A
Alison
Guest
My sister and I read a whole book that published some lengthy interviews with the visionnaries and like you said nkelly, some of those things also bothered me. I did not question it at the time and tried to see if I could make the visionnaries’ disturbing inconsistencies “fit” with Church teaching, when really that is rather ridiculous to do because charisms are not beyond the authority of the Church founded on Christ.
In addition to the two things you have mentioned nkelly, one of the visionnaries also said that anyone can go to confession even non-catholics; yet, the Church’s view of this is not exactly in contention with what the visionnaries have said. Also, as many others, I noticed a heck of a lot of incongruency among the visionnaries. For instance when asked whether it is necessary to ask God for things that one needs, one visionnary replied that it isn’t necessary since God knows everything, while another visionnary said she disagreed with that answer and said she believed it to be necessary to ask God for what one needs. I don’t know, too much inconsistency. Too much disagreement.
-Alison
In addition to the two things you have mentioned nkelly, one of the visionnaries also said that anyone can go to confession even non-catholics; yet, the Church’s view of this is not exactly in contention with what the visionnaries have said. Also, as many others, I noticed a heck of a lot of incongruency among the visionnaries. For instance when asked whether it is necessary to ask God for things that one needs, one visionnary replied that it isn’t necessary since God knows everything, while another visionnary said she disagreed with that answer and said she believed it to be necessary to ask God for what one needs. I don’t know, too much inconsistency. Too much disagreement.
-Alison