Friday 25 October 2019

Amazon Synod: Jesus is the center

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725 words, 4 min read

Following on from the first piece about the Amazon Synod, I would here like to only cover three contributions to the Synod from the last week and skip entirely the reports of the “circoli minori” that were published a week ago and that give a first sense of the inputs to the Synod’s final document that is being drafted now and that will be voted on tomorrow. I’ll just mention some of the key themes that came up frequently in these intermediate working reports: a focus on caring for our common home - Mother Earth - where the Church plays an integral role, a denunciation of violence in the Amazon, the diversity of the Church and the need for inculturation (an Amazonian Rite was mentioned several time), a call for the need for regular, frequent, stable access to the Eucharist and the related call for ordaining married men (viri probati) to the priesthood, the call for a greater, more prominent, more “official” role of women in the Church, including a call for reinstating the diaconate for women.

Let me turn to the three moments from the last week or so that particularly stood out to me. The first was an interview with the newly-appointed Cardinal Jean Claude Hollerich of Luxembourg, who started with putting things into perspective:
“If our planet is destroyed, we can shout as much as we want about married priests or women priests, but there will be no priests needed anymore. So it’s the most important problem and it’s a problem with the greatest urgency.”
Another, equally important attempt at going back to basics was an impassioned plea by one of the lay participants of the synod, Delio Siticonatzi Camaiteri, of the Asháninka indigenous people of Perù, who was quite direct with the journalists - and through them with the broader population - at the Vatican press briefing yesterday, who said:
“I see you looking quite uneasy from here, not understanding what the Amazon really needs. We have our view of the universe, our way of looking at the world that surrounds us and it is nature that brings us closer to God. Seeing God’s face in our culture in our experience brings us closer [to him], because we, as indigenous people, live in harmony with all beings that are there. For you, I see that the idea of us as indigenous people does not make sense. You look worried to me, you look doubtful in the face of this reality that we seek as indigenous people. Don’t harden your heart, soften your heart - this is what Jesus invites us to do. May we live together. We believe in one God. In the end we will all be united. And this is what we, as indigenous people, desire. We have our rites. Yes, we do have our rites. But this rite must include its centre, which is Jesus Christ! There is nothing else to talk about here. The center that unites us now in this Synod is Jesus Christ. Defending life itself, natural life - there is nothing else besides.”
And, finally, there were Pope Francis’ own words at Wednesday’s General Audience, which, while addressed to the whole Church, I can’t help hear as being particularly meant for the Synod members, ahead of their vote on the Synod’s final document tomorrow:
“The nature of the Church emerges from the Book of the Acts, which is not a fortress but a tent capable of enlarging its space (Cf. Isaiah 54:2) and giving access to all. The Church is either “going forth” or it’s not Church, it is either a path that is always widening its space so that all can enter, or it’s not Church,’ — “a  Church with open doors” (Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, 46), always with the doors open.  When I see a church here, in this city, or when I see it in the other diocese from which I come, with the doors closed, this is a bad sign. The churches must always have the doors open because this is the symbol of what a church is: always open. The Church is “called to be always the open House of the Father. [. . . ] So that, if someone wants to follow a motion of the Spirit and approaches, seeking God, he/she won’t meet with the coldness of a closed door” (Ibid., 47).”

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