Commission reportedly thought first seven Medjugorje visions were real

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The commission that now-retired Pope
Benedict XVI established to study the alleged apparitions of Mary at Medjugorje,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, reportedly voted overwhelmingly to recognize as
supernatural the first seven appearances of Mary in 1981.

However, according to a report published by the website
Vatican Insider, the commission was much more doubtful about the thousands of alleged visions that have occurred since July 4, 1981, and supposedly continue to this day.

Two of the 17 commission members and consultants thought the
alleged visions after the period
of June 24-July 3, 1981,
were not supernatural, while the other members said it was not possible to make
a judgment.

The commission said it was clear that the six alleged
visionaries and a seventh who claims to have begun receiving messages from Mary
in December 1982 were not given adequate spiritual support.

Vatican Insider published its piece on the report May 16,
three days after Pope Francis spoke about some details of the report to
journalists traveling with him from Fatima, Portugal.

The Vatican press office May 17 declined to comment on the
Vatican Insider piece.

Speaking to journalists May 13, Pope Francis said that, regarding the Medjugorje
commission’s work, “three things need to be distinguished.”

“About the first apparitions, when (the ‘seers’) were
young, the report more or less says that the investigation needs to
continue,” the pope said, according to the English translation posted on
the Vatican website.

“Concerning the alleged current apparitions, the report
expresses doubts,” he said. Furthermore, “personally, I am more ‘mischievous.’
I prefer Our Lady to be a mother, our mother, and not a telegraph operator who
sends out a message every day at a certain time — this is not the mother of
Jesus.”

Pope Francis said his “personal opinion” is that
“these alleged apparitions have no great value.”

The “real core” of the commission’s report, he
said, is “the spiritual fact, the pastoral fact” that thousands of
pilgrims go to Medjugorje and are converted. “For this there is no magic
wand; this spiritual-pastoral fact cannot be denied.”

The spiritual fruits of the pilgrimages, he said, are the
reason why in February he appointed
Polish Archbishop Henryk Hoser of Warsaw-Praga to study the best ways to
provide pastoral care to townspeople and the pilgrims.

According to Vatican Insider, 13 of the 14 commission members
present at one meeting voted to recommend lifting the Vatican ban on official
diocesan and parish pilgrimages to Medjugorje.

The commission also recommended turning the town’s parish Church of
St. James into a pontifical shrine with Vatican oversight. The move, the
commission said, would not signify recognition of the apparitions, but would
acknowledge the faith and pastoral needs of the pilgrims while ensuring a
proper accounting of the financial donations pilgrims leave.

The commission’s role was to make recommendations to the
pope; its report is not an official church judgment on the apparitions. Pope
Francis told reporters May 13 that “in the end, something will be
said,” but he gave no timeline.

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