C
commenter
Guest
I have always regarded approved private revelations as helpful. They are like the music in Church, they don’t (or shouldn’t) teach new doctrine, but they sometimes increase enthusiasm, and encourage people to focus on public revelation and the public liturgy with increased devotion.
When I was in grammar school, around 1960, we had thorough training in public revelation, so we could study private revelation a little, especially Fatima, in the larger context of Catholicism. My experience with teens and young adults nowadays suggests they have far less knowledge of public revelation than young Catholics years ago.
I have also seen videos of highly credible people such as Bishop Sheen in the 1950s, solidly endorsing Fatima. But I also know in the 1950s Catholics in general were far more obedient to the Magisterium, and to public revelation, than they are now. The majority of supporters of private revelation, including Fatima, are obedient now. A highly vocal minority is not.
When the Church approved Fatima in 1930, I suspect they believed the revelation was “complete”. I doubt they envisioned future disclosures which may or may not be through Sr. Lucia, let alone the endless interpretations and speculations, especially from people who then evaluate the Magisterium, and criticize pope and bishops.
So I suggest the Church will be much more cautious in the future about private revelations: in times of rampant ignorance of public revelation they will concentrate almost exclusively on public revelation. If anything the Church will continue attention to devotions as Divine Mercy, where St. Faustina was dead for a few decades, and the total revelation is about private conversion, not about social/political trends. The Church (I predict) will never again approve a private revelation where the visionaries are still living, or where there is any potential for criticizing the hierarchy.
When I was in grammar school, around 1960, we had thorough training in public revelation, so we could study private revelation a little, especially Fatima, in the larger context of Catholicism. My experience with teens and young adults nowadays suggests they have far less knowledge of public revelation than young Catholics years ago.
I have also seen videos of highly credible people such as Bishop Sheen in the 1950s, solidly endorsing Fatima. But I also know in the 1950s Catholics in general were far more obedient to the Magisterium, and to public revelation, than they are now. The majority of supporters of private revelation, including Fatima, are obedient now. A highly vocal minority is not.
When the Church approved Fatima in 1930, I suspect they believed the revelation was “complete”. I doubt they envisioned future disclosures which may or may not be through Sr. Lucia, let alone the endless interpretations and speculations, especially from people who then evaluate the Magisterium, and criticize pope and bishops.
So I suggest the Church will be much more cautious in the future about private revelations: in times of rampant ignorance of public revelation they will concentrate almost exclusively on public revelation. If anything the Church will continue attention to devotions as Divine Mercy, where St. Faustina was dead for a few decades, and the total revelation is about private conversion, not about social/political trends. The Church (I predict) will never again approve a private revelation where the visionaries are still living, or where there is any potential for criticizing the hierarchy.