October 13, 2023 at 11:36 a.m.

Synod looks at Catholics' shared mission, but also exclusion of women

Sister: 'When thinking about the mission of women in the church, it is important to look to Jesus, to learn from him.'
Sister Liliana Franco Echeverri, a member of the Company of Mary and president of the Latin American Confederation of Religious, is seen on a video screen as she speaks during a working session of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops in the Vatican's Paul VI Audience Hall Oct. 13, 2023. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)
Sister Liliana Franco Echeverri, a member of the Company of Mary and president of the Latin American Confederation of Religious, is seen on a video screen as she speaks during a working session of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops in the Vatican's Paul VI Audience Hall Oct. 13, 2023. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez) (Courtesy photo of Lola Gomez)

By Cindy Wooden | Comments: 0 | Leave a comment

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The life of women in the Catholic Church "is full of scars" and alternating experiences of being encouraged or rejected, the president of Latin America's religious superiors told members of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops.

But the most obvious and defining experience, "has been the love of God, a love that remains even beyond the efforts of some to make invisible the presence and contribution of women in the church," said Sister Liliana Franco Echeverri, a member of the Company of Mary and president of the Confederation of Latin American and Caribbean Religious, or CLAR.

Synod is "new Pentecost" that will renew the church, cardinal says

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The synod on synodality is the "new Pentecost," which will renew active participation of all Catholics in the life and mission of their church, a cardinal said.

The Catholic Church "needed this time of grace and discernment, a time to look back on the road we have traveled, with its glories and failures, and draw lessons for a new beginning," Congolese Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo of Kinshasa said in his homily during a Mass with synod participants in St. Peter's Basilica Oct. 13.

The cardinal, president of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar, related the synod assembly to a reading from the Book of Joel in which the prophet calls on Israel's priests to express their sorrow to God after a locust infestation decimated the year's harvest and to "gather the elders together to study and seek new ways of presenting themselves before God."

Similarly, "coming from every continent and gathered together as one family in the beauty of unity in cultural diversity, we are also invited to weep and mourn at this altar, at the tomb of St. Peter, for our weaknesses as church," he said. Citing the synod assembly's working document, the cardinal noted the crises related to sexual abuse and the abuse of power, money and conscience that "risked distancing people from the church."

Synod participants, he said, must "weep and ask God for forgiveness for our faults."

"But the best way to mourn is to have the courage to embark on a path of repentance and conversion, which opens the way to reconciliation, healing and justice," he said.

Cardinals Dieudonné Nzapalainga of Bangui, Central African Republic, and Cristóbal López Romero of Rabat, Morocco, were the principal concelebrants at the Mass at the basilica's Altar of the Chair. Among the intentions read at Mass was a prayer to the Holy Spirit to make shine the light of the women, children and all persons in Africa who are "hopeful against all hope," and for the church community in the African continent to be a light to the world. The liturgical service and choir were provided by Rome's Pontifical Urbanian University, the Vatican university dedicated to preparing people for service in missions.

After Mass, the assembly of the Synod of Bishops was scheduled to begin discussions on the synod's third module, centered on mission and responding to the question, "How can we better share gifts and tasks in the service of the Gospel?"

In his homily, Cardinal Ambongo said that the Gospel reading from St. Luke, in which Jesus drives out a demon from a mute person, "reminds us that the devil is always present and active in our world."

"The evil one, the demon, sows conflict, discord and division," he said. "If we have the courage to look at our current reality as a church, it won't be difficult to see how the evil one is at work and influencing our way of being and acting."

The cardinal urged synod participants to courageously combat the forces of the devil by using the "weapons of synodality," namely, "unity, walking together, prayerful discernment, listening to each other and to what the Spirit has to say to the church."

"We are called to combat this powerful adversary with an equally powerful weapon at our disposal, which is the Holy Spirit, protagonist of this new way of being church -- the synodal church," he said. - By Justin McLellan

Sister Echeverri spoke to the synod assembly Oct. 13 as participants began work on the third section, or module, of the working document: "Co-responsibility in mission."

The working document asked synod members to reflect on: ways to increase a sense of responsibility for mission among all Catholics; the relationship between liturgy and mission; the relationship between ordained ministry and the dignity of all the baptized; recognizing and promoting the dignity and gifts of women in the church; and involving them in leadership and decision-making, including investigating the possibility of women deacons.

Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich, relator general of the synod, introduced the work by emphasizing how the mission of the church to proclaim the Gospel is at the heart of the life of the church and, therefore, of the synod's concern.

"All the baptized are called and have the right to participate in the mission of the church, all have an irreplaceable contribution to make," he said.

In approaching the discussions, Cardinal Hollerich asked participants to recognize that "each of us is the bearer of a point of view that is essential, but to address the themes effectively, we are also called to realize our own partiality."

For example, he said, "most of us are men. But men and women receive the same baptism and the same Spirit. The baptism of women is not inferior to the baptism of men. How can we ensure that women feel they are an integral part of this missionary church?"

Benedictine Mother Maria Ignazia Angelini, a theologian and spiritual assistant to the assembly participants, reflected on Jesus' interaction with women, his inclusion of them among the disciples and his reliance on them to tell the apostles that he had risen from the dead.

"Jesus' style seems to comprehend that women are dynamic elements of mission, like a presence that in critical, disruptive, unsettling passages senses the movement of life, weaves new, improbable relationships, patiently brings and dissolves conflicts," she said. "It is not a question of rights but of gifts received."

Sister Franco told the assembly that "when thinking about the mission of women in the church, it is important to look to Jesus, to learn from him. The Gospel gives an account of Jesus' readiness to see and hear women, to raise them up, to dignify them, to send them out."

For the synod and the church, she said, "true reform comes from an encounter with Jesus, in the echo of his Word, in learning of attitudes and criteria and in assimilating his style."

In most parishes and dioceses around the world, Sister Franco said, "the church has a woman's face," at least when looking at those gathered for Mass, joining parish groups, teaching religion and helping the poor."

"The church, which is mother and teacher, is also sister and disciple; it is feminine, but this does not exclude men," she said, before listing the grammatically feminine qualities the church must have: "wisdom, kindness, tenderness, strength, creativity, boldness and the ability to give life and face situations courageously."

"At the heart of the desire and the imperative for a greater presence and participation of women in the church," Sister Franco said, "there is not an ambition for power or a feeling of inferiority nor egocentric quest for recognition."

Instead, she said, "there is a clamor to live in fidelity to the plan of God, who desires that within the people with whom he has made a covenant, all would be recognized as brothers and sisters."

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, told Catholic News Service after the session that the focus on mission and the previous days' focus on communion are inextricably tied.

"I sense in the hall there is great hope, and I think it is because people recognize the abundance of gifts that are present, as well as the mutual respect and the freedom that is being afforded to every delegate to speak on the topics before us," the cardinal said.

After days spent discussing what it means to be "a synodal church," Cardinal Tobin said, participants moved on "to the experience and the reality of communion -- communion with Christ, crucified and risen, but also communion with our brothers and sisters who share the great grace of baptism," which gives "a fundamental dignity and a fundamental responsibility to everyone in the church."

As the focus shifts to mission, he said, the church knows it can and must rely on "the gifts of everyone."

When discussing communion, the cardinal said, members asked, "Who doesn't experience communion, who doesn't feel welcome?"

And as they move to looking at mission, he said, they need to ask, "Who doesn't feel like the gifts they've been given can be laid at the feet of Christ in the church because they're not wanted? Whose gifts have not yet been recognized?"

"We're trying to look with humble and clear eyes at the gifts that have been given to the church, because the mission that we have to witness to Christ today is so important," Cardinal Tobin said.



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