As we arrive at their end, it is inevitable that we feel the need to draw a conclusion. Accordingly, questions like these arise in our minds: “Has everything been said about Dr. Plinio? Has his personality been fully outlined? Have his vocation and his role in history been thoroughly comprehended?” Perhaps a poorly informed reader would be inclined to answer in the affirmative However, those who knew Dr. Plinio closely think differently…Has everything been said about Dr. Plinio, his spirit and his vocation? Those who knew him personally can assert the opposite with all certainty
A tower whose peak is lost in the firmament
Although this edition gives an overview of who he was, after examining many facets of his souls one comes to the conclusion that it is very difficult to arrive at an all-encompassing notion of the vocation and the spirit of a man who, at sixty years of age, was capable of affirming that the totality of his memories would provide material to fill more than a hundred volumes!2 Neither the remarkable gift of prophecy nor the discernment of spirits, by which he was able to see souls, penetrate circumstances from a distance, and describe a country he had never visited; nor again his vibrant personality, splendidly courageous and representative of God’s greatness; or even his paternal kindness, which drew numerous sons to him: none of these fully portray him.
A mission to accomplish
However, it is not merely the amplitude and richness of his personal gifts that make it so daunting a task to convey a complete picture of Dr. Plinio. There is another, much deeper reason, based on the fact that his providential mission has not yet been entirely fulfilled on earth. Far from viewing him as a figure from the past whose journey reached its consummation on October 3, 1995, it is necessary to consider him in intimate relation with the unfolding of current events.How many people pass through life like leaves on a tree, which, once dried up, are blown away by the wind, leaving no lasting memory behind! But there is a principle pertaining to spiritual values that permeates the whole of history: whenever a person endowed with unparalleled gifts of the Holy Spirit and singled out by a special calling seems to have been extinguished by ostracism, a time comes when the obstacles raised by his enemies to hide the splendour and greatness of his person can no longer be sustained. Neither the persecutions, nor the campaigns of slander or silence of adversaries, nor the inattentiveness of some of his closest companions, nor even death itself and the granite slab of the tombstone can prevent his light from breaking forth, scattering the darkness…Persecution, slander, oblivion, even death and the granite of a tomb are not able to prevent his light from shining through
His light will shine before all mankind!
These thoughts accompanied me throughout the days leading up to Dr. Plinio’s death, and above all during the funeral, as I sensed the dereliction in which Dr. Plinio passed from this world, forgotten and rejected by so many, to the point of not a single ecclesiastical, civil or military authority appearing to pay him their final respects. Only his sons were there to lay him to rest.
God and His chosen ones do not die
From that day on, I began to experience something similar to what ensued after the death of Dona Lucilia: it was difficult to remember that Dr. Plinio had died. I felt him alive, and constantly within my reach; not as before, when I guided his wheelchair, but rather as if he were going before me, opening the way, and yet somehow turned to face me so that it was always possible to maintain eye contact.Moreover, I noted an ever intensifying effect of Dr. Plinio’s spirit within me, in a way that is difficult to express in words. Such had been my spiritual union with Dr. Plinio that now, with him in eternity, through a true mystical phenomenon, his presence in the very depths of my heart was all the more vivid. On the other hand, as time went by, this supernatural inspiration was also felt by his other followers, united in their enthusiasm and fidelity to their father and teacher. His figure was alive in their memory, and from Heaven, he was a channel of sanctity for his disciples.Such was his union of soul with Dr. Plinio that, when the latter was in eternity, his presence increased in the depths of Msgr. João’s heart
First glimmers of the Reign of Mary
Dr. Plinio spent his whole life yearning for the Reign of Mary – that reign foreseen by St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort, and announced by Our Lady to the three shepherd children in Fatima; that reign already glimpsed by him in his early youth, the continual object of his contemplation and admiration; that reign in which the fruits of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ and the tears of Mary Most Holy will work their full effect on the face of the earth.Nevertheless, Providence chose to take him from this life before his bodily eyes could witness the effective realization of this promise… Undoubtedly, he will see it with the eyes of the soul from the vantage point of eternity, and his mission will be accomplished as he always hoped, by means of his spiritual sons. At a certain moment, according to the law of history, there will be a glorious manifestation from God! The Revolution denounced by Dr. Plinio for so many years will be humiliated, condemned, and defeated, and the Church will flourish again with an utterly unprecedented beauty, light, and vigour.His spirit lives on and will remain immortal in the souls in which a seed of prophetism has been planted, a participation in his charism
Notes
1 This article is a transcription of the concluding chapter of work in five volumes written by Msgr. João on Dr. Plinio (cf. O dom de sabedoria na vida, mente e obra de [The Gift of Wisdom in the Life, Mind, and Work of] Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira. Città del Vaticano-São Paulo: LEV; Lumen Sapientiæ, 2016, v.V, pp. 479-486). With minor adaptations to make it more accessible to the reader, the text is perfectly suited as the conclusion to this edition of our Magazine dedicated to this distinguished Catholic leader.
2 Cf. CLÁ DIAS, EP, João Scognamiglio. O dom de sabedoria na mente, vida a obra de [The Gift of Wisdom in the Life, Mind, and Work of] Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira. Città del Vaticano-São Paulo: LEV; Lumen Sapientiæ, 2016, v.I, p.29.
3 GALVEZ, Manuel. Vida de Don Gabriel García Moreno. Madrid: González, 1945, p.480.