Family
Synod: Press Briefing Day 13
(Vatican
Radio) Tuesday 20 Oct. Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of South Africa cautioned
against using “politically correct language” at the daily press briefing for
the Synod on the Family on Tuesday. Napier was a guest together with Cardinals
Lluis Martinez Sistach of Spain and Alberto Suarez Inda of Mexico.
Fr.
Federico Lombardi, SJ, explained that the interventions in the plenary sessions
of all the Synod auditors were now available. Tomorrow the press will be briefed
on the reports that come from the working groups - or "circoli
minores" - of the Synod. The bishops will meet in plenary for the report
back session on Tuesday evening.
Each
of the three gave an introductory address before taking questions from the press.
Sistach
said that he has experienced a real sense of synodality in the past two weeks.
He said that his small group was very much focused on looking at marriage
preparation. They bishops in his group also spent time examine the process of
annulment in the light of the Motu Proprio, issued by Pope Francis earlier this
year, so that they could make sure annulments are done expediently.
Inda
said he believed that the Synod was important and would have an impact on the
whole world. He said that the family was the “cell of life” in the Church. The
Cardinal said that it was the role of bishops to be merciful judges in their
dioceses. The bishops have to "listen like mothers" and practice
discernment in specific situations. He also thanked the bishops of the United
States of America for their welcome to South American migrants. Many migrants
found hospitality in parishes in the USA. He said that the US bishops provide
services to assist migrants.
Inda
criticized American foreign policy which divided many families. He said that
the bishops of Mexico and the USA need to work together to support marriages
that have been divided because of migration. Many people migrate, not because
they choose to, but because they have to, in order to survive. This leads to
difficulties - like infidelity in marriage when the spouses do not see each
other for extended periods.
Napier
spoke specifically about what the African bishops thought. The African bishops
have a great sense of optimism, first because it is God that is leading them
and second because of the way that Pope Francis is leading the Church. He
thanked lay people who were praying for the delegates of the Synod. Napier also
affirmed people living in good marriages because “they help us to see where we
need to go as a Synod.”
He
said that the Synod was being guided by the title “The Mission and Vocation of
the Family in the Church and in the World” and that he thought that some issues
needed to be dealt with in another forum, especially issues related to
discipline, that had been brought up in the Synod. Napier stressed that in
Africa there was a different view of marriage. “Marriage is not between
two individuals but two families.” He went on to explain that, unlike the West,
cohabitation is often part of the actual preparation process for marriage which
is sanctioned by the families. He also spoke about how the Church must support
child-headed households in Africa. A number of young girls are left with the
responsibility of heading households because of the HIV pandemic.
Inda
explained that drugs and guns were a huge problem and caused much harm to many
families in Mexico. He said that for the bishops doctrine is of utmost
importance, “but doctrine is not just theories, it must be rooted in reality.”
Sistach
said that Christians get married in order to be joy-filled. He said that the
work of the Synod is to aid people to be truly happy in their marriages.
Speaking
on the process of the Synod Cardinal Napier said that the African bishops were
happy. He said that there had been some problems - hence the private letter
written to the Pope last week by some cardinals - but that these were resolved
when the Holy Father “registered our concerns.”
When
asked about the annulment process all three prelates said that the Motu Proprio
gave them the tools they needed assist people. The major difference was that
they do not need to go to a second court of appeal which was often the cause of
delays. They said, however, that the shortened process challenged bishops to ensure
they had proper personnel in place and that the process was followed
faithfully. If a case is complicated it must then go through the longer process
so that the Church can ensure things are done correctly. Cardinal Sistach
humorously said that a way of dealing with the Motu Proprio would be the
creation of a new religious order!
At
the end of the briefing Cardinal Napier was asked about the change or use of
“new language” by the Church. This has been a consistent topic at the Synod –
that the Church finds new ways of talking that is more sensitive and inclusive.
Napier said that it must be remembered that this was a pastoral synod, looking
at how the Church can be servant and minister. He cautioned against the use of
“politically correct” language and said that the Church has to be prophetic
too.
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