Vatican disciplines ex-spiritual director to Medjugorje seers

01 Oct 2008

By The Record

LONDON (CNS) – The Vatican has authorised “severe cautionary and disciplinary measures” against a priest who served as spiritual director to the visionaries in Medjugorje, Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Fr Tomislav Vlasic

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has written to Bishop Ratko Peric of Mostar-Duvno, whose diocese covers Medjugorje, to inform him that they are investigating the case of Franciscan Father Tomislav Vlasic.
The congregation has asked the bishop, for the good of the faithful, to inform the community of the canonical status of the Bosnian priest, whose actions automatically provoked Vatican sanctions.
In a statement posted on the website of the Diocese of Mostar-Duvno, Bishop Peric explained that Father Vlasic has been reported to the congregation “for the diffusion of dubious doctrine, manipulation of consciences, suspicious mysticism, disobedience toward legitimately issued orders” and charges that he violated the Sixth Commandment. The doctrinal congregation said in the letter, also posted on the website, that the priest had been disciplined after he stubbornly refused to cooperate with the inquiry, instead “justifying himself by citing his zealous activity” in initiating religious communities and building churches in the Medjugorje area.
A decree confirming action against Father Vlasic was signed by Cardinal William Levada, prefect of the doctrinal congregation, and Fr Jose Rodriguez Carballo, the minister general of the Order of Friars Minor, earlier this year.
It confined Fr Vlasic to a Franciscan monastery in Italy and banned him from contact with the Queen of Peace community, which he founded, or with his lawyers without permission from his superior. He is banned from making public appearances, preaching and hearing confessions, and he will be required to make a solemn profession of the Catholic faith. The Vatican has warned Father Vlasic that he will be excommunicated if he violates any of the prohibitions.
“Fr Vlasic is forewarned that, in the case of stubbornness, a juridical penal process will begin with the aim of still harsher sanctions, not excluding dismissal, having in mind the suspicion of heresy and schism, as well as scandalous acts ‘contra sextum’ (meaning against the Sixth Commandment) aggravated by mystical motivations,” Bishop Peric wrote. In Rome on September 5, a Franciscan official told CNS it is true that “disciplinary measures have been taken” against Father Vlasic “but he is still a friar of our order; he has not been dismissed from the Franciscans or the clerical state.”
The doctrinal congregation also suspended the Franciscan’s priestly faculties. Fr Vlasic was a central figure in promoting the apparitions at the unofficial shrine in Medjugorje. In 1984 he wrote to Pope John Paul II to say that he was the one “who through divine providence guides the seers of Medjugorje.” Four years later – after it was revealed that he fathered a child with a nun – he moved to Parma, Italy, where he set up the coed Queen of Peace religious community dedicated to the Medjugorje apparitions.
The Medjugorje phenomenon began June 25, 1981, when six children told a priest they had seen Mary on a hillside near their town. Since then, Mary is said to have appeared to the six more than 40,000 times and imparted hundreds of messages.
But three church commissions failed to find evidence to support their claims, and the bishops of the former Yugoslavia declared in 1991 that “it cannot be affirmed that these matters concern supernatural apparitions or revelations.”
In 1985 Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope, banned official, diocesan or parish-sponsored pilgrimages to the shrine.