Cardinal addresses ‘exaggerated expectations’ over synod

Cardinal addresses ‘exaggerated expectations’ over synod
Participants at the the Synod of Bishops recite morning prayer before finishing their discussions on the assembly’s first module in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican on October 7. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media

VATICAN (CNS): The Synod on Synodality is not geared to “resolve particular problems” in the Catholic Church, such as the blessing of same-sex unions or women’s ordination, but to explore ways for the church to discuss and address such issues, Fridolin Cardinal Ambongo of Kinshasa, Congo, said during a news conference at the Vatican on October 7.

“There are a lot of people who believe that this synod will bring solutions to all problems,” Cardinal Ambongo said, “but the synod will define the new way of ‘doing’ Church, the new way of approaching problems, what the problem is but also how in the spirit of synodality we will approach that problem.”

The cardinal said that before he left home for the synod, many people from across Africa asked him to bring solutions back with him for the problems that affect the continent, namely poverty and conflicts. Yet “these are exaggerated expectations,” he said.

Asked about the acceptance of blessings for same-sex unions in the Church, Cardinal Ambongo said, “We are here for a synod on synodality.”

He stressed, “Synodality does not mean expressing personal opinions, but walking together.” He went on to say, “On the LGBT question, the Lord himself will show us the way through collective discernment.”

… the synod will define the new way of ‘doing’ Church, the new way of approaching problems, what the problem is but also how in the spirit of synodality we will approach that problem

Cardinal Ambongo

The cardinal said he was confident the synod will “bear good fruits” for the whole of the Church and said he was struck by the joy, trust, enthusiasm and hope present among the synod participants.

The cardinal, president of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar, spoke with reporters after the fourth day of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops. 

Assembly participants finished conversations on October 6 on the first module of the synod’s agenda dedicated to reflecting on the characteristics of a synodal Church. The 35 working groups of 10 to 12 people each submitted reports summarising their small-group conversations to the synod general secretariat on October 7.

Pope Francis was not present for the small-group work on October 7, but attended the general sessions from October 5 to 6 when the small-groups shared their initial reflections.

Cardinal Ambongo told reporters that a climate of openness had been established in the synod, noting that participants initially seemed to wonder what they could or could not talk about in their discussions but that by the fourth day everyone felt free to speak about what was on their hearts and minds.

Participants, he said, quickly realised that “nobody among us came with an agenda that they try to pass, as we’ve seen in other synods. We are all there, brothers and sisters, listening to the will of God for his Church.”

…nobody among us came with an agenda that they try to pass, as we’ve seen in other synods. We are all there, brothers and sisters, listening to the will of God for his Church

The cardinal said, “People cannot easily say, ‘I know the will of God,’ that would be truly pretentious. That is why the synod rightly chose the method of discerning,” which he said entails seeking together “that which seems today and right now the best solution” to a given issue.

He added that this synod is unlike the other three that in which he participated because previously “we knew more or less how things would end, but this one, no.”

Vatican officials told reporters that discussions on migration and making the Church a welcoming home for all were frequent in the opening days of the synod.

Sister Leticia Salazar, a synod delegate from the United States and chancellor of the Diocese of San Bernardino, California, spoke of her own personal experience of immigrating to the United States at 17-years-old. In a new country, “faith sustains you, but the Church welcomes you,” she said, sharing how her first experience of a faith community came as a young immigrant in California.

She said it is up to the universal Church “to discern how to be a welcoming Church, a listening Church, which are the very characteristics of a synodal Church.”

Sister Salazar, a member of the Order of the Company of Mary Our Lady, said that during the diocesan phase of the synod, “people had a very difficult time [understaning] synodality.” Yet a woman in her diocese shared that she was able to “experience synodality” by being listened to in her Church community.

“Synodality is not a concept, it’s an experience, of being included,” Sister Salazar said.

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