Pope names first woman with right to vote at synod

Pope names first woman with right to vote at synod
Sister Becquart. File photo: CNS

VATICAN (CNS): Xaviere Missionary Sister Nathalie Becquart one of two undersecretaries of the Synod of Bishops February 6. She will not be the first woman undersecretary of a major Vatican office, but she will be the first woman with a right to vote at a meeting of the Synod of Bishops.

The other undersecretary is Augustinian Father Luis Marin de San Martin, whom Pope Francis also named a bishop on February 6.

Mario Cardinal Grech, secretary-general of the Synod of Bishops, was asked by Vatican News if Sister Becquart having the right to vote at the synod would open the possibility to other women as well.

Cardinal Grech responded, that Pope Francis has “highlighted several times the importance that women be more involved in the processes of discernment and decision-making in the Church” and in recent synods, the number of women participating as nonvoting experts or and observers has increased. 

“With the appointment of Sister Nathalie Becquart and the opportunity that she will participate with the right to vote, a door has been opened,” Cardinal Grech said, adding, “We will then see what other steps could be taken in the future.” 

“With the appointment of Sister Nathalie Becquart and the opportunity that she will participate with the right to vote, a door has been opened,” Cardinal Grech said, adding, “We will then see what other steps could be taken in the future.” 

Although the issue has been raised increasingly in the synod hall, until now only bishops and a few priests and brothers belonging to religious orders have had a vote.

“Changes will come with the new generation as more and more young people—not only young women but also young men—ask for women’s equality,” she said. 

Sister Becquart, who was an observer at the 2018 Synod of Bishops on young people, was named a consultant to the Synod of Bishops in 2019. She said that at the time that the appointment was “a symbolic and effective step toward appointing more women at the Curia and it reflects Pope Francis’ desire to give more places to women at all levels of the Church.”

Sister Becquart, the former director of youth evangelisation and vocations for the French Bishops’ Conference, also said she was convinced more progress would come.

“Changes will come with the new generation as more and more young people—not only young women but also young men—ask for women’s equality,” she said. 

Sister Becquart added that hope comes from meeting “more and more priests and bishops now that are speaking out for women. I have seen an evolution. At the beginning, the question of women in the Church was a question from women and now it is also an important topic for many men, priests and bishops—and even the pope!”

However, one will not be able to say there is true collaboration between men and women at all levels of the Church until there are “more women in leadership positions and decision-making processes,” she said.

She said that obviously, the pope should continue appointing women to councils and dicasteries, but that she also had another idea: “Another symbolic step could be, for instance, that he ask a woman to lead the spiritual retreat for the Curia one year.”

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