Cardinal Cupich on the need to be
effective and authentic in social ministry
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| Cardinal Cupich and other speakers at the Renovabis Congress |
The Archbishop of Chicago sets out a series of priorities at
the Renovabis Congress in Munich in order to ensure the Church's social and
pastoral ministy continues to be effective and authentic in a changing world.
By Linda Bordoni
The 23rd International Congress Renovabis took
place this week on the theme The Urban Church. Challenges in
Providing Pastoral Care, both East and West“.
Renovabis is a Catholic charity based in
Germany. It was founded in 1993 to help people in Eastern and Central Europe,
and although the European landscape has changed considerably in the past
decades, the Charity continues to grow and it sponsors some 14,000 assistance
projects in 28 different countries.
The Congress on 11 and 12 September gathered partner
organizations and members to discuss the challenges facing pastoral and
ministry, especially in big cities.
Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago addressed
the Congress listing the priorities he believes must be taken into
consideration in order to ensure the Church’s efforts to minister to those in
need are both effective and authentic.
Cardinal Cupich said he was asked to focus his presentation
on the priorities that he believes the Church should give to the challenges it
faces in offering pastoral care in an urban setting, particularly form a North
American perspective.
Cupich lists the care offered by so many projects in his own
Diocese of Chicago pointing out that he struggles to find a priority.
“Every day we care for the sick, poor, aged, homeless, the
unemployed migrants and prisoners,” he says, “we have the largest Catholic
charities in the US and we are the largest provider of social services within
the State of Illinois”.
He went on to reveal that the Diocese of Chicago has the
largest Catholic hospital system, that it educates the young in over 200
schools, advocates for public policies promote and defend life and dignity, as
well as care of the planet, anti violence measures and religious freedom.
He conceded that these are all priorities, of course, but
pointed out that there is “another level of priorities that have to do with
securing the conditions necessary for these ministries and efforts to be both
effective and authentic: to really be about what the Church is supposed to be
doing in ministry”.
Not just another NGO
“Because we are not just another NGO, but are ministering in
the name of Jesus,” he said.
Cupich spoke of what he called “foundational priorities”
that set the conditions for the Church to be able to be really authentic.
“They involve challenges that need Jesus’ healing and if not
met, they will undermine the impact of all the other ministries that we have,”
he said.
Current challenges
Cupich listed the challenges he highlighted in his
presentation to the Congress
1: the changing face of the family in an era of increasing
globalization and secularization;
2: social polarization that leaves humanity divided,
not only politically, but spilling over into the life of the Church and
undermining “the Church’s ability to give authentic witness for what it means
to be the body of Christ working in urban areas.”
3: The sexual abuse crisis. Cupich said its impact on the
Church’s efforts are not to be underestimated noting that “while it should
never paralyze us, it does, in the US undermine our ability because we have to
be credible witnesses of the Gospel and when we have failed, we have to admit
it, deal with it and bring healing”.
Resources
After listing the priorities to be taken into account,
Cupich reflected on the resources available and pointed to the results of the
Synods of Bishops on the Family and on Married Life.
Especially for the divisions in society, he invited those
present to call upon the insights of Pope Saint John Paul II on social
solidarity.
Cupich also referred to his predecessor, Cardinal Bernadine,
who said “we need a consistent ethic of life”.
“Yes, that is important, but today, in a world when people
are so divided, I am calling for a consistent ethic of solidarity that brings
us together,” he said.
He decried the fact that in the political sphere and
sometimes even in the Church, “not only are people not talking to each other,
they often have contempt for each other and they will not even intersect and
engage in dialogue”.
Synodality
Finally he recalled Pope Francis’ effort to recover from the
earliest traditions an emphasis on synodality in the Church.
“We have to walk together with our people and with each
other,” he said.
Cupich said there is a rich tradition of treating those who
are injured and wounded in the world and Pope Francis, he said, is giving us a
pathway forward.
“I want to open a conversation on how the Church may find a
pathway forward for responding to these foundational challenges” Cupich
concluded, “because if we don’t, all the other efforts we make on behalf
of those in need really will be undermined, while if we address them, we will
be both effective and authentic”.

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