As is clear from the image of the standard on the march mentioned above, Dr. Plinio did not fix himself on a nostalgia for the past, but cast a look of hope to the future. Free from any “archaeologism”, for him the Counter-Revolution lived of longing for the future. And for this reason, confidence is the word that would sum up Msgr. João’s attitude in the face of the events that followed October 3, 1995, the date of his spiritual father’s death. Confidence because Christ overcame death and this world (cf. Jn 16:33). Confidence because Our Lady in Fatima promised the coming of her Reign. Confidence because providential men, by their contemplation, already participate in the eternity of God4 and therefore do not die: “he who believes in Me, though he die, yet shall he live” (Jn 11:25). Confidence is born of fidelity to a promise; it is nourished by selflessness in daily struggles, consolidated by a hope that does not disappoint (cf. Rom 5:5) and radiates its effects to posterity. Dr. Plinio lived of hope until his last breath, confirming what he had declared: “After death, I hope to pray before [Our Lady] for all of you, thus helping you more effectively than in my earthly life.”5 Amidst the crises of all kinds that are mounting, the countless examples of confidence given by Dr. Plinio and his perpetual “yes” to the divine plans certainly inspire his spiritual children.6 Grace continues to evoke in their hearts “words of sweetness and of peace,”7 as Fr. Thomas de Saint-Laurent expressed it, and to illuminate the path of those who wish to hear them. However, just as Dr. Plinio’s triumph was won at the price of much blood,8 so it will also be with his work. As he himself pointed out, the most excellent form of confidence is that which contradicts all prognostications and makes the soul bleed on account of the unexpected, but which bears abundant fruit. In fact, only by following in the footsteps of the Crucified One can the glory of the Resurrection be attained. The thirtieth anniversary of the death of so distinguished a man takes on special significance in 2025, as we find ourselves in a jubilee year dedicated to hope, the utmost expression of which is the virtue of confidence. In this perspective, Pope Leo XIV comments on true hope, that it consists “not in trying to avoid pain, but in believing that the seed of new life is hidden, even in the heart of the most unjust suffering.”9 Dr. Plinio’s trajectory in the Militant Church was an incessant proclamation of confidence, even when darkness seemed to definitively dominate the light, at the cost of so many injustices and contradictions. But it is on such occasions that it becomes beautiful to believe in the light. If they follow their master in this virtue, his spiritual children – as well as all men of good will – can be champions of confidence, even if events belie their faith. When this occurs, they will believe all the more in the victory and trust “even in the improbable, even in the impossible, if this impossible and improbable are in the paths of Mary Most Holy.”10 Confidence is invincible, for it participates in the victory of God Himself.More than asking who Dr. Plinio was, we need to ask who Dr. Plinio is – and will continue to be. His legacy is not like a museum, but like a standard on the march, placed in the hands of countless disciples
Notes
1 CORRÊA DE OLIVEIRA, Plinio. Conversation. Amparo, 17/10/1985.
2 ST. THOMAS AQUINAS. Summa Theologiæ. I, q.108, a.2, ad 2.
3 CORRÊA DE OLIVEIRA, Plinio. 10 de janeiro de 1978: um testamento [January 10, 1978: a Testament]. In: Dr. Plinio. São Paulo. Year III. No. 22 (Jan., 2000), p.5.
4 Cf. ST. THOMAS AQUINAS, op. cit., q.10, a.3, ad 1.
5 CORRÊA DE OLIVEIRA, 10 de janeiro de 1978: um testamento [January 10, 1978: a Testament], op. cit., p.5.
6 See especially the article The Story of a Constant “Yes”, in this issue.
7 SAINT-LAURENT, Thomas. The Book of Confidence. Nobleton: Heralds of the Gospel Canada, 2019, p.13.
8 In this regard, see the article The Triumph Obtained by Blood in this issue.
9 LEO XIV. General Audience, 27/8/2025.
10 CORRÊA DE OLIVEIRA, Plinio. Conference. São Paulo, 20/12/1991.