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sealabeag
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Good to know. Helps with errors in her writings. But then my next question is why Catholic would bother with them, and the Church doesn’t take a negative position on them?
If you’re talking about Maria Valtorta, please provide a source that her writings were removed from the Index. As far as I know they were never removed and were on there until the Index was abolished.Her writings were removed from the index of forbidden books, and as such are not condemned.
This is a reasonable statement, but we have on the other hand the statement of Cardinal Ratzinger, (who became Pope Benedict as we all know), stating that the Index continues in moral force. From Wikipedia:Also, the Index of Forbidden Books no longer exists .
Furthermore, when Maria’s book is published now, the Church requires it to contain a disclaimer at the beginning thatCardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in his letter 144/58 of 31 January 1985, entrusted to Cardinal Giuseppe Siri, Archbishop of Genoa, the decision whether to inform a priest of his archdiocese that the Valtorta work had indeed been placed on the Index , which keeps its moral force, and that “a decision against distributing and recommending a work, which has not been condemned lightly, may be reversed, but only after profound changes that neutralize the harm which such a publication could bring forth among the ordinary faithful”.[18][19] Cardinal Siri not only informed the priest, but also published (with the name of the priest removed) the text of Cardinal Ratzinger’s letter.
So basically in the view of the Church, this is a fictional life of Jesus, not supernatural in origin, that might be dangerous for the faithful to read.“in any future reprint of the volumes, each should, right from its first page, clearly state that the ‘visions’ and ‘dictations’ referred to in it cannot be held to be of supernatural origin but must be considered simply as literary forms used by the author to narrate in her own way the life of Jesus”.
I would also add that to be fully human means to not know all things. Not to be all wise.Scripture does say He grew in wisdom. To be uncertain. To be confused. Not to see cleary. If He was truly human, He experienced all that. None of that is sin.As the 2nd person of the Trinity he was omniscient but at the Incarnation he took on all of the foibles of humanity (minus sin). This includes physical emotions, going to the bathroom, being educated, sleeping, being tired, etc. So when he was helping out Joseph, for example, he was learning the trade as any human would.
The official stand is what I just posted in my post above - the Church still disapproves of her writing and requires publishers to put a disclaimer in the front saying it’s basically a fictional life of Jesus.Anyway I ll check out the official stand on her writings and post links
That is not correct. The alleged writings of Anne Emmerich have not in any shape or form been approved by the Church.Well, yes and no. The writings of Bl. Anne have been approved. The problem lies that what she actually wrote greatly differs from what is attributed to her. One of the processes of Beatification is examination of authored material and finding nothing which goes against Catholic teaching. In reality Bl. Anne wrote very little which survives today. The book which was attributed to her, which was quoted above, was primarily written by Clemens Brentano. Bl. Anne did not speak German, only a dialect, so the words Bretano wrote were never hers but a summarized translation. In addition to this, Bretano almost never took notes during his meetings with Bl. Anne and thus expanded and filled in gaps in his recollection with his own words. These writings were again edited years after Bl. Anne’s death, contributing to a even greater discrepancy.
So yes, Bl. Anne’s visions were approved through the process of her beatification. What those visions exactly were, however, remains largely a mystery as they have been blurred through the manner in which they were handed down.