Synod
Fathers offer message of consolation and encouragement
(Vatican Radio) Bishops attending the Synod on the Family on
Saturday voted overwhelmingly in favour of a concluding message that was drawn
up to reflect the substance of their two weeks of discussions here in the
Vatican.
The
three page message of support for Christian families was read out at the
penultimate session of the Synod and was presented to journalists at the
Vatican press office by Cardinals Gianfranco Ravasi from the Pontifical Council
for Culture, Raymundo Damasceno Assis from Aparecida in Brazil and Oswald
Gracias from Mumbai in India.
The miracle of married life and the complexity of relationships
where the Christian choice is not always an obvious one. The concluding message
from Church leaders around the world speaks of the lights and shadows to be
found in every heart and in every home where families struggle to live out
their Christian vocation. While not touching on all the many, difficult questions
that Synod participants have been wrestling with, the bishops aim to offer both
consolation and encouragement, as the main author of the message, Cardinal
Ravasi explained…
It’s
a text, he said, which must give hope to those families in difficult situations,
while at the same time promoting the riches and beauty that family life
embodies. Amongst the challenges listed in the message are those of marital
breakdown, of sickness or bereavement, of poverty and unemployment, conflict,
persecution and exploitation of women and children. The bishops call on
governments and international organisations to promote the rights of the
family, but they also insist that the credibility of the Church lies in its
ability to be a house with open doors to welcome all people in every
situation….
Cardinal
Gracias, who heads the Federation of Asian Bishops Conferences, said in his
region where Christians are a tiny minority, traditionally strong family values
are also under threat. This message, he said, admits the Church does not have
answers to all the questions people are posing today. But the bishops do firmly
reiterate a commitment to finding pastoral approaches for all people in their
care, based on the teachings of Scripture and tradition.
“There
are the Catholic principles, Scripture, Magisterium, but also an openness, a
pastoral approach for everyone……you ask if gays are welcome? The answer is an
unequivocal ‘Yes’.”
Despite
the heated debate that has characterised the past two weeks’ work, most bishops
are encouraged by the atmosphere of honesty that Pope Francis called for at the
start of the Synod. But what about the handful who didn’t approve the prayerful
message, one journalist asked? Well don’t forget the first disciples disagreed
vehemently at one of the earliest Councils in Jerusalem, Cardinal Ravasi
replied. And even the two versions of the Lord’s Prayer we find in the Gospels
show that perhaps St Luke didn’t agree every word written down by St
Matthew!
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