Valtorta.- Racionalisme (anglès)

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– INTRODUCTION – "The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church." So goes an ancient saying handed down by tradition, a time-altered version perhaps of Tertullian's original taunt to pagan persecutors: "The more you hew us down, the more we multiply. The blood of Christians is seed."1 Down the ages of the Church's existence, the earth has opened its mouth to receive the blood of countless numbers of Her martyred children. But the Church, reinvigorated by the blood of Her children's supreme sacrifice, has grown numberless new shoots on Her ancient Vine. The names of most of these, Her noblest children, we will know only on the Last Day when the Book of Life is opened. Still, a loving Providence has wanted some of them known, honored and remembered even in this life.Thus, Mother Church has enshrined a few of their names in the Roman Canon of the Mass. Among these are the subjects of this present paper: the African catechumens Perpetua and Felicity. They were martyred with their companions for their Christian Faith on March 6, 203 A.D., in the amphitheater at Carthage. This premiere translation of their martyrdom is taken from the Visions and Dictations given to the modern Italian mystic, Maria Valtorta (1897-1961†), and recorded in her "Notebooks." Valtorta is best known for her increasingly popular and chief work, The Poem of the Man-God.2 However, she also recorded many other Visions and Dictations (Locutions) in the three large volumes of her still largely untranslated "Notebooks for 1943, ...1944, and ...1945-1950" respectively. The present translation is taken from the critical edition of her "Notebooks for 1944," 3 and might best be read along with the more traditional account found, e.g., in Butler's translation of the Acta Sanctorum4 for March 7th. The presentation given here consists first of Valtorta's vivid eyewitness account of the imprisonment and death of the martyrs as shown to her. This is followed by two Locutions: Commentaries dictated by Christ Himself on the generous sacrifice of His martyrs. Sadly, in our own day we are seeing the utter antithesis of this supreme sacrifice. Untold numbers of Catholic Christians today, grown cold and callous from rationalism, materialism, sensuality, and power-hungry ideologies, have partially or wholly thrown away the truths of their ancient Faith so dearly bought and bequeathed them by their forebears: their brothers and sisters who died to defend this Faith. But, today too, many Christians are being called again to the grace of martyrdom given the early Church. And this is perhaps in reparation for the thoughtless ingratitude, the heartless and wanton waste of so costly a heritage by myriads of their fellow "Catholics/Christians" today. In Russia, e.g., China, Africa, former


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