Synod: Bishop Dowd on ‘fitting
the pieces of the puzzle'
Synod Father Thomas Dowd, Auxiliary Bishop of Montreal, Canada. |
Synod Father and Auxiliary Bishop of Montreal, Canada –
Thomas Dowd – talks about the need to formulate new methods of engagement to
involve young people.
By Linda Bordoni
The challenges posed by Part three of the Synod of
Bishops on Young People are coming to the fore as small groups discuss
issues and draw up reports to be presented to those charged with writing the
Synod’s final document.
Thomas Dowd, the Auxiliary Bishop of Montreal in
Canada, told Vatican News that that in his group members are trying to find a
model that will allow the Church to move forward pro-actively and efficiently
He also talks about the focus of his own intervention and
about how the Catechesis needs to find new methods with which to engage young
people.
Bishop Thomas Dowd speaks of how his lively English-speaking
group is currently focused on elaborating the input and information received so
far and “trying to find a model that will allow the Church to move forward
pro-actively – not just with bullet points and suggestions, but ‘how do we
change our method so we become more active on these and on other issues?’”.
Accountability and the importance of the post Synodal
process
Bishop Dowd explains that the Synod is going to provide
recommendations to the Pope, and he will take them and work with his close
advisers to produce something for the Universal Church. But, he stresses, very
important is the level of implementation that has to happen in every country,
every diocese, every parish.
“That is often where the rubber meets the road: how are we
going to provide orientations that will also have some level of accountability
for follow-up” he says.
He points out that the theme of accountability is an
important one in many fields including the one that pertains to “a style of
leadership”.
Sifting through and putting the important issues into order
Bishop Dowd says that now that so many important issues have
been brought to the table, participants are engaging in “very free discussions”
in order to be able to sift through and order the issues “and addressing them
together”.
On the need to renew the Catechesis
Bishop Dowd reveals that the topic of his own intervention
focused on Catechesis as it has been his experience that in his context, the
post Vatican II Catechesis has largely failed.
He explains that there was an attempt to renew Catechesis
and engage in a different form of Catechesis, but he says that a lot of it
lacked content or fell short of demonstrating “how the pieces of the puzzle fit
together”.
“We would still wind up getting a lot of content but we
didn’t have the sort of model on the box: like if you are making a puzzle you
have to see what image you are working towards and what image is emerging” in
order to stay engaged, he says.
He says he believes there is a method to learning as much as
there is a content to learning and our Catechesis needs to include that method.
“I hear from other Bishops, he says, that there is a failure
of Catechesis, that things are not sticking, that kids are going to Catholic
Schools and then they are graduating from the Catholic Church, not just from
school”.
Bishop Dowd also speaks of what for him the basic questions
are and of how to make sure a lot of issues fall into place when teaching Catechism.
And, regarding the need for a new Catechism, he asks the
question: “will it attract young people? Will it keep them in place?”
Because, he says, “It’s not a marketing question! It’s a
question of how are we going to express the deep questions in their heart? How
are we going to help them find answers? “
If we want to journey with people on their quest, Bishop
Dowd concludes, addressing their questions has to be part of it!
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