For years, the Korean bishops have been trying to stop the activities of would-be mystic Julia Kim (now Julia Youn) at Naju, Korea. She claimed to have a weeping statue of Our Lady; she claimed to suffer the stigmata; she claimed that the Eucharist turned into visible, bloody flesh in her mouth, including in 1995 when she received the Sacred Host from Pope John Paul II.
The Archdiocese of Kwangju issued several declarations against the claims of supernatural miracles in the case, and on January 21 of this year, the confrontation reached a decisive point when the Archbishop of Kwangju declared Youn and those who participate in her activities excommunicated for grave disobedience.
Although my sympathies are with the bishop, parts of the canonical decree seem odd: e.g., I’m not sure that canon law allows for a latae sententiae excommunication for the sort of disobedience the Archbishop cites. (E.g., see the SJF’s discussion of c1371.) On the other hand, the decree seems to treat adherence to Mrs. Youn’s claims as a matter of schism. Perhaps Pete Vere or Ed Peters (keeper of the “Excommunication Blotter“) will be able to clarify this for the good of the faithful.
A press report is on-line at Mirifica, and also follows after the jump…