Mark Mallett
—Spiritual Food For Thought—
Prophecy Properly Understood
WE are living
in a time when prophecy has perhaps never been so important, and yet,
so misunderstood by the vast majority of Catholics. There are three
harmful positions being taken today regarding prophetic or “private”
revelations that, I believe, are doing at times great damage in many
quarters of the Church. One is that “private revelations” never have
to be heeded since all we are obligated to believe is the definitive
Revelation of Christ in the “deposit of faith.” Another harm being done
is by those who tend to not only put prophecy above the Magisterium, but
give it the same authority as Sacred Scripture. And last, there is the
position that most prophecy, unless uttered by saints or found without
error, should be mostly shunned. Again, all these positions above carry
unfortunate and even dangerous pitfalls.
PROPHECY: DO WE NEED IT?
I would have to agree with Archbishop Rino Fisichella who said,
Confronting the subject of prophecy today is rather like looking at wreckage after a shipwreck. —”Prophecy” in Dictionary of Fundamental Theology, p. 788
In the last century, in particular, Western theological
“development” has not only downplayed the significance of mysticism in
the Church, but even the supernatural regarding Christ’s own miracles
and divinity. This has had a tremendous sterilizing affect upon the
living Word of God, both the logos (generally referring to the inspired written Word) and rhema
(generally spoken words or utterances). There is a common fallacy that,
with the death of John the Baptist, prophecy ceased in the Church. It
has not ceased, rather, it has taken on different dimensions.
Prophecy has changed immensely throughout history, especially with regard to its status within the institutional Church, but prophecy has never ceased. — Niels Christian Hvidt, theologian, Christian Prophecy, p. 36, Oxford University Press
Think of the Deposit of Faith as a car. Wherever the Car
goes, we must follow, for Sacred Tradition and Scripture contain the
revealed truth that sets us free. Prophecy, on the other hand, is the headlights of the Car. It has the dual function of both warning and illuminating the way. But the headlights go wherever the Car goes—that is:
It is not [so-called "private" revelations'] role to improve or complete Christ’s definitive Revelation, but to help live more fully by it in a certain period of history… Christian faith cannot accept “revelations” that claim to surpass or correct the Revelation of which Christ is the fulfillment.—Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 67
Now, there are times when the Church passes through
periods of great darkness, persecutions, and insidious attacks. It is at
times like these that, despite the “interior lights” of the car that infallibly navigate, the headlights of prophecy are
necessary to illuminate the way insofar as showing us how to live the
hour. An example would be the remedies provided by Our Lady of Fatima:
consecration of Russia, First Saturdays, and the Rosary as means to
circumvent war, disasters, and the “errors” that led to Communism. It
should become clear at this moment then that, while not adding to the
definitive Revelation of the Church, these so-called “private”
revelations have had the power to alter the future if heeded.
How can they not be important? Furthermore, how can we call them
“private” revelations? There is nothing private about a prophetic word
intended for the whole Church.
Even controversial theologian, Karl Rahner, also asked…
…whether anything God reveals can be unimportant. —Karl Rahner, Visions and Prophecies, p. 25
Theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar adds:
One can therefore simply ask why God provides [revelations] continuously [in the first place if] they hardly need to be heeded by the Church. —Mistica oggettiva, n. 35
So important was prophecy in St. Paul’s view, that after
his beautiful discourse on love in which he says “if I have the gift of
prophecy… but do not have love, I am nothing,”1 he goes on to instruct:
Pursue love, but strive eagerly for the spiritual gifts, above all that you may prophesy. (1 Cor 14:1)
In his list of the spiritual offices, St. Paul places
“prophets” only second to that of the Apostles and before evangelists,
pastors, and teachers.2 Indeed,
Christ… fulfills this prophetic office, not only by the hierarchy… but also by the laity. —Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 904
Popes, particularly of the past century, have not only
been open to this charism, but encouraged the Church to listen to their
prophets:
In every age the Church has received the charism of prophecy, which must be scrutinized but not scorned. —Cardinal Ratzinger (BENEDICT XVI), Message of Fatima, Theological Commentary,www.vatican.vaHe to whom that private revelation is proposed and announced, ought to believe and obey the command or message of God, if it be proposed to him on sufficient evidence… For God speaks to him, at least by means of another, and therefore requires him to believe; hence it is, that he is bound to believe God, Who requires him to do so. —BENEDICT XIV, Heroic Virtue, Vol III, p. 394Those who have fallen into this worldliness look on from above and afar, they reject the prophecy of their brothers and sisters… —POPE FRANCIS, Evangelii Gaudium, n. 97
PROPHECY IS NOT INFALLIBLE
Perhaps because of the genuine crisis we’ve endured of a deficit in anointed preaching from the pulpit3,
many souls have turned to prophetic revelations not only for
edification, but direction. But a problem that sometimes arises is the weight to
which these revelations are given and the lack of prudence and prayer
that should accompany them. Even if the prophecies come from a saint.
Mystical theologian, Rev. Joseph Iannuzzi, who is
perhaps one of the foremost experts in the Church today on the
interpretation of prophetic revelations, writes:
It may come as a shock to some that nearly all mystical literature contains grammatical errors (form) and, on occasion, doctrinal errors (substance). —Newsletter, Missionaries of the Holy Trinity, January-May 2014
Indeed, the spiritual director to Italian mystic Luisa Piccarreta and Melanie Calvat, the La Salette seer, warns:
Conforming to prudence and sacred accuracy, people cannot deal with private revelations as if they were canonical books or decrees of the Holy See… For example, who could ratify in full all the visions of Catherine Emmerich and St. Brigitte, which show evident discrepancies? —St. Hannibal, in a letter to Fr. Peter Bergamaschi who had published all the unedited writings of Benedictine mystic, St. M. Cecilia; Ibid.
In this past year, terrible divisions have been created
in many countries by those who follow the alleged seer, “Maria Divine
Mercy,” whose archbishop recently declared that her revelations ‘have no
ecclesiastical approval and many of the texts are in contradiction with
Catholic theology.’4 The problem is not only did the seer herself equate her messages to Sacred Scripture,5
but many of her followers act as such toward her claims—messages that
at times are clearly in ‘contradiction with Catholic theology.’6
AUTHENTIC PROPHECY vs “PERFECTION”
There are also those who take the position that, if
there are inaccuracies, even grammatical or spelling errors, this
implies, therefore, that an alleged seer is a “false prophet” for “God
does not make mistakes.” Unfortunately, those who judge prophetic
revelations in this injurious and narrow way are not few in number.
Rev. Iannuzzi points out that, in his extensive research in this field…
Although in some passages of their writings, the prophets may have written something doctrinally erroneous, a cross-reference of their writings reveals that such doctrinal errors were “unintentional.”
That is, the very errors that were initially discovered
in many prophetic texts that were later approved, are elsewhere
contradicted with sound doctrinal truths by the same prophets in the
same prophetic texts. Such errors, then, were simply omitted prior to
publishing.
Again, this may shock some readers who say, “Hey! You
can’t edit God!” But that is to misunderstand completely the nature of
what prophecy
is, and how it is transmitted: through a human vessel. We already have
infallible prophecies as such: they’re called “Sacred Scripture.” To put
the seers of Fatima, Garabandal, Medjugorje, La Salette, etc. on this
same plane of expectation is a false expectation if not
doctrinal error. The appropriate approach is to refrain from
interpreting the “pure letter” and seek the “intention” of the prophet
by interpreting the body of prophetic words in the light of the Deposit
of Faith.
…everything God reveals is received through and according to the subject’s dispositions. In the history of prophetic revelation it is not uncommon that the prophet’s limited and imperfect human nature is impacted by a psychological, moral or spiritual event that may hinder the spiritual enlightenment of God’s revelation from shining perfectly in the prophet’s soul, whereby the prophet’s perception of the revelation is involuntarily altered. —Rev. Joseph Innanuzzi, Newsletter, Missionaries of the Holy Trinity, January-May 2014
Mariologist, Dr. Mark Miravalle notes:
Such occasional occurrences of flawed prophetic habit should not lead to the condemnation of the entire body of the supernatural knowledge communicated by the prophet, if it is properly discerned to constitute authentic prophecy. —Dr. Mark Miravalle, Private Revelation: Discerning With the Church, p. 21
MERCIFUL DISCERNMENT
This is all to say that the approach toward prophecy in the Church today by some is not only short-sighted, but at times merciless.
The hastiness to label seers as “false prophets”, even while
investigations into alleged apparitions are ongoing, is sometimes
astonishing, particularly when there are obvious “good fruits.”7
An approach which looks for any little error, any slip in virtue or
judgment as a justification to completely discredit a seer is not the
approach of the Holy See when it comes to discerning prophecy. The
Church is generally more patient, more deliberate, more discerning, more
forgiving when taking into consideration the entire body
of revelations of an alleged prophet. The words of St. Paul, one would
think, should cause vocal critics to take a more cautious, humble, and
like-minded-to-the-Magisterium approach to alleged phenomenon:
For if this endeavor or this activity is of human origin, it will destroy itself. But if it comes from God, you will not be able to destroy them; you may even find yourselves fighting against God. (Acts 5:38-39)
Whether we like it or not, prophecy is going to play a
greater role in our times, both good and bad. For Jesus warned that
“Many false prophets will arise and deceive many,”8 and St. Peter adds:
It will come to pass in the last days… Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your young men shall see visions… (Acts 2:17)
It would be a mistake to “play it safe” and simply
disregard all prophecy, or conversely, rush to cling to seers or
visionaries with the misguided notion that they will infallibly
lead us through these times. We have an infallible leader already,
Jesus Christ. And He speaks and continues to speak in the harmonious
voice of the Magisterium.
The key to prophecy then is to get in the “Car,” turn on
the “lights”, and trust the Holy Spirit to lead you into all truth,
since the Car is driven by Christ Himself.
FOOTNOTES:
- cf. 1 Cor 13:2 [↩]
- cf. Eph 4:11 [↩]
- Pope Francis devoted several pages in his recent Apostolic Exhortation to facilitate a renewal in this crucial area of homiletics; cf. Evangelii Gaudium, n. 135-159 [↩]
- cf. “Statement of the Archdiocese of Dublinon the Alleged Visionary “Maria Divine Mercy”; www.dublindiocese.ie [↩]
- cf. alleged message of November 12th, 2010 [↩]
- cf. “Maria Divine Mercy”: A Theological Evaluation [↩]
- cf. Matt 12:33 [↩]
- cf. Matt 24:11 [↩]
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