Synod
bishops looking for more autonomy, new insight, fresh language
(Vatican
Radio) At the Synod of Bishops on the Family on Friday morning, participants
presented the results of their small language group work that has been going on
behind closed doors for the past couple of days. Each group has been discussing
the first section of the Synod’s working document, orInstrumentum Laboris,
focused on the challenges facing family life today.
Philippa
Hitchen was listening in and talking to some of the bishops involved....
Who
exactly are those rows of men with their red and purple hats, sitting in the
Synod Hall for three whole weeks? Firstly, they’re family men, in the sense
that they grew up with mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, in-laws, cousins,
nephews and nieces, so they know only too well the difficulties and dysfunctionalities
that family life can bring to us all.
Secondly,
they’re men of God, so whatever other professional training and experience they
bring, they’re men whose lives have touched by Christ and must let their
words be inspired by His love.
Thirdly,
they’re pastors of their people, whose task is to help families discover and
live out their missionary faith, in the day-to-day realities that vary
enormously from one place, one country, one continent to the next.
That
was the self-portrait of one of the Synod fathers who presented the results of
his small group work on Friday. Altogether there were 13 groups, working in
five different languages, and they all spoke in positive terms of the small
group atmosphere with lay men and women, plus non-Catholic participants too.
They also talked of the challenge of bringing together such diverging views
from right across the globe. Many were critical of a “too Western perspective”
that they perceived in the Synod’s working document and several suggested that
much greater autonomy must go to local bishops conferences to find creative
solutions to family problems in their particular parts of the world.
Archbishop
Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia presented the results of one of the
English language groups:
“We
came to feel that there are issues that need to be addressed, analysis that
needs to be done and decisions that need to be taken at the local or regional
level.”
Another
common theme was to recognize and encourage the positive in peoples’ lives,
rather than to talk constantly about crisis and despair, even if families can
no longer be neatly packaged into a ‘one-size-fits-all’ model that the Church
has held up in the past. Archbishop Coleridge again:
“What’s
really in crisis is our understanding of what marriage is and what the family
is…It’s easy to look back to a golden age when there was mum, dad and three of
four kids……that’s not the reality today…..”
Finally
there was a lot of talk about language, words lost in translation and why it’s
important to do away with the kind of ‘Church-speak’ that means nothing at all
to young people today. Instead many bishops cited Pope Francis’ own
down-to-earth, colourful choice of words that has made people from all
countries and all cultures sit up discover a new, fresh face to the unchanging
truths of the Church.

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