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THE PRESENT POSITION OF THE CHURCH ON GARABANDAL:
A RECENT UPDATE
December 21, 1977, was an occasion for rejoicing
for those who accept the apparitions of Garabandal and especially
for those who are spreading the message. For on that day the Most
Reverend Juan Antonio del Val, Bishop of Santander, gave public
witness to the openness of the Church at the present time regarding
the apparitions of Garabandal.
This public witness took place in Garabandal itself,
as the Bishop was making a pastoral visitation to the village. At
the conclusion of that pastoral encounter, he raised the issue of
a new investigation of the apparitions. He began by recalling the
negative attitude of his predecessors and affirming his own official
position.
“The bishops who preceded me in the diocese
did not admit the supernatural character of the phenomena that
occurred, beginning in 1961, in this parish of San Sebastian de
Garabandal.
I am in communion –in communion- with those bishops, my
predecessors.”
The above quotation and the ones that follow are
from the official Spanish press release issued by “the Bishopric
of Santander” and sent to the Madrid office of the Associated
Press. The wire service release was dated “April 2, 1978.”
The translation is our own. It is evident that everything in the
press release is very carefully worded. The expression used by Bishop
del Val to express his official position at the present time is
the best example of this. He said, “I am in communion with
those bishops, my predecessors.” To be in communion with someone
can mean many things. It does not necessarily imply agreement with
that person. Especially, it does not necessarily imply full agreement
with that person’s views and judgments. If the Bishop had
wanted to imply that kind of agreement, it can be presumed he would
have said so more clearly.
In fact, the Bishop, in that same talk to the
villagers, made it clear that he was not in that kind of full agreement
with his predecessors, some of whom were more strongly opposed to
the apparitions than others. Indeed, and we quote again from the
April 2, 1978 press release:
“On that same date, Bishop del Val concluded,
stating that, faced with the suggestion of so many of the supporters
– partidarios- of the phenomena mentioned above, he personally
had no objection – no tenia inconveniente, por su parte –
to having a pontifical commission, working out of the Holy See –
desde la Santa Sede- examine these phenomena in collaboration with
the diocese of Santander.”
There was the good news, stated publicly by the person responsible
today for the apparitions of Garabandal in the eyes of the Church.
Bishop del Val affirmed that he personally had no objection to Rome
instituting a new commission of investigation in which the diocese
of Santander would participate. The press release went on to point
out that what the Bishop had said in the village of Garabandal did
“not signify that the Bishop is planning to reopen the process
(of investigation) of the events in question that was concluded
in its day by this bishopric.”
Whether the Bishop of Santander was planning or
willing to institute a diocesan commission of investigation to review
and carry on further the work done by his predecessors, or whether
he would only consider a new commission in Rome, under the responsibility
of the Holy See but with the collaboration of Santander, is not
the real important point of what he said in Garabandal on December
21, 1977. The important point is his publicly expressed willingness
to a new investigation. Where it might be conducted and even who
would conduct it are matters of less importance.
Bishop del Val’s preference for an investigation
conducted in Rome and under Rome’s responsibility is quite
understandable. It would be a very delicate matter for him to initiate
and conduct an investigation in his own diocese where his predecessors
have refused to approve the apparitions and especially since his
immediate predecessor is still alive and active as bishop in the
same general area of Spain.
Center for Receiving Testimonies
What the Bishop has done is to tell us loud and clear that he does
not consider the apparitions of Garabandal a closed issue, that
he does not consider his predecessors as having said the final word
and their judgment as definitive and irreversible. In other words
it can be truly said that Garabandal is still an open matter and
could eventually be approved.
That Bishop del Val considers Garabandal an open
matter is confirmed by the fact that he has entrusted Don Juan Gonzalez,
who resides in Puentenansa but is pastor of both that village and
Garabandal, with the task of serving as a center or clearing house
for receiving testimonies relative to the apparitions.
This information is certain. The people in the
village of Garabandal have been aware of a local center for receiving
testimonies since early 1978, though the existence of this center
does not seem to have been publicized in any general way. In September,
1978, a Spanish priest who is a close friend of mine, received the
above information about Don Juan Gonzalez directly from Bishop del
Val.
This gathering of information must not be construed
as a first step in a diocesan investigation. The press release made
it clear that the Bishop is not presently planning to reopen or
review the old diocesan investigation. What he did express willingness
to, was a Roman centered investigation.
Those familiar with the niceties of Church protocol
and procedures realize that, before saying what he did in the village
of Garabandal on December 21, 1977, Bishop del Val can be presumed
to have sounded out the Holy See beforehand and also to have received
some indication of its willingness or openness to the idea of a
joint but Roman led commission of investigation.
Those who were hoping that the Bishop’s
December 21 talk might be followed in the near future by the establishment
of a joint commission were to soon know disappointment. Some of
those opposed to Garabandal, fearful that this commission would
indeed come about, reacted strongly. Deplorable tactics were even
resorted to. It was publicly rumored in certain Spanish newspapers
that the Bishop of Santander was to be replaced. The name of the
candidate who was supposed to replace him was printed in some papers.
I have newspaper clippings from Spain to substantiate this. Unfortunately,
there was also some imprudent reaction on the part of some of the
over-enthusiastic supporters of the apparitions.
The result was that Bishop del Val, in the same
April 2, 1978, official press release, stated that the reaction
provoked by his December 21 talk revealed that the climate was not
suitable for pursuing the project of the joint commission he had
mentioned. Here is the carefully worded portion of the press release
that relates to this.
“The reactions provoked by the statements
of the Bishop at San Sebastian de Garabandal, indicate that circumstances
are not suitable for a special commission concerning this matter
at the Holy See – deconseja como no oportuna la comision
especial para estos asuntos en las Santa Sede.”
This statement gives us some insight into how
explosive and divisive the issue of Garabandal is in Spain and what
a delicate problem it poses for the Bishop of Santander and for
Rome. It does not imply repudiation by Bishop del Val of the openness
to a new commission of investigation that he manifested so clearly
in December 1977, in his talk to the people of Garabandal.
To be sure, this openness on the part of the Bishop
does not tell us anything about his own personal belief in the apparitions,
whether he accepts or rejects them. He does not seem to have ever
openly expressed himself on this matter. All it tell us –
but that is all that we need to know – is that he does not
consider that the statements of his predecessors have settled the
matter of the Garabandal apparitions once and for all and that their
negative stance is something final which cannot be changed.
Something else happened in 1971 that revealed
that Rome likewise does not consider Garabandal a closed issue.
It involves Don Jose’ Ramon Garcia del la Riva, pastor of
Our Lady of Sorows parish, Barro de Llanes (Asturias) who was present
at some 200 apparitions and became a close friend of the seers and
their families. He has written an account of what he saw and heard
at Garabandal entitled Memoirs of a Spanish Country Pastor.
Fr. De la Riva was called in by his Ordinary,
the Archbishop of Oviedo, concerning the events of Garabandal. He
met with him on May 21, 1971. The Archbishop told him that the Holy
See had asked him for documents concerning Garabandal. These were
supplied by Fr. de la Riva, who later commented on his visit with
the Archbishop, saying that if the date of this visit were compared
with other dates, “one would readily see that the Holy See
has not yet closed the file on the Garabandal events.” What
he meant by the comparing of dates was that his visit with his Ordinary
indicated that Rome was still seeking evidence about the apparitions
of Garabandal on May 21, 1971, which was two and one half years
after the last negative “Official Note” concerning the
events of Garabandal ever issued by the See of Santander. This note
was promulgated on October 9, 1968, by “the Secretariat of
the Bishopric of Santander, by order of His Excellency, the Most
Reverend Bishop D. Jose’ Maria Cirarda Lachiondo.” Bishop
Cirarda was still the Ordinary of Santander in May 21, 1971.
Bishop del Val, the present Ordinary of Santander,
was installed at the end of 1971. He has never issued any “Note”
concerning the events of Garabandal. The press release of April
2, 1978, was the first official statement ever published by him
(through his bishopric) relating to these events.
So we find that neither the actual Bishop of Santander
nor the Holy See consider “the file closed on the Garabandal
events.” This is the present position of the Church concerning
the events that took place at San Sebastian de Garabandal from 1961
through 1965. This is the message that flows from a careful analysis
of the most recent statements and actions of the Church, especially
those of the actual Bishop of Santander, who in the eyes of the
Church is still the immediate authority presently responsible for
the events of Garabandal.
Message Repeats Church
Doctrine
Although the bishops who preceded Bishop del Val all refused to
admit the divine origin of the apparitions that reportedly took
place at Garabandal, none of them was critical of the message said
to have been delivered there. In fact, Bishop Eugenio Beitia, in
the negative Note which he issued on July 8, 1965, had this to say
in that official document:
“We point out, however, that we have not
found anything deserving of ecclesiastical censorship or condemnation
either in the doctrine or in the spiritual recommendations that
have been publicized as having been addressed to the faithful,
for these contain an exhortion to prayer and sacrifice, to Eucharistic
devotion, to veneration of Our Lady in traditional praiseworthy
ways, and to holy fear of God offended by our sins. They simply
repeat the common doctrine of the Church in these matters.”
Finally, it should be pointed out that the attitude
or position of the Church concerning visions or position of the
Church concerning visions and apparitions is not as simple as many
presume it to be. It is not all black and white. There is much gray.
It is far from always resolving itself into either approval or condemnation.
Between these two extremes, there exists quite a wide spectrum of
positions and the terminology most commonly used, at least in English,
often lacks precision. The cult, v.g. Mass, at a place where apparitions
occurred is approved or authorized by the Church. Medals, such as
the Miraculous Medal of the Rue du Bac, are likewise approved or
authorized. Visions and apparitions are not really approved by the
Church. They are more properly said to be ‘recognized,’
that is, the Church after prudent investigation recognizes or acknowledges
that according to this prudent human examination (which, of course,
implies prayer), it seems that there was a divine intervention and
that the faithful will not be misguided in accepting the even as
coming from God.
This is the common opinion of theologians regarding
the meaning of Church ‘approval’ of an apparition or
vision. Likewise, apparitions are not technically ‘condemned’.
They are not recognized or acknowledged as coming from God, as having
a supernatural origin or character. It might also be said that the
Church accepts or rejects apparitions. This too, would be a more
adequate description of what the Church is doing when it ‘approves’
or ‘condemns’ such events. |