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The anthropological structure of private revelations
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.
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