The new norms reframe the Catholic Church’s evaluation process by essentially taking off the table whether church authorities will declare a particular vision, stigmata or other seemingly divinely inspired event supernatural.

Instead, the new criteria envisages six main outcomes, with the most favorable being that the church issues a noncommittal doctrinal green light, a so-called “nihil obstat.” Such a declaration means there is nothing about the event that is contrary to the faith, and therefore Catholics can express devotion to it.

The norms also allow that an event might at some point be declared “supernatural,” and that the pope can intervene in the process. But “as a rule,” the church is no longer in the business of authenticating inexplicable events or making definitive decisions about their supernatural origin.

  • @[email protected]
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    66 months ago

    Aren’t miracles “supernatural”? Don’t people need 2 “confirmed” miracles to be considered for sainthood?

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      26 months ago

      Yes. And hagiography deals in manufacturing a myth by asserting it cannot be disproven with available data.