After
many requests, questions and dubious assumptions regarding the status
of Garabandal and the church's official position we commissioned our executive
member in the USA, Geoffrey A.P. Groesbeck, to research this topic thoroughly and accurately. Here
is his comprehensive report.
The Church's TRUE Position Regarding Garabandal It's
time to set the record straight, once and for all...
One of
the most misunderstood matters regarding Garabandal is the Church's true
position on it. Opinion as to what it has been, is, or will be, has see-sawed
relentlessly in the more than four decades since the apparitions began
in the tiny hamlet of San Sebastian de Garabandal in northern Spain. There
are those who are convinced the Church is disposed to look favourably
upon it, as well as those who believe the opposite. And there is a large
camp in the middle, uncertain as to which side to join. It is time to
set the record straight, once and for all. Plainly put, these are the
facts.
The Church has not yet made any Definitive Pronouncement
Equally important, the Church has not, in any way, condemned it.
We can
start by asking what constitutes an "official" position, who
declares it so, and to what extent it is binding upon the faithful. To
answer these questions, we must first sound the Church's feelings as to
the status of Garabandal within the larger context of apparitions in general.
In other words, we ask whether Garabandal meets the Church's criteria
for consideration as a valid apparition, before assuming a definitive
position on the matter.
The Church's Criteria
An excellent introduction
to the Church's criteria for reviewing Marian apparitions was provided
not long ago by Fr Jesu´s Castellano Cervera, a Discalced Carmelite
priest and specialist in Mariology, who is also a consultant on the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Church's agency that investigates reports
of Marian apparitions.
In response to being
asked what are the key criteria for discerning alleged apparitions, Fr
Castellano replied, "The first criterion is cordial communion with
the Church and her magisterium."
Garabandal certainly
meets this criterion. Its messages time and again have been pronounced
in complete accordance with Church teachings by all levels of the clergy,
including canon lawyers, theologians, and some of the highest-ranking
members of the Roman Curia.
The
Church's Process
From here, the formal
process of ruling on an apparition is both painstaking and time-consuming.
Given the enormity of the consequences, the Church is justifiably extremely
prudent on this matter.
How prudent? After
the famous Marian apparitions at Lourdes, there were more than 150 alleged
appearances in just the next five years none of which was approved by
the Church. In statistical terms, the odds of an apparition being declared
true are slightly above zero.
Just as it is important
to note that the criteria are extremely challenging, it is equally important
to remember that the Church teaches that no one is obligated to believe
in private revelations, regardless of whether they are approved of or
not.
This point cannot
be emphasized enough: Acceptance of apparitions on a personal level is
a matter of private faith, not a mandatory command of the Church. Unfortunately,
there are many who believe that unless the Church pronounces a verdict
within a certain time span, the apparition in question cannot be real.
Nothing could be further from the truth! By the same token, if people
automatically assume a negative attitude towards an apparition simply
because it has not been approved, this in no way implies that the message
should not be heeded, assuming it is in conformity with the Church's teachings.
Establishing
Procedural Authority
There are three levels
of authority with regard to investigating alleged apparitions: first,
the local bishop (in this case, that of Santander); second, the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome; and finally, if deemed appropriate,
the Pope himself. Determinations at the local level are not final, but
are always subject to the higher authority, which can either ratify the
findings made at the diocesan level or reserve judgment.
Who has the final
say? The Pope himself. As the authors of Star On The Mountain note,
"According to the doctrine of the Fifth Lateran Council and Pope
Leo X (1512), the Holy Father is the only judge of revelations of this
kind (prophecies)"
Many readers may
not know that there have been three investigations into Garabandal at
the local or diocesan level. The first one (1961-62), was held under the
auspices of the apostolic administrator Bishop Doroteo Fernandez, yet
can hardly be called an "investigation" at all, due to the obvious
prejudicial attitude by the investigators.
What do we know for
certain of this initial query? The commission visited the village briefly
three times, and never questioned the visionaries, their parents,
the parish priest, and carefully avoided anyone who might have given favourable
testimony. No questions regarding the apparitions themselves were put
forth; those that were asked were of a general nature, e.g. the way of
life in Garabandal, the social activities of its inhabitants, and so on.
Not only did the priest on the commission resign, but two decades later its
chief medical examiner, Dr Luis Morales, with the permission of the bishop
at the time, publicly reversed his original negative position, after having
received and asked for a miraculous sign.
A second and a third
study (1986-91) were commissioned by Bishop Juan Antonio del Val Gallo
(who was the priest on the original commission). The findings of the first
of these two commissions were neither finalized nor sent to the Vatican.
The results of the third investigation - started by Bishop del Val and
transferred, upon his retirement in 1991, to the current bishop - Jose
Vilaplana, eventually were sent to Cardinal Ratzinger at the Vatican but
have not yet been made public. Thus, no official pronouncement has been
made.
For the actual process
itself, we turn to an article written by Bryan J. Walsh, a member of the
Eternal Word Television Network and author on apparitions.
The
Four Categories of Apparitions
According to Walsh, private revelations, such as Garabandal, fall into one of four categories.
Questionable:
Every purported event starts in this category. The Church assumes that
nothing unusual is occurring until a thorough evaluation takes place.
False:
After careful evaluation, almost all questionable apparitions are determined
to be "false alarms" even though the individuals involved may
be mentally healthy and sincere in their statements.
Fraudulent:
A few alleged apparitions are fakes. On rare occasions an element of satanic
involvement was uncovered.
Authentic:
Very few private revelations have been determined to be authentic in
that they reappear to involve supernatural intervention and act to strengthen
the faith of those who follow them.
The Four Stages of Authentic Apparitions
Those few apparitions considered authentic then are subjected to another level of the Church's
scrutiny, as follows.
After thorough
evaluation by the local bishop, he issues a statement of support for
the event by stating the apparitions contain nothing contrary to faith or morals,
that it appears to be supernaturally inspired and that it is worthy
of devotion by the faithful.
Once approved, a
lengthy period of devotion by the faithful that results in a deepening
of their faith and a return to a life of self-denial and prayer, is then
permitted to develop. If it develops, then the next stage becomes possible.
Papal acknowledgement.
The Pope states publicly that he is favourably disposed to the events
and contents of the apparition.
Liturgical recognition
by recognizing the apparition officially on the Church liturgical calendar.
Most Catholics know
that only four Twentieth century apparitions have progressed to the fourth
stage: Fatima (Portugal, 1917); Beauraing (Belgium 1932-3); Banneux (Belgium,
1933); and Amsterdam (1945-59); although there are others (e.g. Akita,
Japan; Betania, Venezuela) that have passed the first two stages.
Towards
An Official Position
From the above, we
see that not only is the process a lengthy, multi-part one, but also that
almost no apparition - including authentic ones - has made it to the ultimate
stages of papal acknowledgement and inclusion in the liturgical calendar.
It is essential to remember that not reaching these final two stems does
not signify that the apparition is not authentic.
Indeed, far more
important in determining the apparition's authenticity are the first two
stages: Episcopal support after a thorough investigation; and a
lengthy period of devotion. The italics in the previous sentence are deliberate:
One of the areas regarding Garabandal about which all serious researchers
agree is that the initial investigation of 1961 was anything but thorough,
let alone canonically valid.
Consider the comments
of the long-serving parish priest at Garabandal, Fr Valentin Marichalar,
who witnessed literally hundreds of apparitions. It is inconceivable that
the one person who could speak most authoritatively to the matter would
not be questioned by either the local bishop at the time (Doroteo Fernandez),
or the commission he established to investigate the matter!
Yet, this is exactly
what happened. In a 1976 interview with Needles magazine, Fr Marichalar
remarked that the commission wanted only to get the job over with quickly,
and that virtually nothing was done in accordance with proper custom.
Every single major
work published on the history of Garabandal has underscored with unavoidable
point. The glaring lack of thorough enquiry on the
part of the original commission was so noticeable that the enquiry was
re-opened by the local bishop, an almost unheard of event in Vatican circles.
As such, Garabandal's file is in no way closed - it has been re-opened
- and no pronouncement been made from Rome
The only official
pronouncements to date have been those from the succession of local bishops
occupying the bishopric of Santander, under whose jurisdiction lies San
Sebastian de Garabandal. None of these have ever condemned Garabandal
outright.
In the past, they
prudently urged caution, and one went so far as to prohibit saying Mass
there without diocesan approval (although this restriction has since been
lifted). Bishop del Val removed all restrictions on Garabandal, and any
priest is free to say Mass there now, as long as it is held in the village
church.
These notas oficiales,
as they are termed, may have been circumspect, but they never explicitly
condemned Garabandal. To the contrary, since 1965, these notas have very
clearly affirmed that there are no grounds whatsoever for ecclesiastical
condemnation. Equally important, the nota of the current bishop, Jose
Vilaplana, explicitly states that he is in agreement with the position
taken by his predecessors, including del Val, who did so much to keep
Garabandal front and centre in the eyes of the Vatican.
From
Initial Skepticism …
Much has been made
of the first nota's statement, published in August 1961, that "Nothing
up to the present obliges us to affirm that the events occurring …
are supernatural." This should not be misinterpreted as meaning the
events of Garabandal were considered by the bishop not to be of supernatural
origin. A careful reading of the text indicates quite clearly that he
reserved the right to withhold judgment until later, nothing more, nothing
less.
…
To Increasing Acceptance
In the intervening
years, the tenor of these notas shifted dramatically, starting with the
one of 1965 from then-bishop Eugenio Beitia Aldazabal, which again explicitly
stated that Garabandal was not condemned at all. Further, in 1972, Bishop
Jean Antonio del Val reiterated that Garabandal was not to be considered
condemned, a position he stated again in 1992.
His exact words in
the 1992 statement underline the importance of not misinterpreting the
Church's prudence by using it as an excuse to jump to false conclusions:
"The previous bishops did not admit that the apparitions were supernatural,
but to condemn them, no, that word has never been used."
Along the way, the
evidence in favour of Garabandal has mounted steadily. As noted above,
a second (and subsequently, a third) official investigation was opened
in 1987, at the request of Bishop del Val. The bishop nominated four groups
of experts to look into the sociological, psychological, theological,
and scriptural/spiritual aspects of Garabandal.
The
Occasional Negative Voice
There have been dissenting
voices, of course, who have published wildly inaccurate pieces that have
circulated on the Internet. These are traced to a badly flawed translation
of a spurious letter purported to be from the present local bishop, but
its views have long since been discredited.
This version of Bishop
Vilaplana's letter is flawed in that it fails to accurately translate
key text that designate the status of Garabandal. This is a very important
point. Whenever bishops address private revelation or mystical phenomena
in which they are required to render a judgment, they use very specific
terminology, signifying the classification in which they place the event.
There are three classifications, similar to those used by Walsh earlier.
Constat de supernaturalitate - It is certain that the events are
of supernatural origin.
Non-constat
de supernaturalitate - It is not certain that the events
are of supernatural origin i.e. the supernatural origin has not been
established. Here the events in question are still open to eventual
recognition as being authentic.
Constat
de non supernaturalitate
- It is certain that the events are not of supernatural origin.
The key word is constant,
which has the meaning "to be certain, sure, or evident".
So long as a manifestation is in the second category, it is in the safe
zone. Garabandal is in this second category. In fact, the purported letter
used to discredit it confirms its status as such. The Spanish verb constar
is derived from the Latin constat and has the same meaning. In Bishop
Vilaplana's letter, he uses the expression no consta ("not certain"),
thus clearly assigning Garabandal to the second category.
There remain those
who will insist upon interpreting the Church's silence as a condemnation.
This is all the more the pity, as such self-proclaimed views do little
besides obscure the matter and usurp the Church's position as the final
arbiter on such matters.
Papal
Acknowledgement
There remains a very
interesting conjecture that Garabandal may already have received a tacit
acknowledgement from the Vatican itself. It should be stressed that the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has yet to issue a statement
on Garabandal, and has not taken away jurisdiction from the local hierarchy.
At the same time, Conchita was summoned to Rome, first in 1966 by Cardinal
Ottaviani, and then again in 1968. It is difficult to imagine there would
be such interest at the highest levels of the Vatican in a teenager from
rural Spain were there not some compelling reason! Popes Paul VI and John
Paul II met with Conchita and Loli respectively, and issued their blessings
to them.
Where
Now Then?
The road to open
acknowledgement of Garabandal as an apparition is far from finished. In
truth, it is still premature to expect a definite pronouncement, by either
the local ordinary bishop or the Church hierarchy. We must remember that
even the positive judgement of a thorough and fully canonical investigation
cannot alter its current status as long as certain prophesied events are
still pending.
The Blessed Virgin
herself may have anticipated this, and made the necessary provisions.
Indeed she predicted that one day Garabandal would be promoted, with the
permission of the Church. "She will give time for the Message
to be spread with the permission of the Church."
This already has
come to pass in large degree, with the abrogation in 1967 of Canons 1399
and 2318. These permit, without fear of ecclesiastical censorship, the
publication of information on alleged manifestations, and further permit
visits to the sites of alleged Marian apparitions, as long as there is
nothing in the events contrary to the Church's teaching on faith and morals.
As noted earlier, Garabandal clearly passes this test.
Thus, the status
of Garabandal is the same as it always has been and will remain, pending
the fulfillment of the prophecies of the Warning, the Miracle and the
Permanent Sign. During this waiting period, all Catholics are free to
learn of Garabandal and visit it without fear of ecclesiastical censure.
Full recognition
can come only with the fulfillment of the prophesied events. Given their
awesome nature, undoubtedly they will be recognized by the Church and
the world at large as an act of God. At which point Garabandal will have
proved its own authenticity