Aug 12, 2011
According to Archbishop Charles Chaput in “Render Unto Caesar,” in 1970 Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, asserted that the fallout of the cultural revolution from 1960s was nothing that we have seen before. And in response to the precipitous decline in priestly and religious vocations he said that “the city of man is beginning to strike terror in our heart … the Church is becoming extinguished in men’s souls and Christian communities are crumbling.”
Approximately a year later, in 1971, Sister Lucia, one of three seers of the Marian apparitions at Fatima, wrote a letter to her nephew, Valinho, who was a Catholic priest. It could be argued that this letter was one of the most important letters written in the twentieth century. Contained in this letter was her diagnosis as to the reason behind the rapid changes in the world and why the Church was becoming “extinguished in men’s souls.” It also detailed just how important prayer is.
To begin with, Father Valinho was equally distressed over the turmoil and the disorientation of the late 60s and early 70s. His concern was validated by her aunt, Sr. Lucia. She wrote, “It is indeed sad that so many are allowing themselves to be dominated by the diabolical wave that is enveloping the world, and they are so blind that they cannot see their error.” To be sure, this “diabolical wave” had been boiling underneath the surface for several decades
Leading up to the early 1960s the Catholic Church had every reason to be optimistic about the future. Indeed, during the 40s and 50s vocations and church attendance were on the rise. In addition, Church membership in America had nearly doubled in size. However, what Catholics did not see coming – including many of the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council when it opened in 1962 – was that the Culture of Death would overflow from the concentration camps of the Third Reich and the gulags of the Soviet Union to the youth, entertainment industry and universities in the West. Unbeknownst to many, the spirit of anti-Catholicism was far from dead.