It feels very disappointing. Discussing the truth of beliefs is a good starting point, but the story falls completely into the rut.
Too many pitfalls:
First, Mary's story is whitewashing witch hunts (mentioned earlier), and Mary's bizarre physical actions seem to be just for cups, not scary at all;
Second, I don't understand why the devil is always strong and God is weak in this kind of plot. If that's the case, it's better to just change your beliefs;
Third, Mary is so strong, why not just kill all the troublemakers in one go;
Fourth, if Mary's purpose is to pretend to be the Virgin Mary to gain faith, why should she scare the male protagonist and the priest from time to time? Is not this contradictory? Fifth, shouldn't the ritual of the young priest's plot kill be done to protect one's own safety before doing the sealing ceremony? And I don't know how to hide when I come down from the cross... I can only force the male protagonist to save the scene by destroying his reputation.
The conditions for rationalizing the plot are made up by my brain:
First, the male protagonist was indeed chosen by God and had blessings, so Mary could easily kill the priests but repeatedly let the male protagonist go, and at the last moment was only lightly tortured;
Second, at the end, Alice wakes up and the image of the Virgin sheds blood and tears, implying that it was not God who responded to the prayer of the male protagonist and resurrected Alice, but that Mary was revived without dying. miracle.
Looking at the whole article, I don't see anything other than setting a target and emphasizing the importance of faith.
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