V
vames
Guest
Jacinta couldn’t have said “no”, because she was conditioned to think that it’s a good thing to sacrifice herself and to offer all the sufferings that she can get - BOTH the unavoidable ones, as @downunder correctly stated above (what she went through was beyond the possibilities of medical science at that time) AND the self-inflicted ones: if you read all what Lucia wrote, you’ll notice an episode when the children were far away from their home, on a hot day, and Jacinta refused to eat and drink water, althought she was already weakened by hunger and thirst. Or another episode when she picked only bitter acorns and olives to eat, again to make a sacrifice. The little girl obsessively repeated that she wants to suffer for others’ sins and in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Do you really think that Jesus and Mary were delighted to accept such sacrifices? That God has indeed predestined Jacinta to die a painful death for this purpose?
We are angry at this utterly absurd legislation that pretends to allow children to “choose” to be euthanized. We are angry at pedophile advocates who pretend that children can “consent”. The Church states that the law of fasting binds only those who have attained their majority; the Church also says that excommunication isn’t for children under 16, because of their lack of the full use of reason. And yet we accept and praise the idea that a 7-year-old could choose to suffer for others’ sins and in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
Lucia explains clearly how this obsession with suffering and sacrifice has developed in the mind of her little sister:
That’s why, back to the correct observation of @downunder that “In all accounts you have given medical science did all they could and the kids offered it up as they were told to as a sin offering”, I wonder about the truth of this kind of consolation found by Jacinta. The proposal made by the apparition of Virgin Mary’s (“She asked me if I still want to convert more sinners. I said I did. She told me I would be going to a hospital where I would suffer a great deal; and* that I am to suffer for the conversion of sinners, in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and for love of Jesus*.”) reinforced in the mind of Jacinta the idea that she was called to make reparation for others’ sins. So she indeed found a way to bear her illness and pains, she found a meaning in her sufferings and a consolation. But how true was this consolation? Again, has God predestined this young child to die a painful death for this purpose?
We are angry at this utterly absurd legislation that pretends to allow children to “choose” to be euthanized. We are angry at pedophile advocates who pretend that children can “consent”. The Church states that the law of fasting binds only those who have attained their majority; the Church also says that excommunication isn’t for children under 16, because of their lack of the full use of reason. And yet we accept and praise the idea that a 7-year-old could choose to suffer for others’ sins and in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
Lucia explains clearly how this obsession with suffering and sacrifice has developed in the mind of her little sister:
I’m sure many of us can remember the same reaction from our own childhood, the difference being that we weren’t conditioned and encouraged to think about Jesus and Mary as people who need us as co-redeemers by our own sufferings.There was a Crucifix hanging on the wall.
When the little one heard me telling of the sufferings of Our Lord, she was moved to tears. From then on, she often asked me to tell it to her all over again. She would weep and grieve saying: “Our poor dear Lord! I’ll never sin again! I don’t want Our Lord to suffer any more!”
“Alright” I answered, “get up on a chair, bring the Crucifix over here, kneel down and give him three hugs and three kisses; one for Francisco, one for me and the other for yourself.”
“To Our Lord, yes, I’ll give him as many as you like,” and she ran to get the Crucifix.
She kissed it and hugged it with such devotion that I have never forgotten it.
Then, looking attentively at the figure of Our Lord, she asked: “Why is Our Lord nailed to the cross like that?”
Because He died for us.”
“Tell me how it happened,” she said.
That’s why, back to the correct observation of @downunder that “In all accounts you have given medical science did all they could and the kids offered it up as they were told to as a sin offering”, I wonder about the truth of this kind of consolation found by Jacinta. The proposal made by the apparition of Virgin Mary’s (“She asked me if I still want to convert more sinners. I said I did. She told me I would be going to a hospital where I would suffer a great deal; and* that I am to suffer for the conversion of sinners, in reparation for the sins committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and for love of Jesus*.”) reinforced in the mind of Jacinta the idea that she was called to make reparation for others’ sins. So she indeed found a way to bear her illness and pains, she found a meaning in her sufferings and a consolation. But how true was this consolation? Again, has God predestined this young child to die a painful death for this purpose?