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Last Sunday saw the opening of the Synod for the Amazon, which Pope Francis announced two years ago and whose aim is “to find new ways for the evangelization of that portion of the People of God, especially the indigenous, often forgotten and without a perspective of a good future, also for the cause of the crisis of the Amazonian forest, lung of fundamental importance for our planet”. During the two years leading up to ip, 80 000 people living in the Amazon basin (which has an indigenous population of 20 million) were consulted and raised issues ranging from care for the environment, via social justice to constraints on access to the sacraments and pastoral care. The Synod will last 3 weeks and will result in a final document addressed to Pope Francis, who will take it as a basis for a future encyclical or exhortation (like he has done in the case of synods on the family and on youth in the past).
Over the course of the Synod, I will try to periodically share here a selection of news and reflections about its progress, as a way to be engaged with this important event in the life of the Church. I will not try to be exhaustive (you can follow media outlets like news.va and americamagazine.org for that) but focus on what gives me greatest joy or sorrow instead.
As with previous Synods, here too Pope Francis' opening homily, delivered during mass celebrated at St. Peter's last Sunday, is key to understanding what is at stake. Off the bat, he frames the Synod as an exercise in receiving, being and sharing a gift:
“We [bishops] received a gift so that we might become a gift. Gifts are not bought, traded or sold; they are received and given away. If we hold on to them, if we make ourselves the centre and not the gift we have received, we become bureaucrats, not shepherds. We turn the gift into a job and its gratuitousness vanishes. We end up serving ourselves and using the Church. [...] The gift we have received is a fire, a burning love for God and for our brothers and sisters. A fire does not burn by itself; it has to be fed or else it dies; it turns into ashes. If everything continues as it was, if we spend our days content that “this is the way things have always been done”, then the gift vanishes, smothered by the ashes of fear and concern for defending the status quo. [...] Jesus did not come to bring a gentle evening breeze, but to light a fire on the earth.”Francis then proposes prudence as the attitude with which to approach these gifts, a prudence that is active and a vehicle for the newness of the Holy Spirit:
“The fire that rekindles the gift is the Holy Spirit, the giver of gifts. [...] Not a spirit of timidity, but of prudence. Someone may think that prudence is a virtue of the “customs house”, that checks everything to ensure that there is no mistake. No, prudence is a Christian virtue; it is a virtue of life, and indeed the virtue of governance. And God has given us this spirit of prudence. Paul places prudence in opposition to timidity. What is this prudence of the Spirit? As the Catechism teaches, prudence “is not to be confused with timidity or fear”; rather, it is “the virtue that disposes practical reason to discern our true good in every circumstance and to choose the right means of achieving it” (No. 1806). [...] Rekindling our gift in the fire of the Spirit is the opposite of letting things take their course without doing anything. Fidelity to the newness of the Spirit is a grace that we must ask for in prayer. May the Spirit, who makes all things new, give us his own daring prudence; may he inspire our Synod to renew the paths of the Church in Amazonia, so that the fire of mission will continue to burn.”Finally, he contrasts the fire of the Gospel that is God's gift with the destructive fire of human greed and self-interest:
"When peoples and cultures are devoured without love and without respect, it is not God’s fire but that of the world. Yet how many times has God’s gift been imposed, not offered; how many times has there been colonization rather than evangelization! May God preserve us from the greed of new forms of colonialism. The fire set by interests that destroy, like the fire that recently devastated Amazonia, is not the fire of the Gospel. The fire of God is warmth that attracts and gathers into unity. It is fed by sharing, not by profits. The fire that destroys, on the other hand, blazes up when people want to promote only their own ideas, form their own group, wipe out differences in the attempt to make everyone and everything uniform.”Echoing St. Irenaeus1, the same mindset was also summed up by the newly appointed cardinal (and newly ordained bishop) Michael Czerny SJ saying that:
“[O]ur vocation is to help men and women to live their human lives and to live them to the full…. This is the big mission. This is what it means to preach the Gospel and to bring the Good News to the ends of the earth.”On the next day, Monday 7th October, Cardinal Cláudio Hummes, the Relator General of the Synod, then set the scene for the upcoming process of synodal discernment by summarising the work of the preceding two years, including a start overview of the harsh challenges facing the region:
"Numerous consultations held throughout the Amazon show that the communities consider that life in the Amazon is especially threatened by: (a) criminalization and assassination of leaders and defenders of the territory; (b) appropriation and privatization of natural goods such as water itself; (c) both legal logging concessions and illegal logging; (d) predatory hunting and fishing, mainly in rivers; (e) mega-projects: hydroelectric and forest concessions, logging for monoculture production, construction of roads and railways, or mining and oil projects; (f) pollution caused by the entire extractive industry that causes problems and diseases, especially among children and young people; (g) drug trafficking; (h) the resulting social problems associated with these threats such as alcoholism, violence against women, sex work, human trafficking, loss of original culture and identity (language, spiritual practices and customs), and all conditions of poverty to which the peoples of the Amazon are condemned (IL,15)."Cardinal Hummes then panned out to show the big picture in which these challenges play out, which is that of God's relationship with his creation:
"Integral ecology teaches us that everything is connected, human beings and nature. All living beings on the planet are children of the earth. The human body is made of the “dust of the ground”, into which God “breathed” the spirit of life as the Bible says (cf. Gen 2,7). Consequently, all damage done to the earth damages human beings and all the other living creatures on the earth. This proves that one cannot address ecology, economy, culture and other issues separately. In Laudato Si’ it is stated that they must be considered as one; an environmental, economic, social and cultural ecology (cf. LS, cap. IV).He also touched on the very infrequent access to the sacraments that the Catholics of the Amazon suffer from and shared both a call for the ordination to the priesthood to be opened to married men and for greater recognition of the spiritual service and leadership of women in the region:
The Son of God too became a man and his human body comes from the earth. In this body, Jesus died for us on the Cross to overcome evil and death, he rose again among the dead and now sits to the right of God the Father in eternal and immortal glory. The Apostle Paul writes, “For in him all the fullness was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile all things for him (...) whether those on earth or those in heaven.”(Col. 1,19-20). In Laudato si’ we read that, “This leads us to direct our gaze to the end of time, when the Son will deliver all things to the Father, so that “God may be everything to everyone” (1 Cor.15:28). Thus, “the creatures of this world no longer appear to us under merely natural guise because the risen One is mysteriously holding them to himself and directing them towards fullness as their end” (LS, 100). It is thus that God has definitively connected Himself to His entire creation. This mystery is accomplished in the sacrament of the Eucharist."
"There is a lack of appointed priests and this means pastoral care consisting of occasional instead of adequate daily pastoral care. The Church lives on the Eucharist and the Eucharist is the foundation of the Church (St. John Paul II). Participation in the celebration of the Eucharist, at least on Sundays, is essential for the full and progressive development of Christian communities and a true experience of the Word of God in people’s lives. It will be necessary to define new paths for the future. During the consultation stages, indigenous communities, faced with the urgent need experienced by most of the Catholic communities in Amazonia, requested that the path be opened for the ordination of married men resident in their communities, albeit confirming the great importance of the charisma of celibacy in the Church. At the same time, faced with a great number of women who nowadays lead communities in Amazonia, there is a request that this service be acknowledged and there be an attempt to consolidate it with a suitable ministry for them."During that same first general congregation of the Synod, Pope Francis spoke2 again and also warned against ideologies, prejudices and contempt:
"Ideologies are a dangerous weapon; we always tend to latch onto an ideology for interpreting a people. Ideologies are reductive, and they lead us to exaggeration in our pretence to understand intellectually, but without accepting, understanding without admiring, understanding without taking on and then reality is received in categories, the most common are the categories of “isms.” Then when we have to approach the reality of a native people we speak of "indigenisms", and when we want to provide them with a launch pad towards a bette life, we don’t ask them, we speak of developmentalism. These “isms” re-formulate life from an illustrious and enlightened laboratory. There are catchphrases that take root and condition the approach to native people. In our country, the catchphrase: “civilization and barbarism” served to divide, to annihilate and it reached its culmination toward the end of the 80s, [in the 19th century] annihilating the majority of the native people, because they were “savage” and “civilization” came from another side. [This] still continues in my homeland, with offensive words, and then there is talk of a second class civilization, of those that come from barbarism, which today are the "bolitas" [meaning “marbles" and used as a racial slur for Bolivian immigrants in Argentina], the "paraguas" [meaning "umbrellas", referring to Paraguayans], the "little black heads,” always removing ourselves from the reality of a people, qualifying it and putting distances in place. That’s the experience in my country — and then, contempt. Yesterday I was very sad to hear, here, a mocking comment about that pious man who brought the gifts [during mass on Sunday] with feathers on his head, tell me: what difference is there between wearing feathers on the head and the biretta [a three-cornered hat] that some officials of our Dicasteries wear? Then we run the risk of proposing simply pragmatic measures, when, on the contrary, we are asked to contemplate the people, to have a capacity for admiration, which then lead to paradigmatic thinking. If someone has come with pragmatic intentions, let him pray the “I confess,” let him convert and open his heart to a paradigmatic perspective that is born of the reality of the people.From the second day onwards, there then followed testimonies of Synod participants during the daily Vatican press briefings, which were rich both in sharing the Amazon peoples' profound sufferings and joys and in transmitting the warm and positive atmosphere of the synod. On that second day, one experience that particularly struck me was that of Sister Alba Teresa Cediel Castillo, of the Missionary Sisters of Mary Immaculate and of St. Catherine of Siena, who lives in Colombia among the indigenous communities and whose words display both a profound love for the people she serves and a clear absurdity of current practice:
"We are present everywhere and we do what a woman can do by virtue of her Baptism: we accompany the indigenous people, and when priests cannot be present, we perform baptisms. If someone wants to get married, we are present and we witnesses to the love of the couple. We have often had to listen to confessions, but we have not given absolution. In the depth of our hearts, though, we have said that with the humility with which this man or woman approached us because of illness, or because they were close to death – we believe God the Father intervenes there".On Thursday, 10th October, Bishop Medardo de Jesús Henao Del Río, Apostolic Vicar of Mitú, and Titular Bishop of Casae Medianae, in Colombia spoke at the press briefing, starting with examples of the horrors that his people endure, summarized by Vatican News as follows:
"He described the situation there as particularly difficult. The drug trade, he said, is exploiting indigenous people in the area. While there is a school and a paramedic station, there is widespread malnutrition and many live abandoned. The Bishop told the story of a woman who was experiencing a difficult pregnancy. She had nowhere to go and had to perform a C-section on herself. Her husband managed to get her to the hospital where the gynecologist was shocked this could have happened. In this case, the woman and her child survived. In other cases, men have had to help their wives deliver babies using knives, and women sometimes die as a result."He also gave examples of multi-national companies exploiting the region by mining and logging that forces the indigenous people off their land. Finally, Bishop Del Rio also spoke very beautifully of what inculturation looks like in how he ordains deacons:3
"I have recently ordained an indigenous deacon. I have ordained him - and many may be scandalized by this - I have ordained him in two rites: the Roman rite and the indigenous rite. Many may say: what did I do, did I ordain a wizard? No. If we enter the indigenous cosmogonic context, I followed the rite of ordaining a deacon until the point where I deliver the Gospel to him. The the indigenous leaders then placed a crown on his head, which is the sign of a man who acquires wisdom within a community and who will care for the community. [...] It is a sign of distinction. Then they receive him and pass him all around the church - him with the Word of God which is the ultimate wisdom. They dance all around the church, the community applauds him. Then follows the embrace of peace with which the rite of ordination concludes. Once the ceremony and Eucharist conclude, this community welcomes him, asks him for his blessing, they tell him: "You will help us ... When will you come and bless me at my work ..." So, this is not a mixing, but an assimilation of certain values that are there in the indigenous communities that go together with Christian values. We can neither consider all that is indigenous to be holy, nor to be of the devil. It is necessary to study all their myths, what their rites mean, so that rites are such that they accept them and that they are in communion with service. The other thing is that the deacon is at the service of the community. Recently the pope told us that they are not there to serve in a liturgy beside a bishop or a priest but to be at the service of the community. It is a ministry that has strong consonance with indigenous tradition."
1 "For the glory of God is the living man, and the life of man is the vision of God." (Against Heresies, Book 4, Chapter 34, Section 7)
2 The original Spanish text of Pope Francis' address can be found here and I took the liberty of adjusting the zenith.org translation in some places with the desire to render the original text more faithfully in English.
3 Please, note, that this is my translated transcript of Bishop Del Rio's words, spoken at the press briefing, and that all mistakes here are mine.
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