Miracles outside the Catholic Church

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The miracles in other churches are usually personal healing, largely unprovable.Think Benny Hinn. There is a church here in Alberta that is all about healing miracles moderndaymiracles.net/, if you want to check out some stories.

Lukelion
 
True miracles happen all the time outside the Catholic Church. In my church we’ve had many documented cases. One woman had 8 tumors in her lungs. She went in to have surgery and felt the Lord was telling her not to have the surgery and to ask for x-rays again. The doctors were flabbergasted that not one tumor was there. We saw the x-rays in church. A child broke his neck and went in for surgery. The same thing happened. They asked for x-rays to be taken right before the surgery and his neck was whole. He was in church that Sunday. My husband is sometimes called as a chaplain in a local hospital. The hospital called one night because a family requested prayer. A man needed bypass surgery and was having it in the morning. My husband felt the Lord was telling him that this man would be healed and not need the surgery. The doctors tested the morning of the surgery and his arteries were whole. They couldn’t believe it.
 
There have been “miracles” occuring in every type of church for as long as one can look back, from the Mormons to the Muslims. But if what you need is at"big miracle"such as Marian apparitions and bleeding Hosts, or incorrupability and things of that nature, you would be surprised to find that the only Churches that have such miracles are those of ancient apostolic foundations. While these churches may not all be in communion, they all seem to be playing some role in the work of the Lord and the Holy Mother. These churches would be, exclusively, the Roman Catholic Church, the Greek/Eastern Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox Church and the Coptic Orthodox Church.

All of the Churches that have such grand miracles belive in the Communion of Saints, devotion to the Blessed Mother, Apostolic Succession (to one degree or another), the True Presence in the Eucharist, and other qualities that mark them as Churches of thier ancient origens. You can found a good list of apparitions on www.miraclehunter.com including one that occured at a Coptic church in Zeitun, Egypt…
 
There have been some examples of non-Catholics with incorruptible bodies on this thread. As the Church accepts that it is possible for non-Catholics to go to heaven, it is possible that these people are in heaven and just as “saintly” as some of our saints. I don’t think the existence of incorruptible non-Catholics would necessarily disprove the miraculous nature of something like this.
 
What is the importance of weeping statues or apparitions? Miracles from Jesus are miracles whether they happen at Lourdes or in the local evangelical church. People are healed either way. Praise the Lord that he works in mysterious ways for all believers.
 
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thistle:
I think you are missing the point. There is only one Church and that is the one established by Christ and it is the Catholic Church. Other sects may call themselves churches but they are not!
In other words, the Eastern Orthodox Churches are not Churches? This would contradict statements from the Vatican which indicate that the Eastern Orthodox Church is a sister Church to the Roman Catholic Church and that the Church has two lungs. For example, the expression sister Churches has been used by Pope John Paul II in the encyclical Slavorum Apostoli: “For us they [Cyril and Methodius] are the champions and also the patrons of the ecumenical endeavour of the sister Churches of East and West for the rediscovery through prayer and dialogue of visible unity in perfect and total communion” and also in other documents.
 
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thistle:
I think you are missing the point.
I still think that there is an institution which calls itself the Baptist Church and it is not true to say that this institution does not exist. That the institution of Baptists exists is seen by reference to the following:
abc-usa.org/
For a comprehensive directory of independent Baptist Church websites:
bn66.com/churches/baptist.html
The question was whether or not there were reports of miracles outside of the Catholic Church. I gave you two examples, so what is your point with reference to the original question of the OP?
 
There are many miracles that happened outside of the CC. The CC does not own exclusive rights to miracles. People getting healed, marriages saved, people getting miraculously saved etc. But if you are looking at approved apparations, you will not find any. The CC will not automatically approve an apparation. They have to cease, investigated, the seer is checked, investigated to see if they are psychologically sound, what if any were the messages, are they in line with the teachings of the church, etc., etc., and then maybe they may be deemed worthy of believe. Protestant Churches have nobody with authority to render any such apparations worthy of believe. Besides, if something was approved by some pastor or a non-catholic bishop, that would be too, too Catholic to suit them.
 
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TobyLue:
Protestant Churches have nobody with authority to render any such apparations worthy of believe. Besides, if something was approved by some pastor or a non-catholic bishop, that would be too, too Catholic to suit them.
Why this division and bitterness towards your Protestant brothers? Why this push toward Marian apparitions? Why is an apparition such a greater miracle than any other miracle? Did you ever consider that God may use whatever we would welcome or receive? If one is Catholic, they would welcome an apparition of Mary. If one is Protestant one would welcome a vision of Jesus. Yes apparitions are miracuous but for most believers they are meaningless because it is not for them. Apparitions are miraculous for the people that have them just as visions and healings are miraculous for the people that have them. You are right that Protestant churches have no one central government agency that looks into miracles. It tends to be done at a local level. If a miracle is from God we rejoice. Isn’t that the whole point of miracles - God’s intervening in His awesome way? Let me ask this, why does a miracle need to be looked into with so much ernestness? I don’t recall that it happened in the gospels that way. Jesus just told people to show themselves to the local priest. Other times he told people not to tell anyone. Were they not real miracles if they were not investigated? When the gospels speak of the transfiguration and the disciples saw an apparition of Moses and Elijah Peter wanted to create a shrine and again Jesus told them not to tell right away.
 
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JSmitty2005:
Such an inistitution does not exist. Baptists are considered an “ecclesial community” but certainly not a church.
Apparently you disagree with the infallible Pope, and the Vicar of Christ, the Supreme Pontiff of the Holy Roman Catholic Church, His Holiness Pope Paul VI when he addressed a group from the Southern Baptist Church of Dallas on June 12, 1971:“We are most pleased today to receive so large a group from the Southern Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. This is a striking and perhaps unique illustration of a new spirit of friendship among those who call on the name of Christ.”
 
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Kirane:
Apparently you disagree with the infallible Pope, and the Vicar of Christ, the Supreme Pontiff of the Holy Roman Catholic Church, His Holiness Pope Paul VI when he addressed a group from the Southern Baptist Church of Dallas on June 12, 1971:“We are most pleased today to receive so large a group from the Southern Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. This is a striking and perhaps unique illustration of a new spirit of friendship among those who call on the name of Christ.”
#1 - not everything the pope says is infallible; in fact, very little of what the pope says is universally binding

#2 - furthermore, simply because he called them by the name that they call themselves does not actually mean that their community is truly a church!
 
JSmitty2005 said:
#1 - not everything the pope says is infallible; in fact, very little of what the pope says is universally binding

#2 - furthermore, simply because he called them by the name that they call themselves does not actually mean that their community is truly a church!

I prefer to follow His Holiness the Pope, the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, and call them by the same name as His Holiness does. I think that your objection is petty because I am following the Pope on this and besides it is off topic because the question is about whether or not there are miracles outside of the Catholic Church.
 
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Kirane:
I prefer to follow His Holiness the Pope, the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, and call them by the same name as His Holiness does. I think that your objection is petty because I am following the Pope on this and besides it is off topic because the question is about whether or not there are miracles outside of the Catholic Church.
Hahahaha. :rotfl: I’m glad that you can list the titles of the Holy Father but that makes your point no more valid. The pope was calling them that because that’s what they call themselves. He was not speaking in a technical theological sense. The Church has done this, though. Here’s what Karl Keating has said:

I use “church” in a colloquial sense when referring to the Anglican or other Protestant bodies. Official Catholic documents, including those of Vatican II and Dominus Jesus, reserve the word “church” for bodies that maintain all seven sacraments, which means, as a practical matter, that the word is used for the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox churches. Protestant “churches” are termed “ecclesial communities” or “ecclesial communions,” which means that they are “church-like” but are not true churches.

You can find that here:

catholic.com/thisrock/2000/0012fr.asp

CASE CLOSED! Now we can return to the thread’s topic. 👍
 
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JSmitty2005:
Here’s what Karl Keating has said::
I prefer to follow the Pope rather than Karl Keating in this matter. The Pope has the authority as the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, which Mr. Keating does not have.
So, it is ridiculous for you to object to my reference to reading about a miracle in the Baptist Church
 
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Kirane:
I prefer to follow the Pope rather than Karl Keating in this matter. The Pope has the authority as the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, which Mr. Keating does not have.
So, it is ridiculous for you to object to my reference to reading about a miracle in the Baptist Church
Kirane, YOU ARE WRONG. Just admit it. There is no such thing as the Baptist CHURCH. I prefer to follow the official teaching of the Catholic Church rather than try to make a case from a random quote in which the pope uses the word in the colloquial sense. From Dominus Iesus:

The ecclesial communities which have not preserved the valid Episcopate and the genuine and integral substance of the Eucharistic mystery, are not Churches in the proper sense.
 
In regards to the baptist ‘church’ debate…

To me, it’s similar to calling a dolphin a fish. In the most specific scientific terms, it’s a misnomer - dolphins are mammals. But in casual conversation, you can call a dolphin a fish and everyone understands what you’re talking about - they don’t take your words to be a declaration of species.

Baptist churches “are not churches in the proper sense”, but they are churches in another sense.
 
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Nullasalus:
In regards to the baptist ‘church’ debate…

To me, it’s similar to calling a dolphin a fish. In the most specific scientific terms, it’s a misnomer - dolphins are mammals. But in casual conversation, you can call a dolphin a fish and everyone understands what you’re talking about - they don’t take your words to be a declaration of species.

Baptist churches “are not churches in the proper sense”, but they are churches in another sense.
Just as dolphins are not fish, Baptists do not belong to a church. I guess that could be an analogy. A valid priesthood and valid sacraments are necessary for a church. Some churches other than the Catholic Church include:

Eastern Orthodox
Polish National Catholics
Old Catholics
SSPX
Swedish Lutherans
 
thogg85
Why this division and bitterness towards your Protestant brothers? Why this push toward Marian apparitions? Why is an apparition such a greater miracle than any other miracle?
First of all there is division with the Protestants, but that’s for another thread. Where is my bitterness towards Protestants? I’m just stating a truth. Where is their authority to declare something worthy of belief? And it’s true that if anybody were to declare something worth of belief what other church besides the CC and OC have the authority? Where am I pushing Marian apparations? Where did I state that an apparation a greater miracle than any other. Please dont put words in my mouth… or fingers as is the case.
Look again at my statement:
There are many miracles that happened outside of the CC. The CC does not own exclusive rights to miracles.
Is that showing bitterness?
If one is Protestant one would welcome a vision of Jesus.
There was a book out by a Michael somebody, cant remember his last name, but claimed Jesus appeared to him and that book sold many copies. Turned out after investigation was made he admitted he lied about the apparitions. Many people can imagine things and lie. That why the CC takes these things seriously and wants to make sure they really are something unexplainable.
Apparitions are miraculous for the people that have them just as visions and healings are miraculous for the people that have them.
Right now there are many claiming to have visions and some have even been condemn, and others the local bishops are warning the faithful to stay away. There are many people that just like to go around looking for miracles and apparitions, but Jesus warns us about looking for them.
Let me ask this, why does a miracle need to be looked into with so much ernestness?
Because there can be deception. Satan can pose as an angel of light and even work miracles to detract our attention that we should give Jesus. Not all alleged miracles are investigated.Also because there have been many cases of healings (I wont mention any names) but turned out to be fraud. Anybody can pretend they are crippled and then at the command of some dude get up and start walking and that same person does it again and again. It happened in my town many, many years back. It was not a Catholic gathering BTW. Like I said, I’m sure there are many miracles that happened on a daily basis in CC and in Protestant Churches.
 
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Kirane:
I prefer to follow the Pope rather than Karl Keating in this matter. The Pope has the authority as the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, which Mr. Keating does not have.
So, it is ridiculous for you to object to my reference to reading about a miracle in the Baptist Church
Actually, Karl was quoting a pope (or at least a document promulgated with the approval of a pope), John Paul II, to be exact. The “particular” churches have maintained the sacraments and apostolic succession. The “ecclesial communities” have not.

I don’t know what dog you have in this race, but for me, it’s personal. My entire family, with the exception of one brother (a Methodist), are Baptists. I love them dearly, but I cannot help, but acknowledge that the Vicar of Christ and the Supreme Poniff of the Roman Catholic Church (really, I think the title says “universal Church,” because the Catholic Church is more than the Latin Rite) has ruled that they belong to an “ecclesial community,” not a “church.” It MAY sound insulting, but it’s nonetheless true.

That said, I’ve no difficulty saying that **apparently **there are miracles outside the Catholic Church. The trouble is that we don’t know their source. Holy Mother Church has an exhaustive process of examining such things and she examines SLOWLY before she renders judgement. Can God operate miraculously outside the Church? Of course, just as He can operate outside the Sacraments. The Sacraments, however (and the Church is the singular Sacrament to the entire world), are what is normative. They are what constitute the covenant instituted by God.
 
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