But Fatima’s message did not come in isolation. In fact, I believe there is a divine thread that ties it together with another event—one that took place exactly 33 years earlier, on October 13, 1884.
On that day, Pope Leo XIII, after finishing Mass in the Vatican, fell into a trance-like state. Witnesses reported that he stood frozen at the foot of the altar for about ten minutes. When he recovered, he was visibly shaken. He later recounted that he had been granted a terrifying vision: he had seen Satan asking God for permission to destroy the Church. The Lord allowed him a certain amount of time and power—after which, Our Lady would intervene. In response to this, Pope Leo XIII composed the Prayer to St. Michael the Archangel and ordered it to be said after every Low Mass throughout the world.
The connection between these two events—Leo XIII’s vision and the apparitions of Fatima—is striking. One could say that they mark the beginning and end of a prophetic warning: a century-long battle between Heaven and hell, with the fate of countless souls hanging in the balance.
A Time of Crisis… and a Time of Hope
Since those two monumental events, we have seen the rapid advance of secularism, wars, moral collapse, and a tragic division within the Church. The cultural revolution of the 20th century, the loss of belief in the Real Presence, the spread of doctrinal confusion, and the weakening of religious vocations have left deep scars. Evil has grown bolder, and many of the faithful have grown weary.
And yet, just when it seemed that darkness was gaining the upper hand, a new light has begun to shine—Pope Leo XIV.
The Rise of Pope Leo XIV
His rise to the papacy has been nothing short of extraordinary:
- Ordained a priest in 1982
- Consecrated a bishop in 2014
- Created a cardinal in 2023
- Elected Pope on April 7, 2025, the Feast of the Apparition of St. Michael the Archangel and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mediatrix of all Graces.
From an unknown diocesan bishop to the Supreme Pontiff in barely a decade—a pace and path rarely seen in Church history. And his election, falling on the feast of St. Michael, the great defender of the Church, along with the Blessed Virgin Mary Mediatrix of All Graces, cannot be mere coincidence. It is as if Heaven is once again sending a signal: the battle continues, but God is not abandoning His Church.
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