Call to Action - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 16 Aug 2021 09:15:29 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Call to Action - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Fears synodal process will stifle lay Catholic voices https://cathnews.co.nz/2021/08/16/bishops-2023-synodal-process-lay-catholic-voices/ Mon, 16 Aug 2021 08:09:38 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=139278

The process for identifying issues to be discussed at the 2023 global Synod of bishops will stifle lay Catholic voices all over the world, a group of lay Catholics in the UK says. The group is speaking out as they organise an upcoming lay-led diocesan synod. The synod's aim is to feed ideas to bishops Read more

Fears synodal process will stifle lay Catholic voices... Read more]]>
The process for identifying issues to be discussed at the 2023 global Synod of bishops will stifle lay Catholic voices all over the world, a group of lay Catholics in the UK says.

The group is speaking out as they organise an upcoming lay-led diocesan synod. The synod's aim is to feed ideas to bishops to take to a global synod of bishops in October 2023.

The group is particularly concerned topics to go to the global synod will be limited to those discerned by the bishops. They say even though the laity can suggest ideas, they won't have any real say in choosing which ones the bishops take with them. The process as it has been devised will prevent discussion, participation and freedom for everyone except the hierarchy, they say.

While all members of the Church have the right to speak, particularly at the diocesan-level listening exercise, they also have "the obligation to allow those charged with the work of discernment the freedom to do so.

"In one stroke, the freedom to speak is nullified. Of what use is such freedom to a parishioner, if her or his ability to be heard is instantly trumped by the bishop's authority - or ‘discernment' - to disallow it?

"Many of us had high hopes for Pope Francis' announcement on synodality. Sadly, the experience of the Liverpool Synod, and of the ongoing Australian Plenary, amongst others, suggests that the laity may as well save their breath to cool their porridge."

"Just as the Liverpool Synod declared itself unable to consider the issues which most exercised its people, so this global Synod seems to be confining itself to the safe topics of formation and mission, and the ever-safe pronouncements that all can agree upon: refugees, asylum-seekers and the poor.

"We are left to ask - what does Communion truly mean, when we all of us know good fellow-parishioners who have not taken Communion for decades because they are not married to their current partner, have left an abusive marriage, or simply quailed at the labyrinthine processes of annulment?

"What does participation mean, when our children leave at the first opportunity? Why .., would we free, democratic members of our own country, urge rational ... fellow-beings to join a Church where they instantly lose all voice and all governance?"

The synod's success is essential, says Frank Callus of lay Catholic group Call to Action

He says the bishops' guidance is "limited" and needs greater clarity, particularly around how the "listening" process will operate.

While religious practice normally evolves slowly, he says these times are far from normal. The pandemic has closed churches, interrupted liturgical services and caused profound anguish to people of faith and people of none.

A consistent approach to listening would help.

"It is not as if we had no model to follow." The Liverpool synod is one such model. It successfully engaged numerous clergy and laity and produced a series of proposals," he says.

Pope Francis has challenged dioceses to discern their future by listening deeply to all the voices.

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Archdiocese censors Scripture theologian after conference talk https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/07/22/archdiocese-censors-scripture-theologian-conference-talk/ Mon, 21 Jul 2014 19:13:56 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=60870

A US scripture commentator has had her writings pulled from a book for lectors because she attended a progressive group's conference. At the request of Chicago archdiocese's censor, Margaret Nutting Ralph's work was withheld from a resource book published by Liturgy Training Publications. Ms Ralph had given a presentation on contextual interpretation of Scripture at Read more

Archdiocese censors Scripture theologian after conference talk... Read more]]>
A US scripture commentator has had her writings pulled from a book for lectors because she attended a progressive group's conference.

At the request of Chicago archdiocese's censor, Margaret Nutting Ralph's work was withheld from a resource book published by Liturgy Training Publications.

Ms Ralph had given a presentation on contextual interpretation of Scripture at a Call to Action conference.

Call to Action is a Chicago-based lay organisation that works for progressive reform of the Catholic Church.

One of its aims is ordination of women to the priesthood.

Ms Ralph told the National Catholic Reporter that she and her audience discussed Vatican II's Dei Verbum on revelation, as well as homosexuality and contraception.

They also spent a very short time on women's ordination, she said.

But at a later telephone conference between Ms Ralph, the publisher and the archdiocese's censor, the topic of women's ordination was raised repeatedly by the censor.

The censor, who is a priest, told Ms Ralph that refusing to publish the commentaries was called for because he wanted to avoid any public perception that the Archdiocese of Chicago is not firm on doctrine, especially the doctrine against women's ordination.

"He explained that by accepting an invitation to speak at Call To Action, even though my topic was on how to be a biblical contextualist, I had 'passively supported this unorthodox group's whole agenda'," Ms Ralph said.

She said the commentaries she wrote for the lectors' resource book were faithful to Church teaching.

She wrote to Chicago Cardinal Francis George in March and received a note from his office that her correspondence had been received and forwarded.

Ms Ralph worked for 16 years as secretary of educational ministries for the diocese of Lexington, Kentucky.

She was also director of a master's programme in pastoral studies at Lexington Theological Seminary.

Ms Ralph had written commentaries for two previous Liturgy Training Publications books.

Liturgy Training Publications retains copyright and ownership the work it hired Ms Ralph to do.

The company stated it would keep her writings on file in case they could be published in the future.

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