MARIA BOVINE MERCY
CBCP WARNS
AGAINST ‘MARIA DIVINE MERCY’
By CBCP
News
July 1,
2019
Manila,
Philippines
The
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has warned the faithful
against a fake prophet and preacher.
In a
letter to the dioceses June 29, Archbishop Romulo Valles of Davao, CBCP
President, urged the faithful to be “very careful” with the group called “Maria
Divine Mercy”.
“They
bring confusion and propagate erroneous, false and distorted teachings to our
Catholic faithful,” said Archbishop Valles.
Maria
Divine Mercy is the name assumed by what is believed to be a self-proclaimed
Irish seer called Mary Carberry.
—“CBCP warns against ‘Maria Divine Mercy,’” CBCP News, July 1, 2019
Maria
Divine Mercy is a fraud. She is a false prophet. She is not supported by the Roman
Catholic hierarchy and hides her real identity. The devil loves darkness and
works in darkness. If she does the work of God, why doesn’t she come to the
light and reveal who she is?
She is
Maria Bovine Mercy, after the Golden Calf.
Her photo
is posted below. How now, holy cow!
MARIA
DIVINE MERCY: THE WOMAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN
Midway
Street
Original
post - 11 November 2013. Revised 30 November
…A mosaic
has formed that leads to the door step of Mary Carberry, 58, of Dublin,
Ireland, who does business under her maiden name of Mary McGovern. She has four
children. Two have worked for her firm, McGovernPR, including her daughter Sarah
Carberry, 28, and a 27-year son, a Web page designer. The 27-year-old company,
McGovernPR, has won international awards for its skill in marketing products
and ideas. Other Carberry companies are CultureLink, headed by her husband,
John Carberry, and Digital Future Link, headed by Sarah. Mary, John and their adult son live in
Muldowney Court, Malahide, Dublin, Ireland.
Public domain photo
ReplyDeletePhoto link:
https://pixabay.com/photos/cow-black-and-white-beef-spotted-2777682/
Gonzalinho
Photo of Mary Carberry is posted according to principles of fair use. The post is about Mary Carberry.
ReplyDeleteGonzalinho
BOGUS MILLENARIANISM
ReplyDeleteThrough the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, an inquiry was made of the Irish Catholic Conference to see if the Irish Bishops had issued any guidance. Some of the Irish Bishops had no knowledge of these revelations and none had made any statements. However, since the individual uses a pseudonym and is anonymous, it is difficult to investigate. However, there have been other statements made by other bishops. In particular, Bishop Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia has stated:
“I have examined some of these messages and found them to be patently fraudulent and corrosive of true Christian faith as the Catholic Church teaches it. The alleged recipient of the messages operates anonymously and refuses to identify and present herself to local Church authority for a theological examination of the content of her messages.
“The messages contain certain theological and historical errors some of which fall within the category of bogus millenarianism, and they are more likely to provoke fear rather than the peace of the Spirit. They play on elements of the Catholic faith only to undermine it at its core. Moreover, they are outrageous in their claims against Pope Francis. Therefore, the messages of Maria Divine Mercy are not to be taken seriously, discussed, or distributed within the Archdiocese of Brisbane.”
Additionally, both the National Catholic Register and New Advent have posted negative evaluations of the Maria Divine Mercy revelations which can be found at http://www.ncregister.com/blog/jimmy-akin/9-things-you-need-to-know-about-maria-divine-mercy and http://blog.newadvent.org/2013/03/a-closer-look-at-false-prophecies-of.html
https://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=10621
—Bishop Richard J. Malone, “Bishop Prohibits Dissemination of Maria Divine Mercy’s Messages in Portland Diocese,” Catholic Culture, 2013
Question:
Is the Seal Of The Living God that is said to be from God through Maria Divine Mercy true or false?
Answer:
“Maria Divine Mercy” is the name adopted by someone who wrote anonymously on the internet and claimed to receive divine revelations. She claimed to be the 7th angel/messenger written about in the Book of Revelations who was to prepare the world for the Second Coming.
She was never approved in any way, shape, or form by any Church authority nor did her messages seem consistent with the Catholic faith. An Irish newspaper believed it found the woman behind the revelations (an Irish woman) and shortly thereafter the associated websites were taken down.
Several dioceses that have found this devotion within their territory have issued statements that these are unapproved messages and that the lay faithful are not to put any faith in them.
All messages and associated devotions connected to Maria Divine Mercy are false and should not be used or shared.
https://www.catholic.com/qa/is-the-maria-divine-mercy-seal-of-god-real
—Father Charles Grondin, “Is the Maria Divine Mercy Seal of God Real?” Catholic Answers
Gonzalinho
WHY DO PEOPLE BELIEVE IN APOCALYPTICISM?
ReplyDelete…hard to answer, but psychologists and religious scholars say it derives from a number of very human urges: from the fear of death to the desire for justice to the fatalistic despair that this world is too broken ever to be fixed.
…“Thirty to forty percent of Americans report believing that the end times are coming eventually…,” says Christopher Lane, author of “The Age of Doubt: Tracing the Roots of Our Religious Uncertainty.”
So for some, anxiety spurred by the recent natural and economic disasters makes apocalyptic thinking more appealing, he says. “It becomes easier to convince people that things are getting worse and that the answer will come through divine dispensation, rather than have them face the fact that humanity must fix its own problems.”
Gary Laderman, chairman of the department of religion at Emory University, says the story of ultimate reckoning is very popular in religious texts and popular culture.
“It’s a scenario where you can pinpoint the heroes from the villains, good from evil. It’s a powerful story that people identify with. It’s not so foreign to be fixated on the end of the world, our society today just fixates on it in popular culture instead, with Armageddon movies,” he says.
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/MindMoodNews/21-doomsday-psychology-appeal-armageddon/story?id=13638739
—“Doomsday Psychology: The Appeal of Armageddon,” ABC News, May 19, 2011
Scientific psychology is potentially a very good source of information on human susceptibility to harmful religious beliefs and practices. We should examine what science says about religion in society and evaluate it carefully, because science of quality deserves at least our judicious review. Using religion solely to investigate religion itself risks the possibility of looping logic error or infinite loop.
Gonzalinho