The Last Easter: The Prophecy of Fatima Is Coming True!
What if the last Easter of John Paul II was a silent prophecy, a hidden map traced in suffering? Brothers and sisters, stop for a moment.
Leave behind all distractions, all confusion, all that disorients you.
Because today, I want to take you on a journey through time, though not just any time.
I will take you into one of the most mysterious, powerful, and prophetic weeks our generation has ever experienced.
The final holy week of John Paul II.
A week in which a pope spoke more with his body than with his voice.

A week in which silence thundered louder than words, leaving a deep prophetic message intertwined with the prophecies of Fatima.
Yes, brothers and sisters, we’re talking about a man who didn’t just write in cyclicals or travel the world.
We’re talking about a man who carried every wound of his time in his own flesh.
a man who suffered out of love for the church and who in his last Easter left us a map, a guide, a prophetic testament.
Let us not forget God also speaks through the suffering of his saints.
And that suffering, that silent agony has something to say to me, to you, to the church, to all of humanity.
It was Palm Sunday 2005.
The crowd was in St.Peter’s Square, but the Pope wasn’t on the altar.
He was at the window, visible but silent.
He could not speak.
His voice was gone, his throat inflamed, his body exhausted.
But his presence, his appearance, like a suffering father, was an incommenurable act of love.
In that moment, no words were needed.
A glance was enough.
A trembling blessing was enough.
Silence was enough.
On Good Friday, during the way of the cross, John Paul II was in his private chapel.
Cameras showed him seated holding a crucifix in his hands.
He clutched it.
He caressed it.
He kissed it.
With that gesture, he said everything.
He was Christ in Gethsemane.

He was Christ under the lash.
He was Christ falling under the cross.
He was Christ crucified.
But he was also Peter, the first pope once again saying, “Lord, you know that I love you.
” Then came Easter Sunday, the day of glory.
But even that day, the pope could not speak.
He tried.
He attempted to deliver the Easter message, but only a breath came out.
No words, just the breath of the spirit, just a silent blessing, a scene that moved the world.
That silence was his most powerful sermon.
A sermon made of tears, pain, and offering.
John Paul II was the Pope of the Rosary, the Pope of the Virgin Mary, the Pope who consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the Pope who survived an assassination attempt on May 13th, 1981, the day of Our Lady’s apparition in Fatima.
The Pope who had the bullet that struck him placed in the crown of Our Lady of Fatima.
That bullet mysteriously deflected missed his vital organs.
For him, it was a miracle and for us a sign.
In 2000, John Paul II revealed the third secret of Fatima, the one that spoke of a bishop dressed in white falling under the bullets.
It was him, but he did not die.
Because Mary had spread her mantle over him and saved him.
From that day on, John Paul II lived like a man with a destiny.
A man who knew his pontificate was part of a greater design, a deeper struggle, a spiritual battle that goes beyond the boundaries of history.
And then in 2005, just days before the pope’s death, Sister Lucia, the last Fatima visionary, passed away.
Two souls connected by heaven.
Two instruments of the same message.
Two witnesses of the same cry from the Virgin.
Convert, pray, offer sacrifices for sinners.
That wasn’t a coincidence.
It was a sign.
But John Paul II wasn’t just the pope of the rosary.
He was the pope of battle.
A battle that concerns us today, right now in this precise moment of history.
Cardinal Kafara received a prophetic letter from Sister Lutia.
The final battle between the Lord and the kingdom of Satan will be over the family and marriage.
John Paul II knew this.
He sensed it and he denounced it.
He spoke of the culture of death.
He called abortion a grave sin.
He defended the dignity of marriage.
He defended the truth of human sexuality.
He defended the unborn and the dying.
And today we see all this under attack, twisted, undermined.
Today, Satan has unleashed hell against the family, against children, against innocence.
And we are at the heart of this battle.
But we are not alone.
John Paul II left us the weapons, the rosary, the eukarist, confession, the word, and his own testimony.
On April 2nd, 2005, John Paul II breathed his last.
It was the eve of the feast of divine mercy, a feast he himself had instituted.
He had canonized Sister Fina.
He had given the world the chaplet.
He had opened the church’s heart to God’s mercy.
And precisely on that day, the eve of mercy, the Pope’s soul rose to heaven.
It was a seal, a heavenly signature, as if to say, “The cross I lived, I now offer as intercession for you.
Take refuge in mercy.
” and Benedict 16th just a few days later announced the opening of John Paul II’s beatatification cause when May 13th once again Fatima once again a sign once again a call end times or beginning of hope when we hear the word apocalypse many tremble but let’s remember what apocalypse means revelation and in this revelation evil is exposed but good also triumphs John Paul II knew the final battle would be fierce, but he also knew the victory belongs to God.
In his final book, Testament, Memory and Identity, published shortly before his death, he spoke of the mystery of iniquity, but also of the invincible power of grace.
He wrote, “Evil has a limit, and that limit is the mercy of God.
” And Benedict V 16th in 2010 at Fatima declared that it is an illusion to think the prophetic mission of Fatima is over.
The trials continue, but hope is stronger.
The immaculate heart will triumph.
From the very beginning of his pontificate, John Paul II cried out to us.
Do not be afraid.
Open the doors to Christ.
He said it in Rome.
He said it in New York.
He said it in Manila.
He said it to the whole world.
That cry is more relevant now than ever.
In a world afraid of the future, afraid of truth, afraid of the cross, we Christians must be witnesses of courage.
The courage of faith, the courage of love, the courage of truth.
The final holy week of John Paul II is not just a moving memory.
It is a prophecy being fulfilled.
It is an invitation, a call, and we are called to respond.
Now is not the time to stand still.
Now is not the time to sleep.
Now is the time to pray, the time to fight, the time to return to God.
Mary is calling us.
The tears of our lady still streak the faces of statues in many places around the world.
We cannot pretend not to see them.
Dear brother, dear sister, today God is speaking to you through this message, through the living memory of John Paul II.
And he is asking, “What will you do? Take the rosary in your hands, teach your children to pray, go to church, go to confession, attend mass, read scripture, fast, offer sacrifices for the conversion of sinners, become a watchman of the light.
The world needs witnesses.
It needs burning souls.
It needs hearts on fire.
It needs real Christians, not lukewarm ones, not confused ones, but hearts ablaze with love for Christ.
John Paul II left us a flame, a living flame, a flame lit with his suffering, with his love, with his faithfulness.
Now that flame is in our hands.
May the Holy Spirit ignite you like a torch in the darkness of the world.
May keep you under her mantle.
May John Paul II intercede for you every day.
And may you be able to say with him totous to us Mary all yours Jesus.
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May God bless you and do not be afraid.