the third part of
the "secret," so distressing at first, concludes with an image of hope: no
suffering is in vain, and it is a suffering Church, a Church of martyrs,
which becomes a sign-post for man in his search for God. The loving arms
of God welcomenot only those who suffer like Lazarus, who found
great solace there and mysteriously represents Christ, who wished to
become for us the poor Lazarus. There is something more: from the
suffering of the witnesses there comes a purifying and renewing power,
because their suffering is the actualization of the suffering of Christ
himself and a communication in the here and now of its saving
effect.
And so we come to the final question: What is the meaning of
the "secret" of Fatima as a whole (in its three parts)? What does it say
to us? First of all we must affirm with Cardinal Sodano: "... the events
to which the third part of the 'secret' of Fatima refers now seem part of
the past." Insofar as individual events are described, they belong to the
past. Those who expected exciting apocalyptic revelations about the end of
the world or the future course of history are bound to be disappointed.
Fatima does not satisfy our curiosity in this way, just as Christian faith
in general cannot be reduced to an object of mere curiosity. What remains
was already evident when we began our reflections on the text of the
"secret": the exhortation to prayer as the path of "salvation for souls"
and, likewise, the summons to penance and
conversion.
I would like finally to mention another key expression of
the "secret" which has become justly famous: "my Immaculate Heart will
triumph." What does this mean? The Heart open to God, purified by
contemplation of God, is stronger than guns and weapons of every kind. The
fiat of Mary, the word of her heart, has changed the history of the
world, because it brought the Saviour into the world—because, thanks to
her Yes, God could become man in our world and remains so for all
time. The Evil One has power in this world, as we see and experience
continually; he has power because our freedom continually lets itself be
led away from God. But since God himself took a human heart and has thus
steered human freedom towards what is good, the freedom to choose evil no
longer has the last word. From that time forth, the word that prevails is
this: "In the world you will have tribulation, but take heart; I have
overcome the world" (Jn 16:33). The message of Fatima invites us to
trust in this promise.
Joseph Card. Ratzinger (Bendict, Pope Emeritus)
Page 1 - White Light in the Mirror | Immaculate Conception Copyright Notice - Disk of the World - Text and images copyrighted March 21, 1993-2023, Claire Grace Watson, B.A., M.S.T., U.S. Copyright and under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, All rights reserved.
Commentary on the Third Secret
Theological Commentary
Prefect of the
Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith
Cape of Juan Diego
Page 2 - Where She Appears, What She Wears
Prophecies at Akita, Japan | Update from the Pope
Page 3 - Words of the Virgin at Fatima
Prophecies at Kibeho, Rwanda
Medugorje, Bosnia Prophecies
First and Second Part of the "Secret"
Third Part of the "Secret"
Page 4 - Announcement by the Cardinal
Why Pope Benedict Resigned