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    • Irish saint who was Archbishop of Armagh

      • Malachy (/ ˈmæləki /; Middle Irish: Máel Máedóc Ua Morgair; Modern Irish: Maelmhaedhoc Ó Morgair; Latin: Malachias) (1094 – 2 November 1148) is an Irish saint who was Archbishop of Armagh, to whom were attributed several miracles and an alleged vision of 112 popes later attributed to the apocryphal (i.e. of doubtful authenticity) Prophecy of the Popes.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Malachy
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  2. Malachy (/ ˈmæləki /; Middle Irish: Máel Máedóc Ua Morgair; Modern Irish: Maelmhaedhoc Ó Morgair; Latin: Malachias) (1094 – 2 November 1148) is an Irish saint who was Archbishop of Armagh, to whom were attributed several miracles and an alleged vision of 112 popes later attributed to the apocryphal (i.e. of doubtful authenticity) Prophecy of the...

    • What Is “The Prophecy of The Popes?”
    • Who Was St. Malachy?
    • Why Are People Talking About The Prophecy Now?
    • Is This An Approved Private Revelation?
    • What Evidence Is There Concerning Its Authenticity?
    • How Else Can The Reliability of The Prophecy Be Evaluated?
    • Should Catholics Worry About The Prophecy of The Popes?

    It is an alleged private revelation given to the medieval figure St. Malachy. The prophecy consists of a list of 112 short phrases — enigmatic mottoes in Latin that are supposed to represent the popes from St. Malachy’s time onward.

    St. Malachy was the archbishop of Armagh, Ireland in the 1100s. Reportedly, he made a visit to Rome in which he had a vision of the future popes and wrote them down.

    The next-to-last motto in the prophecy of the popes has been associated with Pope Benedict XVI. Since he is now at the end of his papacy, that would bring us to the last name in the prophecy of the popes, which many have taken to indicate the final pope at the end of the world. This passage reads as follows:

    No, it is not. Although it has been influential in some Catholic circles for several hundred years, it is not approved by the Magisterium.

    A significant mark against its authenticity is the fact that it was not published until 1595, though St. Malachy died in 1148. There is no record of the prophecy existing in the intervening 447 years. Allegedly, this was because the prophecy lay, forgotten, in a Roman archive, and it was not rediscovered until 1590. This explanation is possible in ...

    If it is not possible to establish an external, historical record for the prophecy then the next logical approach is to examine its contents to see which theory of its origins they are more consistent with: Do the contents seem to suggest that it was written in the 1100s or do they suggest that it was written around 1590? Many observers have though...

    No. It is not an approved apparition, and the evidence is consistent with it being a forgery composed around 1590. More fundamentally, Jesus indicated that we would not know the time of the end. In keeping with Our Lord’s warning, predictions of the end of the world based on the Bible have a dismaltrack record, and trying to predict the time of the...

  3. St. Malachy (born 1094, Armagh, Ireland [now in Northern Ireland]—died November 2/3, 1148, Clairvaux, France; canonized 1190; feast day November 3) was a celebrated archbishop and papal legate who became a dominant figure of church reform in 12th-century Ireland.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Malachy died over four centuries before the prophecies first appeared. The alleged prophecy was first published in 1595 by a Benedictine named Arnold Wion in his Lignum Vitæ, a history of the Benedictine order. He attributed it to Saint Malachy, the 12th‑century Archbishop of Armagh.

    Motto No.
    Motto (translation)
    Regnal Name (reign)
    Name
    Ex caſtro Tiberis.
    Ex caſtro Tiberis.
    Cœleſtinus. ij.
    Cœleſtinus. ij.
    1.
    From a castle of the Tiber
    Celestine II (1143–44)
    Guido de Castello
    Inimicus expulſus.
    Inimicus expulſus.
    Lucius. ij.
    Lucius. ij.
    2.
    Enemy expelled
    Gherardo Caccianemici del Orso
  5. Mar 26, 2022 · An Irish saint's eerie prophecy that Pope Francis will be the last Pontiff Irish Saint Malachy, the 12th-century bishop of Armagh, prophesied that there would be only one more pope after...

  6. Sep 17, 2013 · The real Malachy was an Irish saint who lived from 1094 to 1148. His alleged prophecies, however, were not discovered until around 1590. The legend goes that Malachy experienced a vision in which he was given insight into popes past, present, and future, and that he recorded this vision as a series of cryptic verses.

  7. Aug 25, 2024 · See Vatican News to discover the life-story and message of St. Malachy, Prophet, the Saint of the Day 18 december.

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