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Medjugorje 25 years later: Apparitions and contested authenticity
John
Thavis
Catholic News Service
ROME (CNS) -- Twenty-five years after six children in Medjugorje, a village in
what is now Bosnia-Herzegovina, began reporting apparitions of Mary, pilgrims
are still flocking to the site and church officials are still cautious about the
authenticity of the events.
Marian experts continue to debate the significance of Medjugorje, and several
have published books -- ranging from enthusiastically supportive to skeptical --
to coincide with the anniversary.
In Medjugorje, Franciscan pastors are preparing for overflow crowds on June
24-25, the dates on which the alleged apparitions and messages began in 1981.
They insist, however, that no special commemorations are planned.
"Everything's been booked solid for more than a year, and we're expecting
thousands of pilgrims. But we're not putting on any spectacle or festival --
just the usual program of prayer," Franciscan Father Ivan Sesar, pastor of St.
James Parish in Medjugorje, said in a telephone interview.
Of the six children who originally reported visions from Mary, sometimes daily,
one says she still receives messages from Mary on the 25th of each month. They
are published online, eagerly awaited by a large network of Christians dedicated
to Medjugorje.
According to Bishop Ratko Peric of Mostar-Duvno, whose diocese includes
Medjugorje, the messages now number more than 30,000, a fact that only increases
his own skepticism about the authenticity of the apparitions.
Bishop Peric discussed Medjugorje with Pope Benedict XVI earlier this year
during a visit to the Vatican. In a summary of the discussion published in his
diocesan newspaper, Bishop Peric said he had reviewed the history of the
apparitions with the pope, who already was aware of the main facts from his time
as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
"The Holy Father told me: We at the congregation always asked ourselves how can
any believer accept as authentic apparitions that occur every day and for so
many years?" Bishop Peric said.
Bishop Peric noted that Yugoslavian bishops in 1991 issued a statement that "it
cannot be confirmed that supernatural apparitions or revelations are occurring"
at Medjugorje.
Bishop Peric said he told the pope that his own opinion was even stronger -- not
only that a supernatural element cannot be proven, but that "it is certain that
these events do not concern supernatural apparitions."
Other priests and bishops have spoken favorably about the apparitions, saying
there is no reason to doubt the sincerity of the visionaries or the spiritual
effects among pilgrims.
At Medjugorje, the debate over authenticity has been largely set aside by the
Franciscan friars who minister to pilgrims and keep in contact with the
visionaries.
"We are not here to give a judgment about whether the apparitions are true or
not. We're here to follow the people who come, to hear their confessions, to
give them pastoral care," said Father Sesar, the 39-year-old pastor.
Father Sesar said that, while early pilgrims to Medjugorje may have been drawn
there by curiosity or a thirst for supernatural signs like rosaries turning
different colors, that is less true today. Much more significant are the long
lines for confession that form every day, he said.
"The biggest things in Medjugorje today are prayer and the sacraments. It's no
longer a place where people come to see miracles. They are coming for spiritual
growth," he said.
Considerable attention, however, is still given to the apparitions and messages
which one of the visionaries, Marija Pavlovic-Lunetti, says she continues to
receive. She now lives with her husband and children in Italy.
The message from May 2006 strikes a pious tone typical of most of the thousands
of alleged communications over the last 25 years: "Decide for holiness, little
children, and think of heaven. Only in this way will you have peace in your
heart that no one will be able to destroy. Peace is a gift, which God gives you
in prayer."
At the Vatican, officials said they are still monitoring events at Medjugorje,
but emphasized that it was not necessarily the Vatican's role to issue an
official judgment on the alleged apparitions there.
More than once in recent years, the Vatican has said that dioceses or parishes
should not organize official pilgrimages to Medjugorje. That reflects the policy
of the bishops.
But the Vatican has also said Catholics are free to travel to the site, and that
if they do the church should provide them with pastoral services.
That has left a margin of ambiguity among Catholics. Adding to the confusion
have been claims that the late Pope John Paul II strongly supported Medjugorje
in various private statements; the Vatican has never confirmed those statements.
After Pope Benedict was elected, it was rumored that as a cardinal he had once
traveled incognito to Medjugorje, and that as pope he could be expected to
officially approve the site as a Marian shrine.
In his February visit to the Vatican, Bishop Peric said he spoke to the pope
about these rumors, and that the pontiff only laughed in surprise.
Pope Benedict, who headed the doctrinal congregation for 24 years, once said the
multiplication of Marian apparitions was a "sign of the times" and should not be
discounted. But he has also counseled prudence, even when it comes to
apparitions officially recognized by the church, like those at Fatima, Portugal;
Guadalupe, Mexico; and Lourdes, France.
Behind the Vatican's careful approach is a basic church teaching: that public
revelation ended with the death of the last apostle, and that no private
revelation, however interesting, will add anything essential to the faith.
Yet some, like Msgr. Arthur Calkins, a Vatican official and a member of the
Pontifical International Marian Academy, believe that while apparitions do not
furnish new truths of faith, they can help Catholics understand them better.
Private revelations recognized by the authority of the church "may serve to
bring home to the faithful truths which are already known, but not fully
appreciated," Msgr. Calkins said in an interview.
"The apparitions of Our Lady at Fatima, for example, brought home to the
faithful the need for prayer, penance, conversion of heart, reparation for sins.
All of this expands on the doctrine of the mystical body of Christ," he said.
Like several other experts at the Vatican, Msgr. Calkins declined to offer any
opinion about Medjugorje.
Marian expert Donal Foley, in his new book, "Understanding Medjugorje," reviews
the public evidence, particularly from the early days of the reported visions,
and says that, "sadly, the only rational conclusion about Medjugorje is that it
has turned out to be a vast, if captivating, religious illusion."
In a phone interview, Foley listed several factors that make him dubious:
contradictions over how long the apparitions would continue, the excess number
of messages, their questionable and sometimes "silly" content, excess focus on
inexplicable "signs," and the credulous local culture in Medjugorje.
Foley said it was obvious that some Medjugorje pilgrims have experienced
spiritual awakening. But he said part of this could be attributed to a
"charismatic element that grabs people's emotions."
Another factor, he said, is that Medjugorje may appeal to Catholics confused by
changes after the Second Vatican Council.
"It's a sad reality that some people have had to go to Medjugorje to get priests
who were enthusiastic about confession, and to get the things they used to be
able to get in the church in the West," he said.
Other writers have used the 25th anniversary as an occasion to celebrate
Medjugorje. Elizabeth Ficocelli's "The Fruits of Medjugorje" offers more than
200 pages of what she says are "stories of true and lasting conversion."
In a special anniversary edition of "Medjugorje, The Message," Wayne Weible says
that more than 30 million people have made the trip to Medjugorje, where what is
"arguably the greatest apparition in recorded Marian history" is still going on.
END
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