While
the media focus was on Pope Francis and the centenary celebrations of
the miraculous apparitions at Fátima,
a Vatican-sponsored academic conference was debating more scientific
celestial goings-on.
Before getting on to revelations about the papal
interest in cosmology and astrophysics, let’s recap on the more
down-to-earth issues.
Over
the past one hundred years, the global expansion and enduring
strength of devotion to ‘Our Lady Fátima’ has been steeped
in ironies, paradoxes and allegations of what is now popularly called
‘fake news’.
On
3rd May 1917 three children tending sheep in a remote field in
central Portugal claimed to have witnessed an apparition of someone
they took to be the Blessed Virgin Mary. Even close relatives,
including the mother of the principal visionary, accused them of
lying.
Inconceivable
though it was a hundred years ago, Pope Francis came to the very same
spot to make two of the visionaries saints and join an estimated
million pilgrims from many countries in prayers that were streamed
live on computers and iPhones around the word.
Strange
as it may seem, the name of what has become one of Christendom’s
most famous places of pilgrimage takes after a daughter of the
Islamic Prophet Muhammad.
Soon
after the creation of the Kingdom of Portugal in the 12th century, a
Christian knight is said to have kidnapped a Moorish princess called
Fátima and taken her to a village in the hills near the
present town bearing her name. Fatima fell in love with her kidnapper
and they married, but not before she had converted from Islam to
Christianity.
Whether
this romantic tale is entirely true or not is neither here nor there
compared to the loathing of the growing number of Fátima
faithful clearly expressed in 1917 by a Portuguese republican
government hell-bent on eradicating religion from the country.
Half
a century later. severe criticism began to be levelled at the Vatican
hierarchy from within the Catholic Church itself. Traditionalist
Catholics have concluded that following the reforms of the Second
Vatican Council introduced in the1960s all of the popes have been
heretics.
Traditionalists
also denounced the Vatican’s explanation in the year 2000 of the
long-withheld text on the so-called “Third Secret” as a
‘cover-up’ of the true apocalyptic meaning of ‘Our Lady of
Fátima’s message’.
The
‘Second Secret’ of Fátima is generally accepted as a
warning of another world war if Our Lady of Fátima's request
to ‘consecrate’ Russia was not carried out. During the First
World War, the 1917 Russian Revolution turned the country into a
communist republic, the precursor of the Soviet Union.
The
act of consecration to “the immaculate heart of the Blessed Virgin
Mary” was never properly carried out, according to some
traditionalists. It was more evidence, they said, that the Vatican
was under heretical control.
Coincidental or not, Russia now seems to be trying to
assert control and spread propaganda and political chaos
internationally as it did in 1917. It
was Russia’s meddling in the last U.S. presidential election that
sparked the FBI investigation and subsequent turmoil over Donald
Trump’s ties with Russia.
One
way or another, allegations of lies, conspiracies, misinformation and
fake news are being bandied about today as they have been at least
since 1917.
None
of this fazed the vast number of pilgrims at the Shrine of Fátima,
united in their devotion to the Virgin Mary, who has been described
by Pope Francis as “the Mother of hope”.
Meanwhile – and here’s the rub – scientists from
around the world were attending a conference hosted by the Vatican
at its observatory near Rome to discuss “Black Holes, Gravitational
Waves and Space-Time Singularities”.
The idea is to dispel conflict between faith and science
while we all continue to search for truth in understanding the
mysteries of the universe.
If you haven’t heard of this conference you might be
scratching your head, but it is NOT fake news. It is possible for
scientists to take miracles seriously, especially the famous ‘Miracle
of the Sun’ at Fátima. The Catholic Herald newspaper
quoted a former particle physicist as saying, “Why not?”
The
paper added: “Contrary to a common prejudice, a scientific
perspective does not rule out miracles, and the event at Fátima
is, in the view of many, particularly credible”.