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Sunday 10 December 2023
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The Role and Status of Apparitions and Private Revelations (Fr. René Laurentin)
How to Approach Them?
«When the baby appeared, the family circle ap¬plauded with cries of joy»,
said Victor Hugo. When an apparition takes place, the family circle of the Church does not applaud with cries of joy. The welcome is normally troubled, tense and nervous. The number-one problem often seems to be: How to get rid of it (to use the title of a play by Eugène Ionesco). At Lourdes, Father Peyramale [Bernadette’s parish priest] greeted the first visit of Bernadette with one of his famous fits of rage which only he knew how to have. The apparitions that occurred in the fifteen years that followed Beauraing and Banneux (1932-1933) were, in varying degrees, discouraged, repressed, or concealed until the 1980’s. For someone who loves Christ and the Virgin, an apparition would be good news as it is for many good Christians. Why then this mistrustful, or rather, disgruntled greeting? A Humble Status
Moreover, apparitions have a humble status in the Church:
The Role and Value of Apparitions
Nevertheless, apparitions have a very significant role in the life of the Church. They are part of a universe of signs. Man, who is a rational animal, needs them. God knows it. This is what gave rise to Revelation and the rites of the Old Testament. Christ gave us the Gospel and the sacraments. The Bible is a web of signs where miracles and apparitions abound in both the Old and New Testaments. In the life of the Church, apparitions have a significant place: Guadalupe, Aparecida [Brasil], Lourdes, and Fatima are among the places of great pilgrimages of the Church after Rome. God, who is both transcendent and intimate, does not leave mankind deprived of the signs without which faith withers and dies. Besides the objective signs which are the Church and the sacraments, he speaks throughout history by providential signs or extraordinary ones that call for discernment. These signs have prophetic functions. St. Thomas stresses that they reawaken faith and "above all, hope." They remind us that the transcendent God remains present and near. The everyday signs, whether small or great, ordinary or extraordinary, are a viaticum for human weakness. In this way, apparitions are, first of all, a pastoral problem before being a theological or juridical one. The Liberation and Multiplication of Apparitions
Why is it that apparitions which seemed extinct in the Church are today multiplying? This change arises first of all from a juridical decision. The former Code of Canon Law, in canon 1399, paragraph 5, "forbade books or pamphlets which tell of new apparitions, revelations, visions, prophecies and miracles". Canon 2318 excommunicated those who violated it.
On October 14, 1966, Paul VI abolished these Canons (Decree of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, published in Acta Apostolicae Sedis, December 29, 1966, P. 1186). Therefore it was not introduced into the new Code of Canon Law. This new legislation restored Christian liberty along the lines of the Council. It put more trust in the charisms and prophetic initiatives of the laity. It was a risk, but the faithful have, in general, known how to act with obedience and discretion (with some exceptions). In the climate of liberty, information took the place of repression. Charisms that were for a long time repressed were now encouraged, sometimes to excess. In the new climate, several bishops have recognized official worship in new sites of apparitions, and in one case even authenticated one. Bishop Pio Bello Ricardo, the bishop of Los Teques (Venezuela), on February 7, 1988, recognized the apparitions of Maria Esperanza Medrano de Bianchi. They began in 1976 and continue today. Other favourable decisions regarding official worship:
Often discernment remains confused, ambiguous, or controversial. It is important to make clear the obstacles. The Formation of Commissions
At the level of commissions there is the problem of prejudices or wrong attitudes which need to be reformed in various degrees.
«Find people who don’t have a bookish knowledge but instead those with a real experience of human hearts and spiritual realities. You will find them surely among confessors who are reputed for their judgement and their holiness, seminary directors, novice masters and exorcists. In these affairs, a spiritual co-naturality is important. Of course, it is good to name one or two theologians to examine the doctrine as well as some scientists to define the nature of the facts, but also for them a certain spiritual sensitivity has its importance» This proposal that is both evident and ordinary has hardly been followed up until now. Those with spiritual expertise are rarely nominated. These commissions would normally have the task of aiding in the discernment which the pilgrims themselves are trying to make. However, even though, at times, these commissions are qualified, most often they retreat into secrecy. With neither evaluation nor moti¬vation, they are quite satisfied to come to a conclusion with an evasively negative formula: has not been proved (non patet supernaturalitas).This open and practically meaningless formula is often translated by newspapers in terms of condemnation as if the negation were " patet non supernaturalitas": the supernatural is excluded.
When Christians lacking authority attempt a judgement, their attitude often justifies the following observations:
I have a high degree of friendship and respect for several of them. I have told them my reasons and my objections. I have left all that exclusively in their hands. They will make them public if they judge it wise or they can keep them secret if they think it prudent. Arguing degrades. It is not a good tool for reaching a true discernment for a matter that is intuitive. I have been criticized for “guaranteeing” Vassula. I have never used that term. I simply represent the elements of discernment according to the classic rules. Each person can therefore be judge, and freedom of opinion is the rule in this area. Even when an official authority makes a pronouncement on an apparition, it does not impose a judgment; it merely proposes one. Thus, I respect the freedom of each person, including the opponents, whose good faith is above suspicion. René Laurentin, When God gives a sign. A response to objections made against Vassula, Trinitas 1993, pp. 11-20. ![]() |