A look at some of the many theological, cultural, and political problems of the Shamazon Sin-od.
From First Things
By Xavier Rynne II
Reports and Commentary, from Rome and Elsewhere,
on the Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon
Region: “New Paths for the Church and for an Integral Ecology”
THE MANY MYSTERIES OF SYNOD-2019
Eighty years
ago, on October 1, 1939, a month after the German invasion of Poland
launched World War II in Europe, Winston Churchill, then the First Lord
of the Admiralty, made a radio broadcast on the Chamberlain government’s
war strategy, during which he famously described Russia (which had also
invaded Poland on September 17, 1939) as “a riddle wrapped in a mystery
inside an enigma.”
The same might
be said about the synodal Special Assembly on Amazonia, which was
formally opened by Pope Francis on Sunday, October 6, at a Mass in St.
Peter’s in the Vatican.
As its
double-barreled title—“New Paths for the Church and for an Integral
Ecology—suggests, Synod-2019 has, on the surface, a dual focus: the
pastoral life of the Church in a vast region of Latin America, and the
environmental issues raised by development efforts in “Amazonia.” The
tacit concession implied by the synod’s title is that evangelization in
Amazonia has been something of a failure, despite the fact that the
Church has been active in Latin America for over half a millennium (and
despite the Latin American Church’s recommitment to a grand strategy of
vigorous evangelization at the Aparecida Conference of Latin American
bishops in 2007, in which a leading role was played by Cardinal Jorge
Mario Bergoglio, SJ, of Buenos Aires—who is now, of course, Pope
Francis). The tacit proposal inside the synod’s title is that a robust
Catholic response to Amazonia’s ecological challenges is something of a
prerequisite for the evangelization of the area. Whether the next three
weeks of synod “interventions” (addresses to the entire synod
membership, which includes 184 bishops and some 70 advisers and
consultants) and small-group discussions succeeds in bringing the
Amazonian Synod’s two focal points into alignment remains to be seen–as
it remains to be seen precisely how these October deliberations and the
synod’s final report shape the post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation that
Pope Francis will issue; recent experience suggests that the connection
between synod and post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation can be tenuous.
But as the
sharp debate preceding Synod-2019 ought to have made clear, much more
will be going on in Rome over the next three weeks than debates about
evangelization, environmentalism, and their possible connection.
The Pre-Synod Scrum
The debates within a synod of bishops are framed by its Instrumentum Laboris
(working document, or IL). And while the working documents for the
synods of 2014, 2015, and 2018 were subject to criticism, the Catholic
Church has rarely seen anything like the scorn heaped on the IL for
Synod-2019.
Some senior
churchmen flatly pronounced the IL heretical: an exercise in
Gaia-worship that had little to do with Christianity and far too much to
do with the wooliest elements of contemporary eco-theology, one of the
many variants on the theologies of liberation that caused such an uproar
in the Catholic Church in the 1970s and 1980s. Others found the IL an
oversized word salad displaying an incontinent affection for politicized
gobbledygook. (Canadian author David Warren lifted out of the IL some
of its riper expressions: “Agro-industrial
mono-cultivation … ideological colonialisms … neo-colonialism of the
extractive industries … mercantilist vision, … colonizing mentalities …
networks of solidarity and inter-culturality … xenophobia and
criminalization of migrants and displaced persons … victims of a
ferocious neocolonialism, … colonizing project … ferocious
neocolonialism.” All of which, Warren noted, were flowing down “the
Amazon, the mother and father river of all.”)
Then there was the debate over the IL’s proposal that the synod discuss the possibility of ordaining viri probati
(trusted married men) to the priesthood in response to what was claimed
to be Amazonia’s severe sacramental deficit, with some Catholic
communities only able to celebrate the Eucharist once or twice a year.
One of the synod’s key organizers, the Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes
(who will also serve as the synod’s “Relator General”), has long been
an advocate of ordaining viri probati (although he prudently
dropped the subject after being appointed Prefect of the Congregation
for the Clergy under Pope Benedict XVI). In a pre-synod press conference
obviously aimed at meeting some of the criticisms that had been
directed to the IL, Hummes claimed that this proposal emerged from “the
voice of the local Church,” but did not explain how the ordination of
minimally-prepared indigenous elders, solely for the celebration of
sacramental rites, would distinguish these Catholic priests from local
shamans in the minds and hearts of the unevangelized.
Then there was
the debate over what struck some as the IL’s too-effusive embrace of
indigenous religions, which seemed to suggest that indigenous religions
contained far more than what the Church had traditionally described as semina Verbi,
seeds of the Word that, in divine providence, could prepare the ground
for genuine Christian evangelization. This concern was not assuaged
when, a few days before the synod, what was described as an “indigenous
ecological ritual” was celebrated in the Vatican gardens by Amazonians.
The “ritual” included a male fertility totem with a distinctively male,
er, profile; the entire exercise seemed to surprise Pope Francis,
watching it at a distance. He declined to give his prepared address and
left abruptly after reciting the Lord’s Prayer.
At the same
press conference at which Cardinal Hummes spoke, the General Secretary
of the synod of bishops, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, made an
interesting attempt to deflect attention from the IL his office had
issued, claiming that it, like previous synodal working documents, was
really a “martyr document,” written to be superseded by the synod’s
final report. That may have struck some as reassuring; it certainly
raised eyebrows among others who remembered with some asperity that
Cardinal Baldisseri had insisted that the much-criticized IL for
Synod-2018 was part of that synod’s permanent record.
The Issues Beneath the Issues
The viri probati
issue will be the most mediagenic at the synod, but the debate over the
IL and eco-theology with which it is redolent raise some very
fundamental issues for Christian orthodoxy. Among them are several noted
by the Canadian theologian Douglas Farrow of McGill University, who saw
in the IL an expression of concerns about its theological direction
that had been raised throughout the present pontificate:
♦ Does the IL and the theology underlying it
substitute for divine revelation a self-referentiality in which we are a
revelation to ourselves?
♦ How does the IL’s discussion of the role of the
Holy Spirit in the lives of the peoples of Amazonia square with the Holy
Spirit who guides the Church—for the IL seems to propose a Holy Spirit
disconnected from Christ, the incarnate Word of God?
♦ Doesn’t the IL’s tendency to place Christianity
alongside, even “within,” human religiosity mean a rejection of the
Cross? And if so, doesn’t that mean that what is being proposed is not a
way of grace but a 21st-century way of works-righteousness?
♦ Where is the Great Commission in all this, and how
does the IL’s eagerness for doctrinal, liturgical, and pastoral
experimentation square with the dominical injunction to teach “all that I
have commanded you” (Matthew 28:20)?
♦ Where, if anywhere, is the bright line between the
IL’s insistence on “synodality” and a Protestant ecclesiology that
erodes the universal authority of the Church in faith, morals, and
worship, so that the boundary between Catholicism and not-Catholicism
becomes so porous (as in liberal Protestant denominations) as to be
virtually invisible?
To which one might add:
♦ Are there elements of indigenous Amazonian
religiosity that are contrary to the letter and spirit of the gospel and
must be identified as such in any true evangelization of Amazonia?
♦ Are the IL’s references to the Earth as a living
being that “speaks” to us far too close for comfort to a pantheism that
denies the reality of the God of the Bible?
♦ Why, when the people of Amazonia are said to
“speak” to the Church during a multi-year pre-synodal listening period,
do these indigenous reflections speak in the accents of German theology
and Western preoccupations?
And on the empirical/historical side of things:
♦ What is the evidence that Amazonia is a Catholic
region being denied the Eucharist because of a lack of priests? Would it
not be more accurate to say that Amazonia is a territory crying out for
evangelization, which is the responsibility of the entire Catholic
community, not just its clergy, as the Aparecida Document and Pope
Francis’s apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium (The Joy of the Gospel) insisted?
♦ What is the relationship between Amazonia’s
priest-deficit and the historic reluctance of white clergy of Spanish or
Portuguese origin to work with indigenous peoples?
In Sum…
Whatever its
declared purpose, the Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops for the
Pan-Amazon Region is going to expose, in what one expects will be a
heightened way, theological and indeed doctrinal tensions within
Catholicism that have roiled the Church for the past half-century—many
of which were once thought resolved, but which have been resuscitated
over the past six and a half years. In this sense, the Amazonian Synod
will be yet another battle in the war over the proper interpretation of
the Second Vatican Council and its call to engage the modern world in
order to convert it to the truth of God in Christ, which is also the
truth about our humanity and its destiny. Given the way in which the
correlation of forces in Synod-2019 has been arranged by Synod General
Secretary Baldisseri to his satisfaction, there may be little doubt as
to how the battle will unfold over the next three weeks. But that by no
means will suggest that the larger struggle over Vatican II’s legacy has
been resolved; it will, however, sharpen the world Church’s
understanding of what is involved in that struggle, which is nothing
less than the integrity of Catholic faith and the Church’s obedience to
its Lord’s command to teach all that he commanded.
- Xavier Rynne II
A Note to Readers
Unlike its predecessors—Letters from the Synod-2015, Letters from the Synod-2018, and Letters from the Vatican during the February 2019 abuse summit—these Letters
will not appear on a daily basis, but as occasion demands during the
course of Synod-2019. Your editor is deeply grateful to his colleagues
at First Things in New York, at the Catholic Herald in London, and at the Catholic Weekly in Sydney for their collaboration. Readers throughout the Anglosphere are encouraged to watch their websites for future Letters from Synod-2019, and for other information about what’s afoot in Rome in October 2019. XR II
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