Baldisseri: the Pan-Amazon Synod is ecclesial not political event
Pope Francis among the indigenous people of Puerto Maldonado, Peru, on Jan. 19, 2018 (AFP) |
Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, the general secretary of the
Synod of Bishops on Monday opened a 2-day seminar in the Vatican in preparation
for the Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in the Vatican for the
Pan-Amazon Region, October 6-27., 2019.
By Robin Gomes
"Towards the Special Synod for the Amazon: Regional
and Universal Dimension" is the theme of the Feb. 25-27
seminar in the Vatican.
The seminar is one of the many initiatives that the General
Secretariat has organized in preparation for the upcoming synod on the theme:
“Amazonia: New Paths for the Church and for an Integral
Ecology.”
The idea of the synod was born out of Pope Francis’
2015 environmental encyclical “Laudato Si – On Care for Our Common Home”, which
calls for action on global warming and pinpoints the Pan-Amazon Region as an
area of concern.
The Pope first announced the synod on 15 October 2017.
Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, the general secretary of the
Synod of Bishops, explained to Vatican News that the synod is not a political
event but an ecclesial assembly dealing with issues concerning evangelization
and the presence of the Church in the world.
Universal dimension
Card. Baldisseri noted that Pope Francis’ Apostolic
Constitution “Episcopalis communio ” of September 2018 points out
that a Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops is convened to discuss matters
which “pertain principally to one or more particular geographical areas”.
This explains that there cannot be a theme that, in the strict sense of the
word, concerns only one territory, to the exclusion of all the others. This,
the cardinal said, would be contrary to the very nature of the Church, as Saint
Paul explains: "If a member suffers, all members suffer together;
and if a member is honoured, all members rejoice with him". (1Cor 12,26).
This principle also applies to the Amazon, many
of whoseissues affect other areas of the planet, such as the Congo
basin, the tropical forests of the Asian Pacific and
the Guarani aquifer basin. Hence the Vatican seminar
deals with both the regional and universal dimensions. The cardinal said
the floor will first be given to those from the Amazonia, and then they will
also listen to other voices to complete the emerging perspectives.
Goals of the Synod
Explaining the theme of the Special Synod, Card. Baldisseri
said that launching new paths for the Church means fostering the leading role
of the Christian community, which has always been at the service of
the local populations in the work of evangelization and human promotion.
The Italian cardinal explained that the strengthening the
"Amazonian face" of the Church requires a renewal of the evangelizing
strategy, a new apostolic paradigm that knows how to strengthen the Christian
presence in the territory, not relying only on missionaries from outside.
Today, he said, it is necessary to identify new forms of
pastoral action that responds to the needs of small communities who live far
apart from each other and are extremely original within.
Card. Baldisseri noted that integral ecology is
a wide-ranging theme that draws deeply on nature and man, creation and the
creatures that inhabit it. Pope Francis in his Encyclical “Laudato Si”,
speaks of the planet Earth as "Our Common Home" to be defended,
protected and preserved, with particular attention to indigenous peoples, who
suffer the most from the impact of the devastating effects of the plunder the
environment.
In this situation, the challenge of the moment is to find
a balance between the legitimate need for progress and
sustainable use of natural resources, which takes into account the voice of
local people, without considering them passive recipients of decisions taken by
others.
Amazonia and the world
The Secretary of the Synod of Bishops explained that terms
such as inculturation, integral ecology, the indigenous question and the
coexistence of different populations indicate that the Special Synod inevitably
has a universal dimension, which goes beyond the confines of the Amazon
region’s vast territory (6.7 million km2).
The inculturation of the Gospel, that is,
the "incarnation" of the Christian message in the cultural and
spiritual expressions of peoples, he said, is a challenge for all Christian
communities in a world subject to rapid change. In this regard, Pope Francis in
Puerto Maldonado (Peru) in January 2018 stressed the importance of drawing on
the wisdom and richness of the cultural traditions of those peoples.
Likewise, integral ecology, in which God, man
and the environment are considered in their intimate
relationship, calls into question the entire planet, because everywhere that
relationship appears threatened.
Symptoms of ruptures in this relationship, the cardinal
said, are the denial of the ethical element in the concept of
development, the speed of change and degradation, natural disasters, social and
financial crises.
Studies in the scientific field attribute these natural
phenomena to progressive global warming, with tragic consequences
that are already imminent in the coming decades. The indigenous issue and
the coexistence of different populations are realities of social importance
that affect every area of the Amazonia territory and also increasingly raise
questions in other areas of the planet. This consideration is part of the
global phenomenon of migratory flows, which at the moment
represents one of the major problems of various countries in the world. In this
context, a look at the Amazonia region can prove to be a promising laboratory
for ecclesial and social reflection.
Hopes for the Synod
Card. Baldiserri pointed out that the Feb 25-27 Vatican
seminar intends to highlight the importance of the Amazonia regions for the
universal Church and for the whole world. It also aims to deepen some of the
themes related to the ecclesial and ecological aspects, in order to offer a
clear and realistic vision of the Pan-Amazonian situation, its characteristics
and its problems. The seminar will also identify and welcome any suggestion
from interventions and discussions.
The upcoming Special Synod in October, the cardinal said,
will be an opportune moment for the Church in its evangelizing mission and
a moment of great attention and reflection for all humanity about " Our
Common Home" and integral ecology, about which the Holy Father speaks.
Besides giving priority to the issue of indigenous peoples,
it is also hoped that in underscoring the effective co-responsibility of
the laity, the synod will pay special attention to the leading role
of women and that consecrated life in the
territory will be given greater value.
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