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“The Message of Fatima imposes an obligation on the
church”.
… Pope John Paul II
What is a
“consecration”?
It is a ceremony by which a person, group of
persons, or thing is set apart as sacred and dedicated to the service of
God or another sacred purpose.
What is
meant by “the consecration of Russia to the Immaculate Heart of
Mary”?
At Fatima, on July 13, 1917, Our Lady told
Sister Lucy that “God is about to punish the world for its crimes, by
means of war, famine, and persecutions of the Church, and of the Holy
Father. To prevent this, I shall come to ask for the Communions of
reparation and for the consecration of Russia to My Immaculate Heart ...
In the end, My Immaculate Heart will triumph. The Holy Father will
consecrate Russia to Me, which will be converted, and a period of peace
will be granted to the world.”
Our Lady’s request is
very simple: Russia—the fount of so much evil in the 20th Century—must be
set apart and made sacred by its consecration to the Mother of God.
Why is it necessary to consecrate
Russia in particular?
Because God wills it. As Our Lady told
Sister Lucy at Fatima: “Russia will be the instrument of chastisement
chosen by Heaven to punish the whole world if we do not beforehand obtain
the conversion of that poor nation ...”
And as Sister Lucy
disclosed in her published memoirs and letters, Our Lord Himself confided
to her that He would not convert Russia unless the consecration were done,
“Because I want My whole Church to recognize that consecration as a
triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, so that it may extend its cult
later on, and put the devotion to this Immaculate Heart beside the
devotion to My Sacred Heart.” Sister Lucy has explained that because
Russia is a well-defined territory, the conversion of Russia after its
consecration to the Immaculate Heart would be undeniable proof that the
conversion resulted from the consecration and nothing else. The
establishment in the world of devotion to the Immaculate Heart would thus
be confirmed by God Himself in the most dramatic manner.
And what if the consecration of Russia is not
done?
At Fatima, Our Lady warned that if the
consecration were not done as She requested, then “Russia will spread its
errors throughout the world, raising up wars and persecutions against the
Church. The good will be martyred, the Holy Father will have much to
suffer, and various nations will be annihilated.” By the same token, the
miraculous conversion of Russia after its consecration by the Pope and the
bishops, and the resulting peace in the world, will be a sign of the power
of God’s grace acting through ministers of His Church and the intercession
of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
How
exactly is this consecration supposed to be accomplished?
True to Her word at Fatima,
Our Lady appeared to Sister Lucy at Tuy, Spain, on June 13, 1929, to say
that: “The moment has come when God asks the Holy Father to make, in union
with all the bishops of the world, the consecration of Russia to My
Immaculate Heart, promising to save it by this means.” The phrase “by this
means” is crucial, because it signifies that the consecration is not
merely a symbol of the coming conversion of Russia, but the very means by
which it will be accomplished. Thus, without the act of consecration there
will be no conversion of Russia, and without the conversion of Russia,
Russia’s errors will continue to infest the world, producing the
persecution of the Church, the martyrdom of the good, the suffering of the
Holy Father and ultimately the annihilation of nations forewarned at
Fatima.
Over the ensuing decades,
Sister Lucy has explained time and again that the act of consecration
requires that the Pope “choose a date upon which His Holiness commands the
bishops of the entire world to make, each in his own Cathedral, and at the
same time as the Pope, a solemn and public ceremony of Reparation and
consecration of Russia ...”
But isn’t
Fatima just a private apparition no Catholic has to believe?
Far from it. The apparitions
at Fatima were confirmed by a public miracle witnessed by 70,000
people—the Miracle of the Sun. Pope John Paul II himself declared at
Fatima in 1982 that the Message of Fatima “imposes an obligation on the
Church”, and he publicly attributed to Our Lady of Fatima his escape from
death in the assassination attempt of May 13, 1981—the very anniversary of
Our Lady of Fatima.
In fact, the Pope himself
has twice attempted to perform the consecration (May 13, 1982 and March
25, 1984), although Russia was not mentioned on either occasion, and the
bishops of the world did not participate. These attempts demonstrate that
the Pope himself recognizes an obligation to consecrate Russia, even if he
has not yet been able to accomplish a consecration in the manner specified
by Our Lady: a solemn public ceremony, mentioning Russia specifically, and
involving all of the world’s bishops. Yet Our Lady Herself has promised us
that this event will ultimately occur.
Didn’t the Pope succeed in performing the consecration of Russia in
1984?
No. As Sister Lucy herself declared in a
September 1985 interview, the attempted consecration of March 25, 1984,
did not satisfy Our Lady’s requests because “there was no participation of
the bishops and there was no mention of Russia.” In consecrating the world
in general on that date without mentioning Russia, the Holy Father himself
acknowledged in the presence of tens of thousands of witnesses, both
during and after the ceremony, that the people of Russia were still
“awaiting our consecration and confiding.” The next day these statements
were reported in the Pope’s own newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, and the
Italian Bishops’ publication, L’Avvenire.
Wasn’t the consecration of the world by the Pope in
1984 enough to fulfill Our Lady’s request?
No. For her entire life since the
apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima, Sister Lucy has insisted that Russia
must be specifically mentioned.
For example, in a 1978
interview with her confidant, Father Umberto Pasquale, and in a letter to
Father Pasquale in 1980, Sister Lucy was asked the question: “Has Our Lady
ever spoken to you about the consecration of the world?” During the
interview, Sister Lucy answered:
“No, Father Umberto!
Never! At the Cova da Iria in 1917 Our Lady promised: ‘I shall come to ask
for the consecration of Russia ...’ In 1929, at Tuy, as She had promised,
Our Lady came to tell me that the moment had come to ask the Holy Father
for the consecration of that country.”
And, in the 1980 letter
(dated April 13 of that year), Sister Lucy confirmed what she had said in
the interview, stating in her own handwriting that “Our Lady of Fatima, in
Her request, referred only to the consecration of Russia.” Both the 1978
interview and the 1980 letter (photographically reproduced) were published
in the May 12, 1982, Italian edition of L’Osservatore Romano.
Does
not our own common sense tell us that if Our Lady of Fatima requested the
consecration of Russia, then Russia must at least be mentioned in the act
of consecration? We might also reasonably ask what possible reason there
could be for not uttering one simple word—Russia—in the act of
consecrating Russia. No explanation has ever been given for this
mysterious omission in the attempted consecrations of 1982 and 1984..
But doesn’t the “collapse of Communism”
after the 1984 consecration ceremony show that Russia is beginning to
convert and that the consecration must have been effective, despite its
failure to mention Russia?
Hardly. In 1997 Russia enacted legislation
which discriminates against the Catholic Church and in favor of Russian
Orthodoxy, Judaism, Islam and Buddhism. Catholic parishes are required to
apply for an annual “registration” which can be revoked at will by any
local bureaucrat, while priests and nuns are given only three-month visas
which cannot be renewed. The Vatican has condemned the new law as a great
setback for the Church in Russia.
In all of Russia today
there are some 300,000 Catholics—fewer than there were in 1917, the same
year Our Lady came to Fatima and promised the ultimate conversion of
Russia, which has yet to occur. The Russian Revolution, which has been
exported in various forms to other nations, confirms Our Lady’s prophecy
of the spread of Russia’s errors throughout the world. Today Muslims
outnumber Catholics ten-to-one in Russia. Compare this with the true
miracle of conversion which occurred after the apparition of Our Lady of
Guadalupe in Mexico in the 16th Century: within nine years some 9 million
Aztecs turned from devil-worship and human sacrifice and were converted
and baptized as Catholics. Yet in Russia today, more than 14 years after
the supposed “consecration” of 1984, we see barely a trickle of converts,
and fewer Russian Catholics overall than there were 80 years ago!
Even
the Russian Orthodox patriarch, Alexi II, publicly admitted on December
24, 1998, that since the supposed “fall of communism” in Russia, Christian
culture “is not only being pushed into the background and oblivion, but is
also being mocked and ridiculed ... as something extinct and unnecessary.”
Alexi also decried the “rise of neo-paganism ... totalitarian sects, black
magic practitioners, astrologers, and occultists” in “post-communist”
Russia.
Meanwhile, Boris Yeltsin
has been forced to cede power to the Communist-dominated Russian
parliament, and his new prime minister, the former head of the dreaded
KGB, has placed Communists in control of the entire Russian economy,
producing what even the liberal NY Times has called “a shift to the left”
and a return to Soviet-style government.
Most telling of all:
Since the “consecration” of 1984, more than 600 million children have been
slaughtered in the womb around the world—including Russia, where legalized
abortion began. The war on the unborn is the greatest war in the history
of the world. Thus, it should be obvious to anyone with common sense that
the period of peace promised by Our Lady if Russia were properly
consecrated has yet to occur.
The conversion of Russia
promised by Our Lady of Fatima has simply not happened. This can only mean
that the consecration has not been done, for Our Lady’s promises cannot be
false.
Isn’t it too late for the
consecration of Russia anyway, since Russia’s errors have already spread
throughout the world?
No! As Our Lord Himself confided to Sister
Lucy at Rianjo in August of 1931: “They did not wish to heed My request!
... Like the King of France, they will repent of it, and they will do it,
but it will be late. Russia will already have spread its errors in the
world ...”
So the consecration will
ultimately be done, and, as Our Lady promised at Fatima, “In the end, My
Immaculate Heart will triumph. The Holy Father will consecrate Russia to
Me, which will be converted, and a period of peace will be given to
mankind.” Our Lord Himself confided to Sister Lucy, regarding the
consecration, that “It is never too late to have recourse to Jesus and
Mary.”
What is so urgent about the
consecration now?
As Our Lady warned at Fatima: “If My
requests are not granted, Russia will spread its errors throughout the
world, raising up wars and persecutions against the Church. The good will
be martyred, the Holy Father will have much to suffer, and various nations
will be annihilated.”
We have yet to witness
the annihilation of nations foretold at Fatima. Must we wait until it
happens before we finally do exactly what Our Lady commanded us to do in
God’s name? In view of the accelerating decline of morality and the
disintegration of social order around the world, simple prudence should
tell us that we cannot delay even one moment longer the consecration of
Russia, and only Russia, to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
But if the Pope feels he has done the consecration,
what right does anyone have to question him?
The Pope has never publicly stated to all
the members of the Church that he has performed the consecration of Russia
to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. On the contrary, the Pope’s words as
quoted in L’Osservatore Romano demonstrate that he knows the consecration
has yet to be done. In view of this, the faithful have every right to
petition their Pope for the definitive consecration of Russia. In fact,
the God-given right of the faithful to petition the Supreme Pontiff in
matters affecting the good of the Church was infallibly defined as
Catholic doctrine by two ecumenical councils: Vatican I (1870) and the
Second Council of Lyon (1274), and is also guaranteed by the current Code
of Canon Law (Canon 212).
The good of the Church
and the safety of the whole world demand absolute certainty that the
requests of Our Lady of Fatima have been carried out. The matter will be
settled only when the definitive consecration is performed, or when the
Pope declares in an official, binding way to the whole Church that he has
already performed the consecration in a manner sufficient to satisfy Our
Lady’s requests. Neither event has occurred, and therefore the matter
remains open to free discussion and petitions by the faithful, who have
every right to address a matter of such obvious importance for the Church
and the world.
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