NORMS
AND PROCESS FOR JUDGING PRIVATE REVELATIONS
Realism
During
the past several years, the number of reported apparitions has been greatly
increasing. While concentrating on Marian apparitions, our purpose here is to
view all popular piety in the context of the total picture of Catholic faith,
devotion, and discipleship. Our approach is to strike a happy medium between
vain credulity and sterile skepticism. Perhaps we could label our position as
one of critical or moderate realism.
Authentic
Visions
Visionaries
or seers behold an object not naturally visible to other persons. An authentic
supernatural vision or apparition is different from illusions or hallucinations
that result from pathological conditions or even diabolical intervention. An
authentic vision is a charism -- gratia gratis data -- given to an individual
or group for the spiritual good of others and/or for the Church as a whole.
The
Church's Voice
On
February 25, 1978, the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF)
issued "Norms of the Congregation for Proceeding in Judging Alleged
Apparitions and Revelations." Pope Paul VI had approved these norms the
preceding day. Although this document uses the term supernaturalitas, we
believe that what is meant is something supernatural in the mode in which it
has occured rather than supernatural in its essence or substance.
The
Bishop's Role
When
an allegedly supernatural event has occurred, it is the responsibility of the
local bishop to conduct an investigation, usually through a committee of
experts.Theologically and canonically, the bishop is entrusted with the role of
"oversight" of the diocese. This role of "oversight" is
based on the bishop's responsibility both for public worship and for the
religious teaching which occurs in the diocese.
Norms
for Discernment
1)
The first norm for evaluating miraculous events is that there be moral
certainty, or at least great probability, that something miraculous has
occurred. The commission may interview the visionaries, call other witnesses,
visit the site of the events.
2)
The second norm deals with the personal qualities of the subjects who claim to
have had the apparition; they must be mentally sound, honest, sincere, of
upright conduct, obedient to ecclesiastical authorities, able to return to the
normal practices of the faith (such as participation in communal worship,
reception of the sacraments).
3)
A third category deals with the content of the revelation or message: it must
be theologically acceptable and morally sound and free of error.
4)
The fourth positive criterion is that the apparition must result in positive
spiritual assets which endure (prayer, conversion, increase of charity).
These
four criteria may also be restated in a negative way. There must be no doubt
that what is occurring is truly exceptional and beyond human explanation. There
must be no doctrinal error attributed to God or to the Blessed Virgin Mary or
some other saint. The third negative criterion is that there must be no hint of
financial advantage to anyone connected with the apparitions, nor must any of
the visionaries be accused of serious moral improprieties at the time when the
visions were being received, nor may there be evidence of mental illness or
psychopathic tendencies.
Verdicts
At
the end of the investigative process, the committee may submit to the bishop(s)
one of the following verdicts or conjectural judgements: constat de
supernaturalitate (the event shows all the signs of being an authentic or a
truly miraculous intervention from heaven); constat de non supernaturalitate
(the alleged apparition is clearly not miraculous or there are not sufficient
signs manifesting it to be so); non constat de supernaturalitate (it is not
evident whether or not the alleged apparition is authentic).The Bishop's
decision regarding alleged apparitions usually does not attempt to interpret or
give the spiritual significance of the events, nor to interpret the messages or
identify the heavenly persons who may have appeared.
Public
Worship
All
such investigations are conducted by the bishop to determine whether public worship
should continue to be held in those places. It could happen that the
investigative committee could conclude that at this time it is able neither to
make a clearly positive nor a clearly negative judgement. If the matter is
still being investigated, the bishop could permit public worship, while at the
same time continuing to be vigilant that the devotions do not wander into
deviant directions.
Our
Responsibility
As
the bishops are entrusted with these responsibilities stemming from the nature
of their office, so there are fundamental responsibilities on the part of the
members of the diocese. First, they are to obey their bishops when the latter
act as Christ's representatives (canon 212), that is, when they teach formally
or establish binding discipline as pastors of a particular church. This
obedience owed to the bishops in their capacity as leaders of particular
churches is intended to promote the common good. Canon 753 also speaks of the
"religious assent" owed to the bishops' teaching authority, which
means a special quality of respect and gratitude, along with critical awareness
and good will. Hence, there should be intelligent obedience to ecclesiastical
authority in the matter of alleged apparitions.
Publications
A
new era opened in the canonical regulations dealing with apparitions occurred
in 1969. In that year, Pope Paul VI deleted certain canons of the 1917 Code of
Canon Law. These canons had specifically forbidden the publication of all books
or pamphlets about new apparitions, revelations, visions, prophecies, and
miracles, or which introduce new devotions, even though justified as private.
Such prohibitions are not part of the 1983 Code of Canon Law. So the many
reports of Marian apparitions may in part be due to the new freedom to discuss
freely and to report such occurrences to the media, without first submitting
them to ecclesiastical approbation.
The
Foundations of Our Faith
Our
faith cannot rest on private revelations and apparitions. Even with properly
approved apparitions, we must maintain a proper perspective -- viewing them as
an assistance to nourish our faith in the central dogmas of the Incarnation,
the Trinity and the Eucharist. In their 1973 pastoral letter, Behold Your
Mother: Woman of Faith, the American bishops called authenticated appearances
of Mary "providential happenings [which] serve as reminders of basic
Christian themes: such as prayer, penance, and the necessity of the
sacraments" (# 100).
This
text is based on "Discerning the Miraculous: Norms for Judging Apparitions
and Private Revelations" by Frederick Jelly, O.P. (1993); and
"Canonical Considerations regarding Alleged Apparitions" by Fr.
Michael Smith Foster, JCD (1995). It was abridged, combined and rearranged by
Fr. Johann G. Roten, S.M.