Jesus did not appear on hill in France, Vatican says
The Vatican’s doctrinal office rejected Dozulé apparitions citing unfulfilled prophecies and theological errors, emphasizing salvation comes through sacraments, not material signs.
- The Vatican declared that reports of Jesus appearing in Dozule, France, are not genuine, as confirmed by a decree approved by Pope Leo.
- A Catholic mother claimed to have seen Jesus 49 times in the 1970s and received messages during those appearances.
- The Vatican emphasized that these alleged apparitions lack supernatural origin and cautioned against exploiting such claims for profit.
- The instruction noted that a prophecy regarding the world's end before 2000 was not fulfilled, highlighting the inaccuracies of the reported events.
22 Articles
22 Articles
Reported Jesus appearances in France are 'not supernatural': Vatican
The Vatican has declared that alleged apparitions of Jesus Christ in France decades ago are "not supernatural" in nature, citing many inconsistencies with the instructions and pronouncements made by the apparitions and Catholic Church teaching. #CatholicChurch #Vatican #France
Alleged apparitions of Jesus in Dozulé, France, not supernatural, Vatican says
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Jesus did not appear to a woman in Dozulé, France, in the 1970s, and the messages she claimed to receive, including about Jesus’ second coming, are misleading and twist central Christian teachings, said the prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. “The phenomenon of the alleged apparitions said to have taken place in Dozulé is to be regarded, definitively, as not supernatural in origin,” Cardinal Víctor Manuel…
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