Amazon Synod: The Church
committed to be an ally with Amazonia
Synod Father voting on the Final Document (Vatican Media) |
Five chapters, plus an introduction and a brief conclusion:
the Final Document of the Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops for the
Pan-Amazon Region was released on the evening of 26 October, by the express
will of the Pope. The document deals with a wide variety of topics, including
mission, inculturation, integral ecology, defence of the indigenous peoples, an
Amazonian rite, the role of women, and new ministries, especially in areas
where access to the Eucharist is lacking.
By Vatican News
Conversion: this is the common thread running through the
final document of the Pan-Amazon Synod. Conversion is expressed with different
accents: integral, pastoral, cultural, ecological, and synodal. The text is the
result of the “open, free, and respectful” exchange undertaken in the three
weeks of the work of the Synod, to tell the story of the challenges and the
potentialities of Amazonia, the “biological heart” of the world, spread over
nine countries and inhabited by over 33 million people, including about 2.5
million indigenous persons. Yet this region, by area the most vulnerable in the
world on account of climate change caused by human beings, is on “a rampant
race to death”. And thus the Document reiterates that a new direction is
necessary in order to save it, to avoid a catastrophic impact on the entire
planet.
Chapter I – Integral conversion
From the beginning, the document exhorts us to a “true
integral conversion”, with a simple and sober life, in the manner of St Francis
of Assisi, to be committed to relating harmoniously with the “common home”, the
creative work of God. Such conversion will lead the Church to be a Church “on
the move”, in order to enter the hearts of all the Amazonian peoples.
Amazonia’s voice is a message of life expressed through a multi-ethnic and
multi-cultural reality, represented by the varied faces that dwell therein.
“Good living”, and “doing good” is the lifestyle of the Amazonian people. This
means living in harmony with oneself, with others, and with the supreme being,
in a single intercommunication between the whole cosmos, in order to forge a
project of full life for all.
The suffering of Amazonia: the cry of the land and the cry
of the poor
Nevertheless, the text does not ignore the many sorrows and
the great violence that today wound and deform Amazonia, threatening its life:
the privatization of natural goods; predatory models of production;
deforestation which has affected 17% of the whole region; pollution from the
extractive industries; climate change; drug trafficking; alcoholism;
trafficking; the criminalization of leaders and defenders of the territory;
illegal armed groups. On a broader basis there is the bitter story of migration
in the Amazon on various levels: the traditional mobility of indigenous groups
in their territories; forced displacement of indigenous populations;
international migration and refugees. All these groups need cross-border
pastoral care, including the right to free movement. The problem of migration,
we read, ought to be confronted in a coordinated way by the Churches on the
borders. A work of permanent pastoral care must, in addition, be considered for
migrant who become victims of trafficking. The synodal Document invites us to
be attentive also to the forced displacement of indigenous families in urban
centres, emphasising that this phenomenon demands a “joint pastoral response”
in the peripheries. Hence, the exhortation to create missionary teams which, in
coordination with the parishes, would be able to deal with this aspect,
offering inculturated liturgies and favouring the integration of these
communities in the cities.
Chapter II – Pastoral conversion
Recalling the missionary nature of the Church is essential.
Mission is not something optional, the text says, because the Church is
mission, and missionary action is the paradigm of all the work of the Church.
In Amazonia, the Church must be modelled on the Good Samaritan, that is, she
must go out to meet everyone. She must be “Magdalene”, loved and reconciled in order
to announce joyfully the Risen Christ, and “Marian”, that is, she must generate
children in the faith, but also inculturated among the peoples that she serves.
It is important, then, to pass from a “visiting” pastoral ministry to a
pastoral ministry that is permanently present. For this reason, the synodal
Document suggests that the religious Congregations throughout the world
establish at least one missionary outpost in one of the Amazonian countries.
The sacrifice of the missionary martyrs
The Synod does not forget the many missionaries who have
spent their lives in order to transmit the Gospel in Amazonia; the most
glorious pages of that history have been written by the martyrs. At the same
time, the Document recalls that the proclamation of Christ in the region was
often accomplished in collusion with the powers that oppressed the people. For
this reason, today the Church has the “historic opportunity to distance
herself” from “the new colonializing powers, by listening to the Amazonian peoples
and transparently exercising her prophetic activity”.
Ecumenical and interreligious dialogue
In this context, both ecumenical and interreligious dialogue
are very important. It is “the indispensable path of evangelization in
Amazonia”, the text says. On the one hand, it must take its starting point from
the Word of God to initiate real paths of communion. On the other hand, with
regard to interreligious dialogue, the Document encourages a greater knowledge
of indigenous religions and cults, so that Christians and non-Christians, can
act together in defence of their common home. For this reason, moments of
encounter, study, and dialogue among the Amazonian churches and the followers
of indigenous religions are proposed.
The urgent need for indigenous pastoral ministry and for
youth ministry
The document further recalls the need for an indigenous
pastoral ministry, that would have a specific place in the Church: it is
necessary, in fact, to create and maintain “a preferential option for the
indigenous populations”, and to give a greater missionary impulse among native
vocations, so that the Amazon might be evangelised by Amazonians.
Further, space must be given to Amazonian youth, with their
lights and their shadows: divided between tradition and innovation; immersed in
an intense crisis of values; victims of sad realities such as poverty,
violence, unemployment, new forms of slavery, and difficulty in accessing
education. The text notes that they often end up in prison, or committing
suicide. Yet young Amazonians have the same dreams and hopes as other young
people in the world – and the Church, called to be a prophetic presence, must
accompany them on their journey, to prevent their identity and self-esteem from
being damaged or destroyed. In particular, the Document suggests “a renewed and
courageous youth ministry”, with an ever active pastoral ministry, centred on
Jesus. Young people, in fact, are a theological “locus” and prophets of hope,
they want to be protagonists, and the Amazonian Church wants to recognise their
space. Hence, the invitation to promote new forms of evangelization, including
the use of social media, and to help young indigenous people to achieve a
healthy interculturality.
Pastoral care in the cities and for families
The final text of the Synod then deals with the theme of
urban pastoral ministry, with particular attention on the family. In the urban
peripheries they suffer from poverty, unemployment, lack of housing, as well as
numerous health problems. It becomes necessary, then, to defend the rights of
all so that everyone has equal access to the benefits the city has to offer on
the basis of the principles of sustainability, democracy, and social justice.
It is necessary to fight, the text reads, so that in the “shanty towns” basic fundamental
rights might be guaranteed. The institution of a “ministry of welcome” should
also be central, for a fraternal solidarity with migrants, refugees, and the
homeless who live in the urban context. In this area, valid assistance can come
from the ecclesial base communities, which are “a gift of God to the local
Churches of the Amazon.” At the same time, public policies aimed at improving
the quality of life in rural zones are also called for, in order to avoid the
unchecked movement of people to the cities.
Chapter III – Cultural conversion
Inculturation and interculturality are important, the
Document continues, in order to achieve a cultural conversion that leads
Christians to go out to meet the other, and to learn from them. The Amazonian
people, in fact, with their “ancient scent” – which provides a contrast between
the desperation that one breathes on the continent, with their values of
reciprocity, solidarity, and sense of community – offer teachings of life and
an integrated vision of reality capable of understanding that all of creation
is connected; and guaranteeing, therefore, a sustainable management. The Church
is committed to being allied with the indigenous populations, the synodal text
repeats, especially in denouncing the attacks on their lives, the predatory
commercial projects, ethnocide and ecocide, and the criminalization of social
movements.
Defending the land and defending life
“The defence of the land”, the text reads, “has no other
purpose than the defence of life”, and is based on the evangelical principle of
the defence of human dignity. It is therefore necessary to respect the rights
of self-determination, the delimitation of their territories, and of prior
consultation of indigenous peoples regarding the use of their land. A specific
point is dedicated to the indigenous populations in voluntary isolation, of
which there are approximately 130 in the Amazon today. Often victims of ethnic
cleansing, the Church must undertake two types of action, one pastoral and
another that of applying of pressure so that national governments might protect
the rights and the inviolability of the territories of these people.
Indigenous theology and popular piety
From the perspective, then, of inculturation – that is, of
the incarnation of the Gospel in the indigenous cultures – space is given for
an indigenous theology and for popular piety, the expressions of which must be
appreciated, accompanied, promoted, and sometimes “purified”, since they are
privileged moments of evangelisation that ought to lead to an encounter with
Christ. The proclamation of the Gospel is not a process of destruction, but of
growth and consolidation of those “seeds of the Word” in the cultures. From
here, there is an emphatic rejection of “colonial-style evangelisation” and
“proselytism”, in favour of an inculturated proclamation that promotes a Church
with an Amazonian face, with full respect for and parity with the history, the
culture, and the lifestyle of the local populations. In this regard, the
synodal Document proposes that centres of research in the Church should study
and collect the traditions, languages, beliefs and aspirations of the
indigenous peoples, encouraging an education based on their own identity and
culture.
Creating a network of Pan-Amazonian ecclesial communication
In the field of healthcare, too, the Document continues,
this educational project should promote the ancient knowledge of traditional
medicine in every culture. At the same time, the Church is committed to
offering health care in places where national health care programs do not
reach. There is also a strong call for an eduation in solidarity, based on an
awareness of a common origin and a future shared by all, as well as a culture
of communication that promotes dialogue, encounter, and care of the “common
home”. Specifically, the synodal text suggests the creation of a network of
Pan-Amazonian ecclesial communication; of an academic network of bilingual
education and of new forms of education, and even distance learning.
Chapter IV – Ecological conversion
In the face of “an unprecedented socio-environmental
crisis”, the Synod calls for an Amazonian Church capable of promoting an
integral ecology and an ecological conversion, according to which “everything
is connected”.
Integral ecology, the only possible path
The hope is that by recognizing “the wounds caused by human
beings” to the territory, models of development based on justice and solidarity
might be sought. This translates into an attitude that links the pastoral care
of nature to justice for the poorest and most disadvantaged people of the
world. Integral ecology should not be understood as a one more path that the
Church can choose for the future, but as the only path possible in order
to save the region from predatory extractivism, from the spilling of innocent
blood, and from the criminalization of defenders of the Amazon. The Church,
insofar as it is “part of an international solidarity”, should foster the
central role of the Amazon biome for the equilibrium of the planet, and encourage
the international community to furnish new economic resources for its
protection, strengthening the tools of the framework convention on climate.
Defence of human rights and the demands of faith
More than a political duty and a social obligation, defending
and promoting human rights is demanded by our Faith. Faced with this Christian
duty, the Document denounces the violation of human rights, as well as
extractive destruction; takes up and supports, also in alliance with other
churches, the campaigns to disinvest in extractive companies that cause social
and ecological damage to the Amazon; proposes a radical energy transition and
the search for alternatives; and also proposes the development of programs of
formation for the care of the “common home”. Nations are asked to stop thinking
of the region as an inexhaustible resource, and a hope is expressed for a
socially inclusive “new paradigm of sustainable development” that combines
scientific and traditional medicine. It recommends that commercial concerns not
be placed above concern for the environment and for human rights.
A Church allied to the Amazonian communities
The appeal is to responsibility: we are all called to
safeguard God’s work. The protagonists of the care for, and the protection and
defence of the peoples are the Amazonian communities themselves. The Church is
their ally, walking with them, without imposing a particular way of acting;
recognizing the wisdom of the peoples concerning biodiversity, and against any
form of biopiracy. The request is made that pastoral agents and ordained
ministers be formed in this socio-environmental sensitivity, following the
example of the martyrs of the Amazon. The idea is to create ministries for the
care of the common home.
Defence of life
In the Document, the commitment of the Church to the defence
of life “from conception to its natural end”, and to the promotion of
intercultural and ecumenical dialogue, in order to counteract structures of
death, sin, violence, and injustice. Ecological conversion and the defence of
life in the Amazon are, for the Church, a call to “unlearn, learn, and relearn
in order to overcome any tendency toward colonizing models that have caused
harm in the past”.
Ecological sin and the right to potable water
The definition of “ecological sin” as “an action or an
omission against God, against one’s neighbour, the community, the environment”,
the future generations and the virtue of justice is proposed. In order to repay
the ecological debt that countries have to the Amazon, the Document suggests
creating a global fund for the Amazonian communities, so as to protect them
from the predatory desires of national and multinational companies.
The Synod recalls the “urgent need to develop energy
policies that drastically reduce the emission of carbon dioxide and other gases
related to climate change”; promotes clean energies; and focuses attention on
access to potable water, a basic human right and a condition for the exercise
of other human rights.
Protecting the earth means encouraging reuse and recycling;
reducing the use of fossil fuels and plastic; modifying eating habits such as
the excessive consumption of meat and fish; adopting a sober lifestyle;
planting trees.
In this context, there is a proposal for an Amazonian Socio-Pastoral
Office that would work in synergy with CELAM, CLAR, Caritas, REPAM, Episcopal
Conferences, local Churches, Catholic universities, and non-ecclesial entities.
The creation of an Amazon office in the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development is also proposed.
Chapter V – New ways of synodal conversion
Overcoming clericalism and arbitrary impositions;
reinforcing a culture of dialogue, of listening, and of spiritual discernment;
responding to pastoral challenges: these are the characteristics on which a
synodal conversion must be based; a conversion to which the Church is called in
order to advance in harmony, under the impulse of the life-giving Spirit and
with evangelical boldness.
Synodality, ministry, the active role of the laity, and consecrated
life
The challenge is to interpret the signs of the times in the
light of the Holy Spirit, and to identify the path to follow in the service of
God’s plan. The forms of the exercise of synodality are varied and ought to be
decentralized, attentive to local processes, without weakening the bonds with
the sister Churches and with the universal Church. Synodality, in continuity
with the Second Vatican Council, translates into co-responsibility and the
ministry of all; with particular attention to the participation of the laity,
both men and women, considered as “privileged actors”. Lay participation, both
in consultation and in decision making in the life and mission of the Church,
the Document explains, must be strengthened and expanded, beginning promoting
and conferring ministries “for men and women in an equitable way”.
The document suggests that Bishops “can entrust, for a
specific period of time, in the absence of priests, the exercise of pastoral
care of the communities to a person not invested with the priestly character,
who is a member of the community”. The responsibility for the community, it
specifies, would remain with the pastor.
The Synod then proposes consecrated life “with an Amazonian
face”, beginning with strengthening native vocations. Within the proposal is an
emphasis on an itinerancy of consecrated persons for the most impoverished and
excluded. The Document also asks that formation be centred on inculturality,
inculturation, and dialogue between spiritualities and Amazonian cosmovisions.
An opportune moment for women
Ample space in the Document is dedicated to the presence of
women. As the wisdom of the ancestral peoples suggests, mother earth has a
feminine face; and in the indigenous world, women are “ a living and
responsible presence in human promotion”. The Synod asks that the voice of
women be heard, that they be consulted, that they participate in a more
decisive way in decision-making, that they might contribute to ecclesial
synodality, and to take up more forcefully leadership within the Church, in
pastoral councils, or “even in areas of government”. Protagonists and guardians
of creation and of the common home, women are often “victims of physical,
moral, and religious violence, including feminicide”. The text reaffirms the
Church’s commitment to defending their rights, especially with regard to
migrant women. At the same time it recognizes the ministries entrusted by Jesus
to women, and calls for a “revision of the Motu proprio Ministeria
quaedam of Saint Paul VI, so that adequately formed and prepared women
might also receive the ministries of acolyte and lector, among the others they
are already able to carry out”.
Specifically, in those contexts in which Catholic
communities are guided by women, it asks for the creation of a ministry
recognizing women who are leaders of the community. The Synod notes many
consultations on the Amazon sought the “permanent diaconate for women”, a theme
very much present during the work of the Synod at the Vatican. The Document
expresses the desire of Synod participants to share their experiences and the
reflections that emerged so far with the “Study Commission on the Diaconate of
Women”, established in 2016 by Pope Francis, and “await the results”.
The permanent diaconate
The promotion, training, and support of permanent deacons is
described as urgent. The deacon, under the authority of the Bishop is at the
service of the community, and today is obliged to promote integral ecology,
human development, social pastoral care, and service to those who find
themselves in situations of vulnerability and poverty, which makes them like
Christ. It is therefore necessary to insist on ongoing formation, marked by
academic study and pastoral practice, in which the candidate’s wife and
children are also involved. The curriculum of formation, the Synod specifies,
should include themes that favour ecumenical, interreligious, and intercultural
dialogue; the history of the Church in the Amazon; affectivity and sexuality;
the indigenous cosmovision; and integral ecology. It recommends that formation
teams be composed of ordained ministers and laity and that the formation
of future permanent deacons in the indigenous communities living along the
rivers be encouraged.
Formation of priests
The formation of priests should be inculturated: there is a
need to prepare pastors who live the Gospel; know canon law; are compassionate,
following the example of Jesus; who are close to people; capable of listening,
of healing and consoling, without seeking to impose themselves; manifesting the
tenderness of the Father. In the area of formation for the priesthood, the
Document hopes for the inclusion of disciplines such as integral ecology,
eco-theology, theology of creation, indigenous theologies, ecological
spirituality, the history of the Church in the Amazon, and Amazonian cultural
anthropology. The Synod recommends that centres for formation, by preference,
should be inserted into the Amazonian reality, and that non-Amazonian young
people should be offered the opportunity of participating in such formation in
the Amazon region.
Participation in the Eucharist and priestly ordination
Participation in the Eucharist is central for the Christian
community. And yet, the Synod notes, many ecclesial communities in the Amazon
territory have enormous difficulties in accessing the Eucharist. It can take
months or even years for a priest to return to a community to celebrate Mass or
offer the Sacraments of Reconciliation and Anointing of the Sick. The Document
reaffirms the appreciation of celibacy as a gift from God, insofar as it allows
the priest to devote himself fully to the service of the community, and it
renews the prayer that there might be many vocations to a celibate life.
Recognising that “this discipline is not required by the very nature of the
priesthood”; and considering the vast expanse of the Amazonian territory and
the scarcity of ordained ministers, the Final Document proposes “to establish
criteria and dispositions on the part of the competent authority, within the
framework of Lumen gentium 26, to ordain to the priesthood
suitable men who have already legitimately constituted a stable family,
are held in esteem by the community, who live their permanent diaconate
fruitfully and who would receive an adequate formation for the priesthood to
sustain the life of the Christian community through the preaching of the Word
and the celebration of the Sacraments in the most remote areas of the Amazon
region”. It specifies that, in this regard, “some were in favour of a more
universal approach to the subject”.
A post-Synodal regional ecclesial structure, and an
Amazonian University
The Synod proposes a restructuring of the local Churches
from a Pan-Amazonian point of view, resizing the vast geographical areas of
many dioceses; grouping together particular Churches present in the same
region; and creating an Amazonian Fund for the purpose of evangelization. The
idea of creating a regional ecclesial post-synodal structure, organized with
REPAM and CELAM, in order to take up many of the proposals that emerged from
the Synod. There is a proposal In the field of education to establishment an
Amazonian Catholic University, based on interdisciplinary research,
inculturation and intercultural dialogue, and Sacred Scripture while respecting
the customs and traditions of the indigenous peoples.
An Amazonian rite
In order to respond in an authentic Catholic way to the
request of the Amazonian community to adapt the liturgy using their vision of
the world, their traditions, their symbols and their original rites, the
above-mentioned ecclesial structure is asked to set up a competent commission
to study the development of an Amazonian rite that “expresses the liturgical,
theological, disciplinary, and spiritual heritage of the Amazon”. Such a rite
would be an addition to the 23 distinct rites already present in the Catholic
Church, enriching the work of evangelization; the ability to express faith in a
culture of its own; and the sense of decentralization and collegiality that the
Catholic Church can express. The suggestion is also made that such an ecclesial
rite would complement the way in which the Amazonian people take care of the
territory and relate to its waters. Finally, in order to encourage the process
of the inculturation of the faith, the Synod expresses the urgent need for
forming committees for the translation and drafting of biblical and liturgical
texts in the local languages, “preserving the material of the sacraments and
adapting them to the form, without losing sight of what is essential".
Music and singing should also be encouraged at the liturgical level.
At the conclusion of the Document, the Synod Fathers invoke
the protection of the Virgin of the Amazon, Mother of the Amazon, venerated
under various titles throughout the region.
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