The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin!

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

D1B wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
Look, you started this thread by mocking a simple nun who reported that she had an apparition of Mary 150 years ago. Everyone chimed in and called her mentally ill.

So I linked to a miraculous event reported by nearly all of perhaps 70,000 people (including numerous skepcts who had come to gloat) gathered at Fatima on October 13, 1917 at noon. You can't dismiss 70,000 people as delusional or mentally ill. Now I know you are not a person of faith, so I don't expect you to leap to the conclusion that God, at the request of Mary, performed a great miracle by creating the appearance of the sun gyrating in the sky. But I do find it amazing that you and others were so quickly to embrace the idea that this was caused by almost 70,000 people simultaneously experiencing retinal distortion, an explanation which is, quite frankly, ridiculous (especially since no one was "on notice" to stare at the sun before this happened).

I then brought up Maximilian Kolbe, an extraordinary man who, at great personal risk, housed and sheltered Jews in Poland from Nazi occupiers, and was sent to Auschwitz for his actions. The authorities were convinced that a a period at Auschwitz was enough to cure this delusional priest of his desire to help Jews, and then they free him. But he goes right back to assisting Jews and blasting Nazis in his publications. So he gets sent to Auschwitz again, where he ultimately volunteers his life for another, and goes to his death with so much courage that even his jailers marvel. Some even grow sympathetic and smuggle him bread and wine so he can perform Communion.

You can call him delusional. I say he had an extraordinary faith-based courage. Whatever he had, I wish I had, and if that makes me delusional, then I want to be delusional.

That his friary in Nagasaki survived intact when nothing else around it for nearly a mile did, is perhaps coincidence, but I see something more at work
Joe, it's faith. That's all it is. You ignore common sense rational explanations of things and focus on what you percieve to be miraculous, fine, but you are indeed delusional. Kolbe may or may not be delusional, I don't know him, nor will I , because I don't give a **** - there are millions of Kolbes out there who don't get any recognition for their work.

Quit trying to prove **** like this Joe, you aint in court and you just end up looking like a madman. :thumb:
J, I'm not trying to prove anything. Nor do I think I have to prove anything. I've always said the burden of proof is on the atheist anyway.

It's easy for a "rational" person to call a long-dead nun in Wisconsin mentally ill because she said Mary visited her. Fine.

But what does a "rational" person say when nearly 70,000 people report seeing something miraculous at the date, place and time predicted by a child who said she saw Mary. Is the child mentally ill? How about the 70,000 people?

So the "rational" person comes up with something -- which is an irrational claim that all of them suffered from retinal delusion simultaneously.

There are genuine mysteries and inexplicable events in life and sometimes there is no apparently rational explanation.

I'm not saying that you must believe; what I'm saying is your explanation of why all these people reported seeing the same miraculous event at the same place and time simply isn't credible. Whatever else that might imply is left to the individual, I suppose.

And what about people like Maximillian Kolbe, who himself reported having discussions with Mary (including about where to build his friary. When someone is as courageous as Fr. Kolbe, how can you say he acted out of a delusion?

I'm not a madman. I am simply drawn to people like Kolbe. I want to be more like him. And I am not.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Vidav »

JoltinJoe wrote:
D1B wrote:
Joe, it's faith. That's all it is. You ignore common sense rational explanations of things and focus on what you percieve to be miraculous, fine, but you are indeed delusional. Kolbe may or may not be delusional, I don't know him, nor will I , because I don't give a **** - there are millions of Kolbes out there who don't get any recognition for their work.

Quit trying to prove **** like this Joe, you aint in court and you just end up looking like a madman. :thumb:
J, I'm not trying to prove anything. Nor do I think I have to prove anything. I've always said the burden of proof is on the atheist anyway.

It's easy for a "rational" person to call a long-dead nun in Wisconsin mentally ill because she said Mary visited her. Fine.

But what does a "rational" person say when nearly 70,000 people report seeing something miraculous at the date, place and time predicted by a child who said she saw Mary. Is the child mentally ill? How about the 70,000 people?

So the "rational" person comes up with something -- which is an irrational claim that all of them suffered from retinal delusion simultaneously.

There are genuine mysteries and inexplicable events in life and sometimes there is no apparently rational explanation.

I'm not saying that you must believe; what I'm saying is your explanation of why all these people reported seeing the same miraculous event at the same place and time simply isn't credible. Whatever else that might imply is left to the individual, I suppose.

And what about people like Maximillian Kolbe, who himself reported having discussions with Mary (including about where to build his friary. When someone is as courageous as Fr. Kolbe, how can you say he acted out of a delusion?

I'm not a madman. I am simply drawn to people like Kolbe. I want to be more like him. And I am not.
The burden of proof falls to the person making the claim, not the person denying it.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by D1B »

Ibanez wrote:
D1B wrote:
Dumbfuck, they got Atheism all wrong.

*BTW, you're one of the very few little fuckheads that seriously needs to retire. You're boring and offer nothing to this message board. I hope you get hit by a fucking train. :thumb:
Please, you're a walking contradiction that gets high on trying to be the big bad wolf on the internet. You are 10 times worst than the Republicans and Catholic priests you rail about to ad nausuem. We get it, you're extremely intelligent and know the ins and outs of politics and Roman Catholicism. If you are so much better, fucking act like it. You are more wise than any of us could ever hope to be in a 100 lifetimes. You're a shallow, egotistical shit for brains cunt that keeps reliving the 1980's when you played football at UNI and the act got old long ago. Why don't you do what everyone that has had to tolerate your bloated, immature ass has dreamed off: Go home, eat your favorite meal, beat off once more and pay to have some tranny hooker choke you death. Seriously, just quit life because if you have to come onto an internet message board and fuck with people, than your life has gotten to a point so pathetic, i'm sure a pyschoanalyst would remark, "That's fucked up." So do us all a favor and just off yourself. :twocents:
At least I played ball and aint an 87lb. weakling with ricketts and chronic acne like you. I know pussies like you. You sit in the stands with wet panties dreaming of guys like me. Your dorm room is filled with pictures of football players and Cher posters. The closest you'll ever become to being relevent in college football is to be a moderator on an FCS message board that doesn't really even require moderators. :rofl:

You smack like a fag, and your girlfriend reeks of rotting possum, Old Spice and Axe Ball Wax , and her name is Ralph :nod:. So go fuck yourself , no wait, who cares what you do, no one pays attention to you.

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by D1B »

JoltinJoe wrote:
D1B wrote:
Joe, it's faith. That's all it is. You ignore common sense rational explanations of things and focus on what you percieve to be miraculous, fine, but you are indeed delusional. Kolbe may or may not be delusional, I don't know him, nor will I , because I don't give a **** - there are millions of Kolbes out there who don't get any recognition for their work.

Quit trying to prove **** like this Joe, you aint in court and you just end up looking like a madman. :thumb:
J, I'm not trying to prove anything. Nor do I think I have to prove anything. I've always said the burden of proof is on the atheist anyway.

It's easy for a "rational" person to call a long-dead nun in Wisconsin mentally ill because she said Mary visited her. Fine.

But what does a "rational" person say when nearly 70,000 people report seeing something miraculous at the date, place and time predicted by a child who said she saw Mary. Is the child mentally ill? How about the 70,000 people?

So the "rational" person comes up with something -- which is an irrational claim that all of them suffered from retinal delusion simultaneously.

There are genuine mysteries and inexplicable events in life and sometimes there is no apparently rational explanation.

I'm not saying that you must believe; what I'm saying is your explanation of why all these people reported seeing the same miraculous event at the same place and time simply isn't credible. Whatever else that might imply is left to the individual, I suppose.

And what about people like Maximillian Kolbe, who himself reported having discussions with Mary (including about where to build his friary. When someone is as courageous as Fr. Kolbe, how can you say he acted out of a delusion?

I'm not a madman. I am simply drawn to people like Kolbe. I want to be more like him. And I am not.
That's fine Joe. I always enjoy our exchanges.

You know if there is a heaven, I'll be at the front of line and allowed in the VIP section with Ghandi, Nelson Mandella, Jimmy Carter, MLK and Margaret Sanger. I'll look down from my perch and find you with the hoi polloi and will grant you access where you can meet these fine people. :thumb:
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Grizalltheway »

:lol: :lol:
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

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:lol:

Heaven would be no fun without you. :nod:
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JohnStOnge »

I take it that when you went to parochial school the nuns were really mean to you?
Well, I believe that I must tell the truth
And say things as they really are
But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by D1B »

JohnStOnge wrote:I take it that when you went to parochial school the nuns were really mean to you?
No, best years of my life. We lived in a great town and wonderful school - St. Patricks.

It's the dogma.

Funny, someone like you who demands empiricle certitude in everything would fall for the christian bullshit fairy tales. :ohno: :lol: :dunce:
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JohnStOnge »

D1B wrote:Funny, someone like you who demands empiricle certitude in everything would fall for the christian bullshit fairy tales. :ohno: :lol: :dunce:
D, I don't know how many times I have to tell you that I am an agnostic before it registers. Like you (apparently), I was born into a Catholic family. I went to parochial schools 1st through 10th grade. I quit going to church at some point during my teen years. I just don't have the hostility towards Christianity that some people do.
Well, I believe that I must tell the truth
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But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by 89Hen »

JoltinJoe wrote::lol:

Heaven would be no fun without you. :nod:
:| Heaven is when he's on CS vacation.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by D1B »

89Hen wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote::lol:

Heaven would be no fun without you. :nod:
:| Heaven is when he's on CS vacation.
This place would suck without me. You knuckleheads should be paying me, Cap'n Cat, Wedgebuster and houndawg. :nod:
"Sarah Palin absolutely blew AWAY the audience tonight. If there was any doubt as to whether she was savvy enough, tough enough or smart enough to carry the mantle of Vice President, she put those fears to rest tonight. She took on Barack Obama DIRECTLY on every issue and exposed... She did it with warmth and humor, and came across as the every-person....it's becoming mroe and more clear that she was a genius pick for McCain."

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

Grizalltheway wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:It's amazing how easily you accept that 70,000 people were all intently staring at the sun, and this caused mass delusion.
Is the earth flat, and the center of the universe, Joe? It's pretty astounding how easily you brush aside the laws of physics simply because you think this event supports the existence of your grown-up Santa Claus. :roll:
:lol:

I never brush aside the law of physics.

You just don't get my point.

If you think I believe in a grown-up Santa Claus, that's only to help you in your disbelief.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by 89Hen »

D1B wrote:This place would suck without me. You knuckleheads should be paying me, Cap'n Cat, Wedgebuster and houndawg. :nod:
People pay for strippers in Wisconsin. Doesn't mean they're good.

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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Grizalltheway »

JoltinJoe wrote:
Grizalltheway wrote:
Is the earth flat, and the center of the universe, Joe? It's pretty astounding how easily you brush aside the laws of physics simply because you think this event supports the existence of your grown-up Santa Claus. :roll:
:lol:

I never brush aside the law of physics.

You just don't get my point.

If you think I believe in a grown-up Santa Claus, that's only to help you in your disbelief.
Sure thing. Care to explain how the sun suddenly got brighter/closer to the earth without any sort of adverse effects?
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

Grizalltheway wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
:lol:

I never brush aside the law of physics.

You just don't get my point.

If you think I believe in a grown-up Santa Claus, that's only to help you in your disbelief.
Sure thing. Care to explain how the sun suddenly got brighter/closer to the earth without any sort of adverse effects?
Perhaps an extraordinary mass coronal event which created the appearance of the sun gyrating in the sky and moving toward earth?

But you miss the point. The point isn't that there must be an explanation consistent with physics. Of course, every miracle will have an explanation consistent with science, and that is true whether our understanding of science has advanced to the point of grasping that explanation or not. Indeed, the existence of mass coronal ejections wasn't even noted by scientists until the 1970s.

The point is that this unpredictable event happened at precisely the moment, and was viewable at precisely the location, that three small children said something miraculous would happen.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by dbackjon »

So why didn't the Virgin Mary protect the Christchurch Cathedral?
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

dbackjon wrote:So why didn't the Virgin Mary protect the Christchurch Cathedral?
Anglican Church. ;)

Seriously, though, churches get destroyed by natural and man-made disasters. They're just buildings.

What was coincidental about the Catholic friary in Nagasaki was the identity of the person who built it (an Auschwitz martyr who gave up his life so that another prisoner would live); and the date of the surrender of Japan as a result of the Nagasaki bombing. Now if the friary had not been built at the foot of the hill, it would have been destroyed like any other building. Nonetheless, that there is a scientific explanation for the building's survival does not preclude that it was a "miracle."
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Skjellyfetti »

Uh, no. A miracle is precisely something lacking a scientific explanation... so it's given a supernatural one.
an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/miracle" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

if it has a scientific explanation, it doesn't surpass all known human or natural powers.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

Skjellyfetti wrote:Uh, no. A miracle is precisely something lacking a scientific explanation... so it's given a supernatural one.
an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/miracle" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

if it has a scientific explanation, it doesn't surpass all known human or natural powers.
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it may violate what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Moreover, just because something extraordinary has a rational explanation, does not mean that the event was not itself an act of providence.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Ursus A. Horribilis »

JoltinJoe wrote:
Skjellyfetti wrote:Uh, no. A miracle is precisely something lacking a scientific explanation... so it's given a supernatural one.


http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/miracle" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

if it has a scientific explanation, it doesn't surpass all known human or natural powers.
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it violates what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

PS -- You should read your definition more carefully too.

an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers :coffee:
I agree with ya. It doesn't have a KNOWN scientific explanation at this point but that doesn't mean of course that it won't have a scientific explanation that is understood at some point in the future.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Vidav »

JoltinJoe wrote:
Skjellyfetti wrote:Uh, no. A miracle is precisely something lacking a scientific explanation... so it's given a supernatural one.


http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/miracle" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

if it has a scientific explanation, it doesn't surpass all known human or natural powers.
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it may violate what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Moreover, just because something extraordinary has a rational explanation, does not mean that the event was not itself an act of providence.
Moreover, just because something extraordinary has no rational explanation, does not mean that the event was itself an act of providence. :coffee:
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Ursus A. Horribilis »

Vidav wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it may violate what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Moreover, just because something extraordinary has a rational explanation, does not mean that the event was not itself an act of providence.
Moreover, just because something extraordinary has no rational explanation, does not mean that the event was itself an act of providence. :coffee:
:lol:
I specifically left that low hanging fruit to see if we could get some involvement going here again. I like the scientific approach that both of you are taking on that one.
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Vidav »

Ursus A. Horribilis wrote:
Vidav wrote:
Moreover, just because something extraordinary has no rational explanation, does not mean that the event was itself an act of providence. :coffee:
:lol:
I specifically left that low hanging fruit to see if we could get some involvement going here again. I like the scientific approach that both of you are taking on that one.
I do what I can. :D
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by Vidav »

Ursus A. Horribilis wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it violates what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

PS -- You should read your definition more carefully too.

an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers :coffee:
I agree with ya. It doesn't have a KNOWN scientific explanation at this point but that doesn't mean of course that it won't have a scientific explanation that is understood at some point in the future.
This quote kind of sums that up:

"A great many things have been pronounced untrue and absurd, and even impossible, by the highest authorities in the age in which they lived, which have afterwards, and, indeed, within a very short period, been found to be both possible and true." - Catherine Crowe
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Re: The Catholic saint and shrine factory comes to Wisconsin

Post by JoltinJoe »

Vidav wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
Why do you constantly interject in matters you know nothing about? This isn't about dictionary.com.

In fact, in Catholic theology, most notably as influenced by Aristotle, the claim has always been that a miracle does not violate nature; it may violate what we understand about nature.

t. Augustine eventually rejected gnostic teaching and came to proclaim that the material world too was the handiwork of spirit. This led him to view miracles, not as contrary to nature, but only as contrary to what we know about nature. Moreover, he pointed out that if God is the author of all reality then there exists but a fuzzy distinction between the natural and the miraculous.6

http://myweb.brooklyn.liu.edu/mcuonzo/h ... clelaw.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Moreover, just because something extraordinary has a rational explanation, does not mean that the event was not itself an act of providence.
Moreover, just because something extraordinary has no rational explanation, does not mean that the event was itself an act of providence. :coffee:
When Pope John Paul II visited Fatima on May 13, 2000 to celebrate the 83rd anniversary of the first appearance of Mary on May 13, 1917, many pilgrims reported seeing the sun dance and move in the sky on that date.

Scientists later confirmed that a significant coronal mass eruption occurred on that day and was visible in Portugal and in the Fatima area.

You would say that it was a coincidence; however, a person a faith might call it a sign from providence.

That what was observed at Fatima on that day has a rational explanation doesn't preclude one from believing it was a sign from God. The context of the event is important. If it had happened on any other date, so what? But if it happens on the anniversary of Fatima, and when the pope is present to observe that anniversary, a person of faith might see something more than a coincidence at work.
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