28.7.05

Don Bosco y el Milenio


The Biographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco1 provide us with a number of prophecies, which the saint disguised as "dreams," which have always stirred interest in the readers of his biography.

Well known is the saint's "dream of the two columns" where Don Bosco foresaw the future difficulties of the Church, envisioned as a ship on stormy seas. Several popes strive to moor the Church and anchor it between two columns which arose amid the dangerous waters. The columns symbolized the two devotions to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament and to Mary Immaculate, the Help of Christians, Calm and peace for the Church is won only when one of the popes finally succeeds in anchoring the Church between the two columns.2

The dream has great symbolic significance and can be interpreted in several ways, while maintaining the essential meaning that the Church's future is guaranteed through Peter's ministry and through fidelity of the faithful to the two devotions to Jesus and Mary.

Another symbolic dream is the less-known "march of the 200 days," which can shed light on interpreting dream of the two columns. The account of this dream is given in the tenth volume of the Biographical Memoirs (pp. 49-59) in the context of "three prophecies," whose details need not delay us here.

The "first prophecy" ends as follows:

"There shall yet come a violent hurricane. Iniquity is at an end, sin shall cease, and before two full moons shall have shone in the month of flowers, the rainbow of peace shall appear on earth ... Throughout the world a sun so bright shall shine as never seen since the flames of the Cenacle until today, nor shall it be seen again until the end of time."

I will return to this prophecy at the very end of the article. It is the second prophecy that especially concerns us here.

It reads in part as follows:

"It was a dark night, and men could no longer find their way back to their countries. Suddenly a most brilliant light shone in the sky, illuminating their way as at high noon. At that moment from the Vatican came forth, as in procession, a multitude of men and women, young children, monks, nuns, and priests, and at the head was the pope.

"But a furious storm then broke out, somewhat dimming that light, as if light and darkness were locked in battle ...

"The ranks of the procession thinned considerably. After a two-hundred-day march, all realized that they were no longer in Rome. In dismay they swarmed about the Pontiff to protect him and minister to him in his needs.

"At that moment two angels appeared, bearing a banner which they presented to the Supreme Pontiff, saying: "Take the banner of her who battles and routs the most powerful armies on earth. Your enemies have vanished; with tears and sighs your children plead for your return."

"One side of the banner bore the inscription: 'Queen conceived without sin' and the other side read: 'Help of Christians.'

"The Pontiff accepted the banner gladly, but he became very distressed to see how few were his followers.

"But the two angels went on: 'Go now, comfort your children. Write to your brothers scattered throughout the world that men must reform their lives. This cannot be achieved unless the bread of the Divine Word is broken among the peoples. Teach children their catechism and preach detachment from earthly things. The time has come,' the two angels concluded, 'when the poor will evangelize the world. Priests shall be sought among those who wield the hoe, the spade, and the hammer, as David prophesied: 'He raises up the lowly from the dust; from the dunghill he lifts up the poor. To seat them with princes, with the princes of his own people' (Ps 113:7-8).

"On hearing this, the Pontiff moved on, and the ranks began to swell.

Upon reaching the Holy City, the Pontiff wept at the sight of its desolate citizens, for many of them were no longer. He then entered Saint Peter's and intoned the Te Deum, to which a chorus of angels responded, singing: 'Glory to God in the highest, and peace on earth to men of good will.'

"When the song was over, all darkness vanished and a blazing sun shone...

"From the start of the exile until the intoning of the Te Deum, the sun rose two hundred times. All the events described covered a period of four hundred days."



Notes
1. Salesiana Publishers. New Rochelle, NY, 1965-1995, vols. I-XVI.
2. Ibid., vol. VII, pp. 107-109

The 200 Day March



Don Bosco and the Millennium

Rev. Frank Klauder, S.D.B.



SOUL Magazine, Jan./Feb. 1998, p. 6
World Apostolate of Fatima
PO Box 976
Washington, NJ 07882

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