Current:Home > ContactPope’s big meeting on women and the future of the church wraps up — with some final jabs -Secure Horizon Growth
Pope’s big meeting on women and the future of the church wraps up — with some final jabs
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 11:18:13
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis’ monthlong meeting on the future of the Catholic Church was wrapping up Saturday with voting on a final document on the role of women and how the church can better respond to the needs of the faithful today.
Organizers and participants alike have tried to temper expectations for any big changes to emerge, especially on hot-button doctrinal issues such as the church’s views on homosexuality. They have insisted that the mere process of forcing bishops to sit down at round tables to listen to ordinary Catholics for a month was the important novelty of the gathering.
But there was no denying that Francis’ big Synod on Synodality, as the meeting is called, and the two-year canvassing of rank-and-file Catholics that preceded it, has indeed generated expectations.
Progressives have hoped the gathering would send a message that the church would be more welcoming of LGBTQ+ people and offer women more leadership roles in a hierarchy where they are barred from ordination. Conservatives have emphasized the need to stay true to the 2,000-year tradition of the church and warned that opening debate on such issues was a “Pandora’s Box” that risked schism.
Regardless of how the meeting ends, it’s not over. Another session is planned for next October, with final recommendations or conclusions from that meeting presented to Francis for his consideration in a future document.
Francis called the synod as part of his overall reform efforts to make the church a more welcoming place. In his vision of a “synodal” church, the faithful are listened to and accompanied rather than preached at by an out-of-touch “clerical” hierarchy that has anyway suffered a credibility crisis over clergy abuse scandals around the world.
In a novelty, he allowed women and laypeople to vote alongside bishops, putting into practice his belief that the “People of God” in the pews are more important than the preachers and must have a greater say in church decision-making. That mission and his call for “co-responsibility” has inspired in particular women seeking the restoration of female deacons, a ministry that existed in the early church.
“Though some seem to think it is possible to talk about co-responsibility in mission without addressing the elephant in the room, the fundamental equality of women and their access to all ministries of the church is a question that will persist until it is attended to with fierce attention to the Gospel,” said a statement this week from Women’s Ordination Conference, which has been staging events, marches and protests in Rome all month.
But the mere inclusion of laypeople as voting members in the meeting prompted some to question the legitimacy of the gathering itself. They note that the “Synod of Bishops” was created to provide the pontiff with the reflection of bishops, the successors of the apostles.
Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, whom Francis appointed as a member of the synod but has not hidden his opposition to it, said the gathering could hardly be called a Synod of Bishops “when lay people have the same voice, they have the same time to speak, and they take away opportunities for the bishops (to have) the possibility to speak.”
In an interview published Saturday in the National Catholic Register, Mueller outlined a scathing critique of the meeting, saying it was a manipulated, theologically light gathering claiming to be the work of the Holy Spirit but really aiming to undo church teaching.
“All is being turned around so that now we must be open to homosexuality and the ordination of women. If you analyze it, all is about converting us to these two themes,” the German theologian was quoted as saying by the Register.
The interview appeared Saturday, apparently respecting Francis’ call for delegates to refrain from speaking to the media during the meeting except when selected to speak at official Vatican press conferences, where detailed contents of the deliberations aren’t revealed.
The Rev. Timothy Radcliffe, a British Dominican whom Francis asked to provide spiritual reflections periodically during the meeting, had a far different take. He praised the inclusion of laypeople as truly reflecting the spirit of a synod.
“There’s a gathering of representatives of the College of Bishops, but it also shows the bishop not as a solitary individual, but immersed in the conversation of his people: Listening, talking, learning together,” he said.
But even Radcliffe cautioned against expectations of radical change.
“It’s a synod that gathers to see how we can be church in a new way, rather than what decisions need to be taken,” he told reporters this week. He added that the process had only just begun. “And that’s why there will be bumps. There will be mistakes. And that’s fine, because we are on the way.”
veryGood! (92984)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Finland to close 4 border crossing points after accusing Russia of organizing flow of migrants
- New Jersey drops ‘so help me God’ oath for candidate filings
- Potential kingmaker in Dutch coalition talks comes out against anti-Islam firebrand Wilders
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Vatican plans to gradually replace car fleet with electric vehicles in deal with VW
- NYC carriage driver shown in video flogging horse is charged with animal cruelty
- Stock market today: Asian shares wobble and oil prices fall after Biden’s meeting with China’s Xi
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Pink gives away 2,000 banned books at Florida concerts
Ranking
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Why Omid Scobie Believes There's No Going Back for Prince Harry and Prince William's Relationship
- Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith Slam “Unequivocally False” Claim He Slept With Actor Duane Martin
- US Coast Guard searches for crew member who fell from cruise ship near Puerto Rico
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Protesters in San Francisco attempted to shut down APEC summit: 'We can have a better society'
- New report shows data about which retailers will offer the biggest Black Friday discounts this year
- Xi-Biden meeting seen as putting relations back on course, even as issues remain unresolved
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
These Are The Best Early Black Friday 2023 Home Deals at Wayfair, Casper & More
Personal attacks and death threats: Inside the fight to shape opinion about the Gaza war
Xi-Biden meeting seen as putting relations back on course, even as issues remain unresolved
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Why Omid Scobie Believes There's No Going Back for Prince Harry and Prince William's Relationship
Enough is enough. NBA should suspend Draymond Green for rest of November after chokehold
Tristan Thompson Apologizes to Kylie Jenner for Jordyn Woods Cheating Scandal