Current:Home > ContactVatican updates norms to evaluate visions of Mary, weeping statues as it adapts to internet age and hoaxers -CapitalEdge
Vatican updates norms to evaluate visions of Mary, weeping statues as it adapts to internet age and hoaxers
View
Date:2025-04-14 07:02:31
Vatican City – The Vatican's doctrinal office has released new norms regarding alleged supernatural phenomena such as apparitions of Mary, weeping statues and other supposed mystical events.
For centuries, apparitions of Mary at sites such as Fatima, Portugal and Lourdes, France – eventually declared by church authorities as having divine origin – have become the basis for shrines visited by millions of pilgrims each year.
But in a new document replacing the church's 1978 rules, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) declared that the Vatican and the local bishop will no longer formally declare such phenomena to be of divine origin. DDF chief Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernandez said in a press conference on Friday introducing the new norms that the Vatican would no longer affirm "with moral certainty that (such phenomena) originates from a decision willed by God in a direct way." Instead, after careful analysis, they would limit themselves to authorizing devotion and pilgrimages, he said.
The new rules give the final word to the Vatican, requiring the bishop to conduct an investigation, formulate his judgment, and submit it to the DDF. The DDF will then respond with one of six possible outcomes. They range from a "nihil obstat" ("nothing stands in the way") allowing the bishop to promote the phenomena and invite devotion and pilgrimage; to proceeding with caution since some doctrinal questions are still open; to advising the bishop not to encourage the phenomena; to declaring based on concrete facts that the phenomena does not have divine origin.
Fernandez said that since examination of alleged religious phenomena took many years, these new rules would help the church reach decisions much more quickly, which is essential in the internet age where such claims spread very quickly.
In most cases, these apparitions have led to a growth in faith, leading to shrines that are at the heart of popular devotion, he said. But the cardinal also cautioned that they could lead to "serious issues that harm the faithful" and could be exploited for "profit, power, fame, social recognition, or other personal interest." The faithful could be "misled by an event that is attributed to a divine initiative but is merely the product of someone's imagination, desire for novelty, or tendency to lie," he said.
Neomi De Anda, executive director of the International Marian Research Institute at the University of Dayton, told the Associated Press the new guidelines represent a significant but welcome change to the current practice while restating important principles.
"The faithful are able to engage with these phenomena as members of the faithful in popular practices of religion, while not feeling the need to believe everything offered to them as supernatural as well as the caution against being deceived and beguiled," she said in an email.
- In:
- Vatican City
- Catholic Church
veryGood! (7)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- A man pleads guilty in a shooting outside then-US Rep. Zeldin’s New York home
- Senate committee to vote to hold Steward Health Care CEO in contempt
- Why Sister Wives’ Kody Brown Believes Janelle Brown Is Doing This to Punish Him
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Nebraska ballot will include competing measures to expand or limit abortion rights, top court rules
- Disney superfan dies after running Disneyland half marathon on triple-digit day
- Actor James Hollcroft Found Dead at 26
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Texas’ highest criminal court declines to stop execution of man accused in shaken baby case
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Colorado teen hoping for lakeside homecoming photos shot in face by town councilman, police say
- Idaho high court says trial for man charged with killing 4 university students will be held in Boise
- High-tech search for 1968 plane wreck in Michigan’s Lake Superior shows nothing so far
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Officers who beat Tyre Nichols didn’t follow police training, lieutenant testifies
- Tech companies commit to fighting harmful AI sexual imagery by curbing nudity from datasets
- Ex-Massachusetts lawmaker convicted of scamming pandemic unemployment funds
Recommendation
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
Tennessee judge rules gun control questions can go on Memphis ballot
Three people wounded in downtown Dallas shooting; police say suspect is unknown
Influencer Suellen Carey Divorces Herself After Becoming Exhausted During One-Year Marriage
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Studies on pigeon-guided missiles, swimming abilities of dead fish among Ig Nobles winners
The ACLU commits $2 million to Michigan’s Supreme Court race for reproductive rights ads
Pac-12 expansion candidates: Schools conference could add, led by Memphis, Tulane, UNLV