Catholic history is full of ‘private revelations’ from God (nice little mental box I think using that term you’re putting things in, a little too small) warning the Popes and the Church about this, that, and the other thing.
Reminiscent of the prophets of the Old Testament, who often warn Israel.
Sometimes the Popes listen, sometimes they don’t. Obviously the Popes are not the incarnate person of the Holy Spirit walking on this earth, thus the exagerrated conflict put forth here is against the Faith on such matters. Popes are human too. You can go too far trying to prove a point.
Sometimes God works through them, sometimes He does not.
Which is why I suspect from the methodology used here that you don’t know that much at all about Fatima, and are just feeling very Vatican loyal and suspicious of private revelations, the general approach of someone new to the whole thing who doesn’t know otherwise how to sort it all out yet, because of a lack of experience. A suspicion, that’s all I have, not saying it’s fact. But if it is true, then you really shouldn’t be pontificating on this matter, since it’s a little beyond you.
Loyalty is commendable. I am loyal too. I also acknowledge human limitations. I think that’s most loyal, rather than building up people into more than they are and so tripping them up by impossible expectations.
There are many Cardinals in the Vatican, all with different views, they aren’t a united block. They have different opinions on Fatima. If one who has one opinion is in charge of the right office – or gets the ear of the right person, there you go, there’s a pronouncement. Then perhaps later, like with Padre Pio, (who had his faculties suspended), the Pope later apologizes and says, “I was misinformed.” Or perhaps he doesn’t apologize, but was still mistaken, that happens sometimes too. These things happen. Popes are best served by understanding both where their holiness lies, and where their humanity lies. No leader likes to be made out to be a God when he isn’t, and he would best be served by people who can support him in his humanity as well.
St. Catherine of Siena once wrote Pope Gregory XI, ‘. . . Pardon my presumption in what I have said to you and am saying; I am constrained by the Sweet Primal Truth to say it. His will, father, is this, and thus demands of you. It demands that you execute justice on the abundance of many iniquities committed by those who are fed and pastured in the garden of Holy Church; declaring that brutes should not be fed with the food of men. Since He has given you authority and you have assumed it, you should use your virtue and power: and if you are not willing to use it, it would be better for you to resign what you have assumed; more honour to God and health to your soul would it be.’
In other words, she said that the Pope wasn’t disciplining the Church, and executing justice, and if he wouldn’t exercise his office as Pope, he should resign, for the sake of his soul. Guess what. Pope Gregory XI didn’t listen. I don’t know what happened to him at the judgement but I don’t think it bears thinking about. God has not revealed…
In another revelation, of Our Lady to St. Bridget of Sweden, she warned that any pope who changed Church discipline on celibacy would go to Hell, even if he was as holy as St. Gregory the Great, this was how much God cared about that discipline and how from God it was. So far, no Pope has done it, but you can bet the temptation is there.
Just tracing the history of Fatima you can see the Papal response to it was not entirely what it should have been and was asked for. And so it already displays that there can be a conflict. And why should there not be?
If Fatima is genuine, and all the signs are that it -is-, then, Our Lady vs. the Pope? Our Lady wins obviously. And obviously yes, sometimes Popes can do things that do not please God and Our Lady. On the other hand, Our Lady never displeases Our Lord. Never has, never will.
The Pope has a certain authority, within which he is supreme. In other areas, he isn’t. If Our Lady asks for something, the Pope like everyone else has to hope he has fulfilled it, he doesn’t have the power to by fiat declare that he has.