What are Asia's bishops telling Rome?
Local bishops' conferences should publish their Synod responses
- Fr William Grimm MM, Tokyo, Japan
The bishops of the world have started sending Rome
their responses to the questionnaire put out by the preparation
committee for the Extraordinary Synod on "Pastoral Challenges to the
Family in the Context of Evangelization" that will take place next
October.
In many countries, bishops have taken the
unprecedented step of inviting the participation of the entire local
Church in formulating the response.
The bishops of the German-speaking countries have
recently attracted international attention because their reports make it
clear that while the People of God in their countries are committed to
the Church, they do not fully understand or accept various teachings
that touch upon sex, especially those concerning birth control,
remarriage after the failure of a previous marriage and cohabitation
before marriage.
As more responses are submitted and made public, we
will probably find that the same is true of Catholics in many countries,
certainly in the West, though increasingly elsewhere as well. It may be
that the Spirit-infused sensus fidelium (consensus of
the faithful, laity as well as clergy) is calling for a reexamination
of the ways in which we live as sexual people in the Church, even though
some of those ways are ancient. The Synod will have to take these
attitudes into account, even if ultimately the bishops reject them in
part or in toto.
Readers of ucanews.com will, of course, be interested
in knowing what our bishops in Asia are presenting to Rome in
preparation for the Synod. But, will we know? While at least some of
Asia’s bishops have already sent their responses to Rome, I am not aware
of any bishops’ conference from this continent that has published those
responses.
It would be a mistake, bad manners and even an injustice not to do so.
After all, the bishops are speaking as leaders of
local Churches, speaking about those local Churches. They are presenting
to the other Synod participants a picture of the reality faced by the
People of God in their various countries. Surely those people have a
right to know what is being said about them and on their behalf. Telling
them is simply good manners.
Reading the bishops’ summary of the situation in any
country can, if accurate, give the people of that place an organized,
thought-out overview of their own lives that will become matter for
reflection, discussion and prayer. As is often the case, we do not
really know important things about ourselves until someone points them
out to us.
If people were to know not only their own bishops’
responses, but those of bishops from other nations, it might deepen
their sense of communion with fellow Catholics in other places as they
see how their situations, concerns and hopes are either shared or
differ.
Knowing the input of their bishops will, after the
Synod is over, enable the people about whom the Synod deliberates to
know how much attention the bishops gathered in Rome actually gave to
their concerns and situations. In other words, will the responses shape
the Synod’s agenda and content, or have they merely been a pro forma exercise, simply one more step, an unimportant one at that, in the process?
And, finally, giving the bishops’ reports to the lay
people about whom the reports have been written will provide readers an
opportunity to see if their bishops really see, understand and care
about the actual situation of the people entrusted to their pastoral
ministry. A common critique of bishops is that they are more focused on
Rome and institutional concerns than on their own people. Publishing
their responses to a questionnaire so intimately concerned with the
lives of their people will provide either refutation or proof of that
criticism. That would either give Catholics deeper confidence in their
leaders or challenge those leaders to change their focus.
Local Catholic media will undoubtedly be happy to
disseminate those responses in local languages and UCAN is ready to make
English-language versions available to an international audience.
So, bishops of Asia, share with us your insights, observations and comments as you have prepared them for the Synod.
Fr William Grimm is publisher of ucanews.com, based in Tokyo.
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