If Church Judgment ...Goes Against Medjugorje........

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If Church Judgment ...Goes Against Medjugorje........

Post by Denise » Mon Oct 31, 2011 11:23 am

If Church Judgment ...Goes Against Medjugorje,
How Will Followers React?


by Donal Anthony Foley




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The following article was printed in The Wanderer on 10/27/2011, Page 1

If Church Judgment ... Goes Against Medjugorje, How Will Followers React? by Donal Anthony Foley


This year saw the 30th anniversary of the beginning of the alleged visions at Medjugorje. Great numbers of pilgrims have visited the “shrine” in Bosnia-Herzegovina during this period, and the alleged visions and visionaries have a worldwide following. But is Medjugorje a case of genuine Marian apparitions? What if this isn’t the case, and it turns out to be a huge religious deception?


Many people are uncomfortable with this second possibility and would rather focus on the “good fruits” which have arisen out of the visions, and which have certainly been present in factors such as individuals coming back to the Church, or finding their vocation. But we cannot assess a series of alleged visions just on the basis of good fruits: We also need to investigate the totality of what actually happened.


Regarding Medjugorje, the Church is now doing just that at the highest level, following the formation, in March 2010, of an international commission led by Camillo Cardinal Ruini. Once it comes to a decision, this will be delivered to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), but the final verdict rests with Pope Benedict XVI.


It doesn’t seem to be widely understood, particularly by a good number of Medjugorje supporters, that it is quite possible that the commission will issue a negative judgment. But if the ultimate judgment, as ratified by the Pope, is negative, how will rank-and-file Medjugorje supporters react? They are used to seeing a generally positive media position on Medjugorje, even though there is a growing body of evidence pointing to serious problems regarding the alleged visions and the visionaries, as well as their immediate associates.


A good example of this is the laicization, in June 2009, of Fr. Tomislav Vlasic, one of the early spiritual directors of t he visionaries. He had previously been reported to the CDF “for the diffusion of dubious doctrine, manipulation of consciences, suspected mysticism, disobedience toward legitimately issued orders” and charges contra sextum that is, in connection with the Sixth Commandment, and thus relating to sexual matters.

(For further resources regarding this general point see:
www.theotokos.org.uk/pages/unapprov/med ... jugor.html)

According to the papal nuncio to Bosnia- Herzegovina, Archbishop Alessandro D’Errico, Medjugorje is a subject which “deals with a question for which [ Pope Benedict] feels responsible as the supreme head of the Church to pronounce a clear message.”


So we can expect a definite decision one way or the other from the Pope regarding Medjugorje, but there are signs that this decision is likely to be negative.


This is clear from the fact that the Vatican has adopted a more critical stance regarding alleged mystics generally since Pope Benedict came to power. Figures such as Brother Gino, an alleged stigmatist, and members of the Army of Mary, a sect founded by one Marie- Paule Giguère in Canada in 1971, have been disciplined by the CDF in recent years. And it is surely significant that Cardinal Ruini overturned a positive diocesan decision about the alleged weeping statue at Civitavecchia, which has Medjugorje connections, and so has a track record of being cautious about alleged mystical events.


The crucial point in all this, and the one which will surely be the most significant for the Ruini commission, is that up to now, ecclesial pronouncements about Medjugorje have either been explicitly or implicitly negative, or at best neutral: explicitly in the case of the successive local bishops, and implicitly as regards the! 1991 Zadar Declaration, in which the bishops of ex- Yugoslavia said that “ on the basis of investigation up till now, it cannot be established that one is dealing with supernatural apparitions and revelations.”


(The statements from Bishops Pavao Zanic and Ratko Peric have been important in the overall process of discerning the truth about Medjugorje — in the light of the CDF document Normae Congregationis which deals with alleged revelations — and their position cannot be lightly dismissed, as has regrettably been the tendency among some Medjugorje supporters.)


Other statements concerning, for example, pilgrimages have essentially been of a pastoral nature and designed to ensure that the genuine needs of pilgrims were taken into account. Some striking supernatural facts about Medjugorje are going to have to suddenly emerge if the commission is to overturn the previously established ecclesial positions, and it is very difficult to see this happening.


Turn To Approved Apparitions


Where does all this leave the Catholic media, given their largely positive reports about Medjugorje? If they don’t properly investigate Medjugorje, their credibility will be called into question, and, just as happened with the sex abuse crisis, it will be left up to the secular media to take the lead in exposing some of the less savory aspects of Medjugorje.


So there needs to be a much more critical approach from the Catholic media toward Medjugorje, both to get to the facts and also to prepare Medjugorje supporters for the real possibility of a negative decision. If such a decision were to come tomorrow, it would be nothing less than a bombshell for most convinced Medjugorje adherents and could conceivably lead to some of them leaving the Church. They would be quite entitled to ask: “Why weren’t we told about all this negative information concerning Medjugorje?”


But there is also a need for the leaders of the worldwide Medjugorje movement to start to inform their followers about the possibility of a negative verdict. There do seem to have been signs of more questioning articles and news reports recently, as though people are starting to realize that a negative decision is a distinct possibility, but I would argue that much more needs to be done.


What, then, if the decision is negative? My hope is that, if this is the case, convinced Medjugorje supporters will turn to the approved apparitions of our Lady, particularly Fatima, as this has (unlike Medjugorje) obtained the full approval of the Church and of all the Popes since Pius XII.


When Pope Benedict visited the shrine in May 2010 he went out of his way to emphasize that “Fatima has a message for the entire world and touches history here and now, and sheds light on this history.” He also said: “We would be mistaken to think that Fatima’s prophetic mission is complete.”


The Fatima message provides a blueprint for the future and an absolutely sure and certain devotional path, and it is to be hoped that Medjugorje supporters will realize this and act on it, rather than continue to uncritically support the alleged visions.
Devotion to the souls in Purgatory contains in itself all the works of mercy, which supernaturalized by a spirit of faith, should merit us Heaven. de Sales

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