By
all accounts, this really did happen. Present at the Global Synodal
Assembly in Rome were 365 voting participants; 295 were bishops, and
seventy were not, including priests, women religious, and laypeople.
These members were advised by eighty-five non-voting theologians. There
were no openly LGBTQ+ members at the Assembly.
Before the Assembly began, Francis appointed Fr. Timothy
Radcliffe, OP, to lead participants in a three-day retreat.
“Conversation needs an imaginative leap into the experience of the other
person…[t]o see with their eyes, and hear with their ears,” Radcliffe
noted. To facilitate this, the Synod altered its usual seating
arrangements based on episcopal authority and filled the Synod Hall with
round tables, meant to promote conversation and symbolize the future of
the Church.
Ever since his 2013 remarks aboard the
papal plane (“Who am I to judge?”), Pope Francis has had a mixed
reception among LGBTQ+ Catholics. Some welcomed his remarks as gestures
of mercy and compassion; others noticed that they didn’t necessarily
support or welcome LGBTQ+ persons in the Church. Francis has taken other
positive steps since then, including befriending an openly gay man, Juan Carlos Cruz Chellew,
also a survivor of clerical abuse. In 2021, Francis appointed Cruz to
the Pontifical Council for the Protection of Minors, making him the
first openly LGBTQ+ person to serve at such a prominent level at the
Vatican. He was instrumental in Francis’s announcement
that “being homosexual is not a crime.” The announcement isn’t trivial,
as several countries still have laws making homosexuality illegal;
some, as Dignitas Infinita notes, even punish it with execution.
But at the same time, Francis has repeatedly signaled that
he may still regard LGBTQ+ persons as second-class Catholics. How else
could the pope welcome transgender women to the Vatican and call them
“children of God” while also qualifying his support for baptizing
transgender people if doing so could “cause scandal?” How can Francis
openly tell worshipers at World Youth Day that “in the Church, there is
room for everyone” (“todos, todos, todos”), and yet repeatedly use an anti-gay slur while speaking behind closed doors in Rome?
Some of Francis’s vacillation is reflected in the
proceedings of the Synod on Synodality. While the gatherings raised
hopes in some quarters of a breakthrough regarding LGBTQ+ people, the
synthesis document, A Synodal Church in Mission, disappointed
many. To start, it only mentions LGBTQ+ people tangentially, listing
“issues” of “sexuality and identity” among those requiring more
reflection, specifically in the realm of theological anthropology. The
prior Instrumentum laboris had used the term “LGBTQ” instead of
“homosexual,” which many saw as a sign of the Church’s growth. But
there was real disagreement with such terminology among the Synod
delegates. After the conclusion of the October Assembly, Fr. James
Martin described how Synod participants wrestled with the issues
concerning LGBTQ+ Catholics:
[T]he approaches fell along two lines: First,
there were people, like myself, who shared stories of LGBTQ Catholics
struggling to find their place in their own church, along with calls for
the church to reach out more to this community. On the other hand, many
delegates objected even to using the term “LGBTQ,” seeing it more
reflective of an “ideology” foisted upon countries by the West or a form
of “neo-colonialism,” and focusing more on homosexual acts as
“intrinsically evil.” From my point of view, I wish that the synthesis
was more reflective of the rich conversation around the topic and
admitted our divergences, as was done in other controversial areas.
Martin is not alone in his ambivalence and disappointment.
Journalists covering the Synod reported a troubling lack of information
provided by Vatican officials. From the start, the Vatican framed this
as a media “fast” designed to protect the freedom of participants to
speak without fear. But in the end, it may have proved
counterproductive. At a minimum, it’s puzzling that an event championing
openness and accountability would so strictly limit participants’
freedom to speak to journalists, even after the conclusion of the
Assembly. And while Pope Francis has repeatedly stressed listening and
consultation, especially around controversial issues, he and the Vatican
Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith nevertheless issued two
doctrinal declarations that concern LGBTQ+ people, Fiducia supplicans and Dignitas infinita, that show little (if any) evidence of consultation of those actually affected by the documents.
No comments:
Post a Comment