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Don_Ruggero
Guest
You are confusing two distinct concepts. Private revelations do not have to be accepted.That is not a negative judgement against the visions. It simply says that her beatification was not linked to the visions and that the writings cannot be authenticated. That is not the same as saying that the writings are deemed inauthentic.
The faithful are free to believe the visions (as they are free to reject them). That is the case with private revelations that have not been declared to be non-supernatural.
But in this case, it cannot be established what of the materials that exist originate with the visionary or reproduce what she is relating as an alleged private revelation. That is an entirely different matter.
The writings had to be set aside from the analysis carried out in a cause for beatification because what actually can be traced back to Anne Catherine Emmerich could in no way be established.
A judgement cannot be arrived at concerning a private revelation when you cannot establish what is authentically the content of the alleged private revelation from the recipient of the alleged private revelation…in such an instance, there is no data to analyse.
The judgement, in essence, is we cannot know if any given passage in these works is hers or not.
The writings cannot be attributed in any real sense to Anne Catherine Emmerich. That is the whole point. Forensically, it is not possible to even begin to establish, let alone successfully conclude, what of the material actually truly originates with Anne Catherine Emmerich.
To say there is not a negative judgement is to miss the point that there is nothing extant upon which one can formulate a judgement.
Indeed, when the assessment is that it is impossible to even isolate what originates with the visionary, as opposed to what is material redacted in from other sources, there is no basis upon which to conclude a judgment that is either positive or negative.
That is why the conclusion of both the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith as well as the Congregation for the Causes of Saints was what it was.