Synod a win for Francis and ‘openness’
As people analyze and debate the final relatio or report from the Synod on the Family, there is a danger of missing the forest for the trees.
Oct 30, 2014
By Fr Thomas Resse, SJ
As people analyze and debate the final relatio or report from the Synod on the Family, there is a danger of missing the forest for the trees.
It is true that the welcoming language toward gays was dialled back from what was expressed in the October 13 draft, and Communion has not yet been granted to divorced and remarried Catholics. But while we are spilling a lot of ink (or electrons) comparing the final report with the earlier draft, let’s not forget the big picture: The Synod was a victory for openness and discussion in the Church and the final document is an invitation for everyone in the Church to join that discussion. This is exactly what Pope Francis wanted.
True, there were some ideological traditionalists who did not want any change. Those, the Pope referred to in his final address as zealous traditionalists or intellectuals who have “certitude of what we know and not of what we still need to learn and to achieve.”
But most of the bishops are pastors who worry that if they appear too welcoming or accommodating, then people will think that all sexual unions are equal and that there is no reason to get married in the Church. These bishops simply need more time to figure out how to be a loving parent and a clear teacher. For too many years, they only worried about being clear.
True, there were African bishops who feared how a welcoming attitude toward gays would be perceived in their cultures. For example, would conservative Muslim clerics use it in propaganda against the Church?
At the same time, we are seeing change in the African Church. For example, the president of the Nigerian conference of bishops made clear at the Synod that, while the Nigerian bishops oppose gay marriage, they also oppose the criminalization of homosexuals. In Africa, that matters.
Some are portraying the final report as a defeat for Francis. I don’t think so, and he certainly does not think so. If he wanted to be a dictator, he could have just ordered whatever he wanted. Rather he invited the bishops into an open, collegial discussion.
Source: NCR
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