Catholic bishops called Saturday for a more welcoming church
for cohabitating couples, gays and Catholics who have divorced and civilly
remarried, endorsing Pope Francis’ call for a more merciful and less judgmental
church.
Bishops from around the world adopted a final document at the
end of a divisive, three-week synod on providing better pastoral care for
Catholic families.
It emphasizes the role of discernment and individual conscience in dealing with difficult family situations, in a win for liberal bishops.
It emphasizes the role of discernment and individual conscience in dealing with difficult family situations, in a win for liberal bishops.
Conservatives had resisted offering any wiggle room in
determining, for example, whether civilly remarried Catholics can receive
Communion since church teaching forbids it. While the document doesn’t chart
any specific path to receiving the sacraments as originally sought by the
liberals, the document opens the door to case-by-case exceptions to church
teaching by citing the role of discernment and conscience.
The three paragraphs dealing with the issue barely reached
the two-thirds majority needed to pass, but conservatives couldn’t muster
enough votes to shoot them down. That will give Francis the manoeuvring he
needs if he wants to push the issue further in a future document of his own.
In a final speech to the synod, Francis took some clear
swipes at the conservatives who hold up church doctrine above all else, and use
it to cast judgment on others who don’t measure up.
Francis said the synod had “laid bare the closed hearts
which frequently hide even behind the church’s teachings and good intentions,
in order to sit in the chair of Moses and judge, sometimes with superiority and
superficiality, difficult cases and wounded families.”
“The synod experience also made us better realize that the
true defenders of doctrine are not those who uphold its letter, but its spirit;
not ideas but people; not formulas but the free availability of God’s love and
forgiveness,” he said.
The document is the culmination of a two-year process
launched by Francis to put in practice his call for a church that is more a
“field hospital for wounded souls” than an exclusive club for the perfect.
The bishops took his direction, finding “positive elements”
in couples who live together even though they are not married. Rather than
condemning these couples for living in sin, the document says pastors should
look at their commitment constructively and encourage them to transform their
union in a sacramental marriage.
On gays, the synod document repeats church teaching that
gays should be respected and loved and, in a novelty, says families with gay
members require particular pastoral care. It strongly rejects gay marriage, but
omits references to church teaching that homosexual acts are “intrinsically
disordered.”
Only the 275 synod “fathers” were allowed to vote — none of
the handful of women invited to participate — even though one of the “fathers”
with voting rights wasn’t even a priest, much less a bishop.
“If this synod were the church, I would say that it’s the
end of judging people, the end of a church that passes judgment on all the
situations,” said Belgian Bishop Lucas Van Looy. “It’s a church that welcomes,
a church that accompanies, a church that listens, a church that also speaks
with clarity.”
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