POSTFACE - THE FIRST SIGNS OF A COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARY
REBIRTH
The following excerpts are taken from an article written for the 100th
anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady in Lourdes and was published in the
monthly magazine Catolicismo (no. 86, February 1958). Here the worthy
Brazilian Catholic leader and thinker Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira analyses the mission of
Mary Most Holy in the restoration of Christian Civilisation and the defeat of
the Revolution. We use this word as it is used by this same author in his
masterly work Revolution and Counter-Revolution. In this work the word
‘Revolution’ means a centuries-long process during which the Western world has
deviated from Christian principles.
His commentaries regarding humanity’s state of unease due to sin and the
profound yearnings it has for something different are intimately related to the
third part of the Secret of Fatima published four decades after this article.
After referring to the proclamation of the dogmas of the Immaculate Conception
and of Papal Infallibility, as well as to St. Pius X’s steps to encourage
frequent reception of the Holy Eucharist, Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira writes:
But, one could ask, what has come as a result of this for the fight of the
Church against its external enemies? Could one not say that the enemy is
stronger than ever, and that the age the illuminati of days gone by dreamed of
is upon us? Are we not indeed in an age of stark and total scientific
naturalism that is dominated by materialistic technology? Are we not in an age
of a ferociously egalitarian universal republic that has a somewhat
philanthropic and humanitarian inspiration and from which will be swept all
remnants of supernatural religion? Is this not in fact communism? Is it not
also here that lies the danger by which Western society, supposedly
anticommunist, will slip towards the realisation of this “ideal”?
Yes. And this danger is closer than is usually imagined. However, no one pays
attention to a fact of primordial importance: as the world is modelled according
to this sinister design, a profound, an immense, an indescribable uneasiness is
overwhelming it. Sometimes this uneasiness is subconscious and, even when
conscious, is still vague and ill defined. In any case, no one contests its
existence. One would say that humanity is being violently forced into a mould
that is not according to its nature and against which all the fibres of its
existence writhe and resist.
Humanity also yearns longingly
for something else it does not yet know how to define. This may be a new
phenomenon since the decline of Christian civilisation began in the 15th
Century. The whole world now groans in darkness and pain just like the prodigal
son when he reached the depths of shame and misery far from the paternal home.
At the very moment when iniquity seems to triumph, there is something
frustrated in its apparent victory.
Experience shows us that from discontent such as this emerge the great surprises
of History. As the writhing increases, so does the unease. Who can tell what
magnificent surprises may result?
Many times the hour of divine mercy comes for the sinner when at the extreme
limits of sin and pain.
Now this healthy and promising uneasiness is, in my view, the fruit of a
resurrection of the Catholic fibre coming from the great events mentioned
above. This resurrection has had favourable repercussions over what was left of
life and sanity in the cultured areas of the world.
It certainly was a great moment in the life of the prodigal son when his
spirit, immersed in vice, once again acquired new life and his will new vigour,
as he meditated upon his miserable state and the turpitude of all the errors
that had lead him far from the paternal home. Touched by grace, he found
himself, more clearly than ever, in face of the great alternative: either to
repent and return, or to remain in error and accept the tragic consequences.
Everything a good education had taught him was as if marvellously reborn at
this providential moment; while, on the other hand, the tyranny of his bad
habits affirmed themselves possibly even more terribly than ever. The internal
struggle had begun. He chose the good. And we know the rest of the Gospel
story.
Are we not possibly close to this moment?
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