Between May 13 and October 13, 1917, three Portuguese children
received apparitions of Our Lady at Cova da Iria, near Fatima, a city
110 miles north of Lisbon. (See February 20 entry for Blesseds Jacinta
and Francisco Marto). Mary asked the children to pray the rosary for
world peace, for the end of World War I, for sinners and for the
conversion of Russia. The third visionary, Lucia dos Santos, became a
Carmelite nun and died in 2005 at the age of 97.
Mary gave the children three secrets. Since Francisco died in
1919 and Jacinta the following year, Lucia revealed the first secret in
1927, concerning devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The second
secret was a vision of hell.
Pope John Paul II directed the Holy
See's Secretary of State to reveal the third secret in 2000; it spoke of
a "bishop in white" who was shot by a group of soldiers who fired
bullets and arrows into him. Many people linked this to the
assassination attempt against Saint John Paul II in St. Peter's Square
on May 13, 1981.
The feast of Our Lady of Fatima was approved by
the local bishop in 1930; it was added to the Church's worldwide
calendar in 2002.
Comment: The message of Fatima is simple: Pray. Unfortunately,
some people—not Sister Lucia—have distorted these revelations, making
them into an apocalyptic event for which they are now the only reliable
interpreters. They have, for example, claimed that Mary's request that
the world be consecrated to her has been ignored. Sister Lucia agreed
that Pope John Paul II's public consecration in St. Peter's Square on
March 25, 1984, fulfilled Mary's request. The Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith prepared a June 26, 2000 document explaining the
“third secret” (available at www.vatican.va).
Mary is perfectly honored when people generously imitate her
response “Let it be done to me as you say” (Luke 1:38). Mary can never
be seen as a rival to Jesus or to the Church's teaching authority, as
exercised by the college of bishops united with the bishop of Rome.
Quote: “Throughout history there have been
supernatural apparitions and signs which go to the heart of human events
and which, to the surprise of believers and non-believers alike, play
their part in the unfolding of history. These manifestations can never
contradict the content of faith and must, therefore, have their focus in
the core of Christ's proclamation: the Father's love which leads men
and women to conversion and bestows the grace required to abandon
oneself to him with filial devotion. This too is the message of Fatima
which, with its urgent call to conversion and penance, draws us to the
heart of the Gospel” (The Message of Fatima, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, June 26, 2000). |
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