Synod of Bishops: Now "determined in missionary spirit"
Synod Fathers gather around Pope Francis. |
The Primate of all Ireland said at Friday’s Synod of Bishops
press briefing that he that has not engaged with and encouraged young people
enough.
By Russell Pollitt, SJ
A graced month
Both Cardinal Christoph Schönborn of Austria and Archbishop
Eamon Martin of Ireland said that the Synod has been a time of grace – despite
their personal apprehension before it started.
Cardinal Schönborn said that when appointed he was
concerned about being away from Vienna for such a long time. Now, he says, he
realises what a good experience it was for bishops to come from all over the
world so that they could listen to young people and share with them. He said
that they heard more about the experiences and life situations of youth. He
said that here is no other comparable social body of leaders in the world who
will take the time – a whole month – to listen to young people with empathy and
true attention. He said that the atmosphere was not one in which the bishops
had answers but simply one in which they gave attention to the vison and dreams
of young people. He said that at the Synod they laughed a lot and that there
was an excellent atmosphere and real communion. He said that he will be more
determined in his missionary spirit because the courage and willingness of
young people.
Archbishop Martin echoed this. He said that it was a
graced-filled month. He too said that he was skeptical before arriving. He said
that in Ireland they have to connect with young people but they haven’t done a
great job. He said that the Church connects with families and schools but after
that they struggle to engage young people. He said that the Synod has offered
him much for reflection on how to go about connecting with youth. The communion
at the Synod, with the Holy Father, bishops and young people was a real grace,
he said.
Archbishop Anthony Muheria from Kenya said that the Synod was an
exceptional experience of the universality of the church, its diversity and
also of collegiality. He says that the Synod has been like a flame, a fire,
which reignited the desire of the bishops to engage young people and in so
doing give new life to the Church.
The Church must preach a counter-cultural message
Archbishop Martin said that this Synod was not talking about a
particular doctrinal issue. The Synod touched on many issues from the point of
view of young people. In the first week the gathering identified the pressures
that young people were under. The reality of poverty, human trafficking,
migration, how many young people are lost, the increase in depression, mental
illness and their yearning for a stable reference point. The Archbishop said
that the bishops felt the importance again of the Church presenting a
counter-culture message to the world, a world, he added, in which young people
are drowning and feel suffocated. He said that the Church gives people a reason
to hope, to hold on to life, to live with passion. If anything, he said, the
Church mustn’t chase after fashions but fearlessly speak and go against the
grain of what society proposes. We need a Church that is counter-cultural, he
said.
The future challenge
Archbishop Muheria said that the challenge is now for the
bishops to pass the flame of the Synod on to young people. We need to instill
hope. He said for him it is now about what will happen when the Synod ends on
Sunday. He said that the Church needs to help young people face hurdles so that
they can have great dreams for the future – great dreams which are calling the
whole Church forward, he added. He said this will mean a change in approach and
therefore a new adventure. He said that the majority of Catholic youth are in
Asia and Africa and the Synod must connect with them despite their particular
challenges.
Archbishop Martin said that he is nervous as he has to go home
and bring the power and joy and life of the Synod back to the particular
Churches in Ireland. “I have to be an ambassador of the Synod,” he said.
He said that young people have to be involved in the
contemporary Church. In society they are in politics, education, policing,
government and the legal system. For this reason, too, he said, the Church must
engage with them so that they can transform society from within the places they
are already working and involved.
Archbishop Martin said that he came to the realisation that
young people are not the object of ministry, young people are themselves agents
of evangelisation. He said that he realises that he must engage more with young
people so that they can become missionary disciples. He said he sees now that
he has not engaged with and encouraged young people enough. He said that he
must go and reimagine his diocese and parishes. A question, for himself, he
said, was how he facilitates making faith-filled young people part of the
decision-making of the Church back in Ireland.
Mr Erduin Alberto Ortega Leal from Cuba, said that the Church
does try and help young people find answers but that the Church of the future
must also be involved and active with all people. He said that sometimes people
in the Church don’t understand the mistakes of the past but, thanks to the
Synod, he feels that there is a better understanding now.
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