Doves? The Blessed Mother? Jesus?
Not since 9/11 have the northern lights put on such a relevant display, particularly in the realm of potential religious simulacrum (skeptics say “pareidolia”).
Back then, a giant angel seemed to be in one of them.
Now we have this:
And this:
And:
“The auroras pulled together into what looks like a dove rising out of the sky — wings wide, light bursting outward. It almost feels like the moment the sky takes a breath. Pure, powerful, and impossible to ignore. ✨#MrMBB333 #sky #phenomenon #aurora pic.twitter.com/u1jH7EENXb
— Michael Bradbury (@MrMBB333) November 13, 2025
One is wise to pay heed to signs, when one realizes that (according to seer Lucia dos Santos of Fátima)) the aurora borealis of 1938-1939 was the “great sign” mentioned in the three secrets, the sign of a second world war.
That series of auroras preceded Hitler’s march into Austria.
The geomagnetic storm (now called the “Fátima Storm”) unfolded between January 16-26, with peak auroral activity on January 22, 25, and 1938. It was associated with a very large sunspot group late in Solar Cycle 17, producing intense solar activity and global radio disturbances.
It was a night when the world looked aflame. Across practically the whole of Europe—from Portugal and Spain to Austria, Germany, Italy, Britain, Scandinavia, Poland, and deep into Russia—the sky turned blood-red, so bright that countless witnesses believed cities or forests were burning. From Gibraltar to southern Sicily, the heavens glowed like an otherworldly warning. And as stated above, it wasn’t only Europe:
In North America, reports stretched from the far north of Canada all the way down to Bermuda and Southern California. Newspapers ran startled headlines: “Northern Lights Disrupt Radios in Maine” and “Borealis Over Tennessee Valley.” Imagine that—the aurora seen deep into the American South, shimmering over places where such sights simply do not occur.
Even this was not the border. Accounts from the opposite side of the world say the phenomenon reached all the way to southern Australia, marking it as a truly global disturbance—a shimmering banner in both hemispheres, as if nature itself was sending a message. Some called it beauty. Others called it prophecy.
The auroral oval expanded enough to place crimson aurora directly overhead at mid-latitudes, which today corresponds to “G4–G5-class” events in NOAA’s scale (severe to extreme).
In short: 1938 was a top-tier storm, comparable to the strongest post-telegraph-era space-weather events (1882, 1921, 1989, 2003, 2024).
Did we say 2024–last year?
Indeed: that was the historic but underpublicized May 10–11, 2024 storm, which was G-5 (extreme)–equal to 1938 (beware, folks).
The current November 2025 activity is of the order of G3–G4, strong but not quite as extreme as May 2024 or 1938, but noteworthy.
The auroras have been witnessed from Iceland (over mountain Akrafjall in the west)
to Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada.

This week (Nov 11–14, 2025), multiple X-class flares triggered storms visible across much of North America, from Canada and South Dakota (St Ann of Badus Catholic Church and Cemetery; Zachary Wicks Photography)
to New York and Washington state, from Indiana (Notre Dame):
to Florida:

And also in Texas, Florida, and California, and as far afield as Australia and New Zealand.
Forecasts mention occasional G4 intervals, plus the possibility of briefly reaching G5 levels similar to 1938 and May 2024 if the strongest energy connects well with earth’s magnetic field.
Devil?
We’ll focus on Jesus.
The bottom line?
Stay tuned.










