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Wednesday, 14 October 2015

THE SYNOD AND CATHOLIC TEACHING: LOOKING AT THE SYNOD AS A LESSON IN ECCLESIOLOGY




Conciliarity in the Church

In an article about Archbishop Welby and the Anglican Church, I wrote about the difference between the Anglican Church and the Catholic Church.   It could have been an article about the difference between the Catholic Church and any version of Christianity that considers the individual believer as the ultimate authority on faith and morals. This is what I wrote:
Yet it has happened at a time when the Anglican Church is showing itself to be a church so very different from the Catholic Church and from the other apostolic churches, like the Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox, that unity appears a distant dream. 

All these Apostolic churches, like the Catholic Church, believe themselves to be bound by Tradition.  Tradition is how the Gospel has been understood, lived and passed down from the time of the Apostles.   This understanding, living and passing down is the result of the synergy between the Holy Spirit and the Church as body of Christ, and is intimately bound up with the epiclesis and the corresponding Spirit's activity in the Mass. In fact, the liturgy is the main expression of what Catholics normally call the ordinary magisterium: lex orandi, lex credendi. The sacramental nature of the Church means that the Church's understanding of the Gospel is more than the sum total of the opinions of the individuals who make up the Church.  It is the communal mind of those who share in the liturgy.  When a new question arises, it cannot be simply answered by a majority vote: it has to be shown that the answer is faithful to Tradition.  
 The problem with women bishops and priests is that they have been unknown in Christianity for two thousand years, even though there were women who were witnesses to the resurrected Christ, and even though priestesses existed in pagan religions and must have been available as models to the early Christians.   For this reason, both Pope John Paul II and Benedict XVI simply said that they had no authority to make such a change.  The patriarchs of the Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches would say the same. It is not because they are misogynist or conservative and don't want to: to do so would inevitably mean that we would have to revise our understanding of the relationship between the Holy Spirit and Tradition.  To accept women priests and bishops (but not women deacons) we would have to change our theology of the Church. For churches with their roots in apostolic times, Tradition is above law because Tradition is a work of the Holy Spirit as well as a work of the Church, while law requires only human prudence.
 Father Stephen Freeman, an Orthodox priest and theologian, author of the "Glory be to God for All Things" blog, puts it beautifully:
The deepest meaning of conciliarity is trinitarian. “Each person of the Holy Trinity lives not for himself but for the other.” Because the Trinity is council, a communion of persons, the Church is also council; the church reproduces on earth the Trinitarian mystery of unity. The conciliar Church is “an orderly communion of persons freely united in the Holy Trinity in truth and in love.” This is not due to any authoritative command that the Church “ought” to be conciliar, but because, by participation in the divine life, the Church takes on the qualities of the Trinity. “The very act of organizing the life of the Church becomes an act of worship and in this worship we participate in the very life of God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.”

Conciliarity is the experience of divinely restored human life. It describes an experience of synergy between God and humans, in which humans participate with God through the Holy Spirit in the formulation of Truth. “Through conciliarity, the nature of the Church as theanthropic communion in Christ is expressed.” By participating in the conciliar life of the community — unity in diversity through mutual-indwelling — we participate in the divine life, and vice versa. Thus conciliarity is found “in every act of communion among all members of the Church’s body.” Rooted in Matthew 18:20, it represents an understanding of Christian life lived in mutually accountable community.”
By believing, we participate in a community of meaning, an organism called the body of Christ, forged by our participating in the Catholic liturgy in the power of the Holy Spirit, a communal mind that reflects our participation in the life of our Trinitarian God, in which truth and love, understanding and worship, are not separated but illumine each other, being dimensions of the relationship between the Church and God.

Conciliarity and what the Synod is not.

All that being said, we can see what a synod is not.   It isn't a kind of parliament, like the General Assembly of the Church of England, where things are decided by majority vote.   Voting takes place as part of the interaction between the bishops, but it is not the be-all and end-all of everything.   The object, as far as truth is concerned, is to discern the common mind, in this case, on Christian marriage. This common mind is not merely the common mind of the pope and bishops who are present - that can be discovered by a show of hands - but the common mind of the Church of all places and times; and this needs the Holy Spirit who bridges time and space.   G. K. Chesterton wrote:
“Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes, our ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead. Tradition refuses to submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely happen to be walking about."
Conciliarity and Primacy

We must remember that, for the early Fathers, each diocese is the body of Christ.   It is not simply a similarity that binds the different dioceses together.  If they are being true to their inner reality, each diocese is not only similar to others, all are identical as one eucharistic host is identical to another, because each is body of Christ. It follows that, when St Irenaeus writes that all churches should agree with the Church of Rome, he is not imposing on them an authority from outside, but an agreement that any local church will recognise when it examines itself.   Thus, Pope Benedict XVI wrote that his job was not to impose beliefs, but to remind people of beliefs that they had, perhaps, forgotten.  

The sub-apostolic father who gives us the most developed understanding of the pope's role in relation to the bishops
is St Cyprian of Carthage who was bishop from 249 till 258.   Here are two passages that give us his teaching:
If any one consider and examine these things, there is no need for lengthened discussion and arguments. There is easy proof for faith in a short summary of the truth. The Lord speaks to Peter, saying, I say unto you, that you are Peter; and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatsoever you shall bind on earth shall be bound also in heaven, and whatsoever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. And again to the same He says, after His resurrection, Feed my sheep. And although to all the apostles, after His resurrection, He gives an equal power, and says, As the Father has sent me, even so send I you: Receive the Holy Ghost: Whose soever sins you remit, they shall be remitted unto him; and whose soever sins you retain, they shall be retained; (John 20:21) yet, that He might set forth unity, He arranged by His authority the origin of that unity, as beginning from one. Assuredly the rest of the apostles were also the same as was Peter, endowed with a like partnership both of honour and power; but the beginning proceeds from unity. (De catholicae ecclesiae unitate, 4)

After such things as these, moreover, they still dare — a false bishop having been appointed for them by heretics — to set sail and to bear letters from schismatic and profane persons to the throne of Peter, and to the chief Church whence priestly unity takes its source; and not to consider that these were the Romans whose faith was praised in the preaching of the apostle, to whom faithlessness could have no access. (Epistle 54, 14 )
St Peter was first among equals in that the apostles had the same honour and power as St Peter had, but the fact that he had personally what they had collectively; hence, the beginning proceeds from unity.   Likewise, the episcopate is held together by the chief church, from which priestly unity takes its source. In fact, conciliarity can only be in good health if there is a protos, a primacy that permits the many to act as a single organism. 

As John Zizioulas, Bishop of Pergamon has pointed out, conciliarity and primacy are not opposed to one another On the contrary, you cannot have conciliarity without primacy.  The proof can be found in the Orthodox Church itself which has a beautiful understanding of  Church conciliarity both in theory and in practise: where primacy exists, in parish, diocese and patriarchate, there is also conciliarity; but, at a universal level, where there is no primacy accepted by all, they are at sixes and sevens, the situation is a mess: in place of real conciliarity at a universal level, there are patriarchates jostling for power in a most worldly fashion, Moscow sneers at Constantinople, Antioch excommunicates Jerusalem etc.  They are sure that we Catholics are wrong in having the pope, but they have no convincing alternative.   We shall see how the Great Synod works out in 2016.  Many still believe that it will never take place.   If it does, it will only do so at the cost of recognising the primacy of the Patriarch of Constantinople who has called it together, something that Moscow doesn't want to do.
In trying to formulate the role of the Patriarch of Constantinople in world-wide Orthodoxy, believe it or not, the Greeks are helping us to understand the role of the pope in the Catholic Church.

The reason why a protos is necessary is the great variety of churches represented by a great variety of bishops, which needs to be balanced with the participation of each local church in the common understanding of the whole Church.  To achieve this is not only important to stop schism between local churches: it also affects the authenticity and interior unity of each and all of the local churches that make up the worldwide Church.

Diversity in the Synod

There are bishops from every continent, different language groups, nationalities, histories, cultures,experiences,  and priorities. .    There are bishops living in the secular world of Europe and the USA, bishops of the persecuted churches in the Middle East, bishops from Africa where the Church is growing at an incredible rate, bishops who live among Hindus and Muslims, bishops of small dioceses in Italy, an Australian bishop whose diocese is three times the size of France, patriarchs and bishops of different Eastern rites etc.  Thus they approach the common understanding of marriage they have all received in Tradition with different cultural pre-suppositions, different thought patterns, different interests, different priorities, different difficulties, different answers to pastoral problems.

Until fairly recently, everything was the same in the Catholic Church and the same Catholic answer fitted all circumstances.   Differences of pastoral context made no difference to pastoral policy.   No recognition was ever given to the fact that some pastoral policies made no sense to anybody but the clergy..   An example: what do we do if, because of the pervasive secular culture, half the couples that come to marriage simply don't understand the level of Christian commitment required to celebrate a Catholic marriage validly?   Any instruction passes through one ear and out of the other.   It means the marriage is invalid, but there is nothing out there as evidence when the marriage inevitably collapses, only the non-Catholic culture.  Do  the priests take this into their calculations?   The answer is not obvious. Do we sacrifice the welfare of the individual for the sake of the general? 

THe doctrine on marriage may well be the same in all parts of the Church, but its application to the lives of individual persons demands a sensitivity to the context in which each matrimony is celebrated; and this can only be known by the local church. 

In fact, there is much in the Christian life that takes its shape from the context that Providence has decreed that this life is to be lived. The "sacrament of the present moment" demands close attention to local conditions, even when the general principles we employ are the same all over the world. 


In the synods before Francis, there was much control from the centre which suppressed too much concern for local conditions and the insights that they caused, so that the general teaching of the Catholic Church could be highlighted.   This was because, whatever the understanding of the local church that arose in Vatican II, they still thought in universal categories.    This led to a delay in implementing several key recommendations of Vatican II, namely collegiality and decentralisation.

  These two synods are an attempt to begin the process by which papal primacy is complemented by collegiality, and centralisation by adaptation to the local scene. Inevitably, the fathers of the Synod are now discussing whether pastoral policy should be decided on a regional or national level, once the common mind of the Church has been agreed on at a synodal level.

In fact, the diversity among the bishops reflects the diversity of the churches they represent.   The African bishops represent churches that are growing fast and are in no mood to meet modernity, paganism or any other non-Catholic set of values halfway.  European and American bishops, on the other hand, have their backs against the wall, and are directing the "new evangelisation" at post-Christians who, quite often have post-Christian sexual lives.   Their pastoral problem is how to attract them and how to integrate them into the Catholic community if they are divorced and remarried.

Pope Francis, as preserver of "priestly unity" (St Cyprian's words), has two tasks.  He must be the centre of unity for different episcopates with different agendas, whose agendas are different only because they are being good shepherds of their flocks, enabling them and encouraging them to do what they have to do in their different circumstances.  At the same time, he must foment a relationship of mutual love between bishops whom he has encouraged to express their points of view freely. Mutual love is the only sign that reflects the presence of the Holy Spirit within the Synod; and it is the Holy Spirit that gives the Synod its catholicity.   

He also has the third task already mentioned which comes up whenever there are ecumenical conversations with the Orthodox, that of de-centralising and establishing regional centres of authority to correspond to the patriarchates, as well as balancing primacy with collegiality.   As Archbishop of Buenos Aires and one of the chief organizers of CELAM, the Latin American Bishops' Conference which is probably the most advanced regional conference in the Catholic Church, he spoke of the document released at the end of its meeting in Aparecida in Brazil as the expression of the magisterium of the Latin American bishops.  The word "magisterium", up till then, had only been used for the teaching authority of the pope and the universal episcopate within the context of the universal Church.  That the Latin American bishops have teaching authority within their own region.   When Pope Benedict insisted that the English speaking bishops should change the language of their liturgy, it was reported, rightly or wrongly, that Archbishop Bergoglio said in conversation that he believed that this was their own affair, and not something for the pope to decide.

Since becoming pope, Francis has shown that he believes decentralization must go hand in hand with a "pastoral conversion" to evangelisation.  This is an excerpt from "Vatican Insider":
“It is my duty, as the Bishop of Rome, to be open to suggestions which can help make the exercise of my ministry more faithful to the meaning which Jesus Christ wished to give it and to the present needs of evangelization,” Francis adds. In the document, the Pope recalls that in the encyclical “Ut unum sint” (1995), John Paul II asked for help in finding “a way of exercising the primacy which, while in no way renouncing what is essential to its mission, is nonetheless open to a new situation.” But, Francis remarks, “we have made little progress in this regard.” “The papacy and the central structures of the universal Church also need to hear the call to pastoral conversion. The Second Vatican Council stated that, like the ancient patriarchal Churches, Episcopal conferences are in a position “to contribute in many and fruitful ways to the concrete realization of the collegial spirit.” “Yet this desire has not been fully realized, since a juridical status of Episcopal Conferences which would see them as subjects of specific attributions, including genuine doctrinal authority, has not yet been sufficiently elaborated. Excessive centralization, rather than proving helpful, complicates the Church’s life and her missionary outreach,” the Pope remarks. So one of the areas of reform that should be examined by the Pope’s eight-member advisory Council of Cardinals is the desire for Episcopal Conferences to play a greater role in Church decision-making. The 1985 Synod of Bishops had recommended a wider and more in depth examination of the theological and juridical status of the Bishops’ Conferences, particularly the issue  of their doctrinal authority. The Code of Canon Law currently attributes certain doctrinal responsibilities to the Episcopal Conferences, like publishing catechisms for their respective territories with the prior approval of the Apostolic See and the approval of various editions and versions of Holy Scripture texts. In the Motu Proprio “Apostolos suos” issued in 1998, John Paul II recalled that Episcopal Conferences should be considered within the framework of the entire College of Bishops and that they are not a collegial body of the government of particular Churches, neither do they act as intermediaries between individual bishops and the whole College of Bishops. Now Francis says he wants to take one more step towards decentralization. He had alluded to this in his interview with Italian Jesuit magazine Civiltà Cattolica: “The dicasteries of the Roman Curia are at the service of the pope and the bishops,” he says. “They must help both the particular churches and the bishops’ conferences. They are instruments of help. In some cases, however, when they are not functioning well, they run the risk of becoming institutions of censorship. It is amazing to see the denunciations for lack of orthodoxy that come to Rome. I think the cases should be investigated by the local bishops’ conferences, which can get valuable assistance from Rome. These cases, in fact, are much better dealt with locally. The Roman congregations are mediators; they are not middlemen or managers.”
He has kicked off with the two synods on the family, knowing full well that the pastoral needs of post-Christian Europe are entirely different from those of Africa, showing the necessity for decentralisation of authority if the Church is to become centred on its evangelisation role. 

The Pope and the Bishops

The unity of the Church is expressed in the doxology at the end of every eucharistic prayer in the Latin rite:
Through him, with him, and in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honour is yours, Almighty Father, for ever and ever.  Amen
The "unity of the Holy Spirit", according to St Augustine, is at two levels.  The first is our participation of the word and sacraments, and the second is our participation in Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit, by whom we share in God's love.  THrough the sacraments we share in the Holy Spirit who binds us together in Christ, and we become one organism with him as his body.   Father R. Cantalamessa puts it in this way:
The Eucharistic bread is obtained from the dough of many grains of wheat and the wine from a multitude of grapes; in the same way, the Church is formed by many people, united and blended together by the charity which is the Holy Spirit. Just as wheat spread over the hills is first harvested, then milled, and then kneaded with water and cooked in the oven, so the faithful spread throughout the world are brought together by the word of God, milled by the penances and the exorcisms preceding baptism, immersed in the water of baptism, and put through the fire of the Spirit. Also in relation to the Church one must say that the sacrament significando causat, the sacrament “causes by signifying”. By signifying the union of many persons in one the Eucharist brings it about and causes it. In this sense, we can say that “The Eucharist makes the Church.”

According to the Fathers of the Church, it is love, not law that binds us together. What has been said about Tradition has enormous implication for the exercise  of authority in the Church. Pope Francis has said that the whole Church, including the papacy must undergo a "pastoral conversion".  There must be a clear understanding that words like "authority", "jurisdiction", "power", "law", have a radical change of meaning once they are used within the context of Christ's Church.   A papacy whose authority in the Church is no different from that of authorities in the world must be rejected as non-Christian, just as the jostling for power and quarrels among Orthodox patriarchs must also be rejected for the same reason.   In contrast, the way the pope functions must be a reflection of the work of the Holy Spirit who distributes functions and charisms throughout the Church.   Vatican I states:
This power of the supreme pontiff by no means detracts from that ordinary and immediate power of episcopal jurisdiction, by which bishops, who have succeeded to the place of the apostles by appointment of the holy Spirit, tend and govern individually the particular flocks which have been assigned to them. On the contrary, this power of theirs is asserted, supported and defended by the supreme and universal pastor; for St Gregory the Great says: "My honour is the honour of the whole church. My honour is the steadfast strength of my brethren. Then do I receive true honour, when it is denied to none of those to whom honour is due."   
It can be said that papal authority is only authentic when it reflects the work of the Holy Spirit in the Church, in a way that shows love  as well as enabling his brother bishops to fulfil their functions within the wider context of the whole Church worldwide. If, instead of asserting, supporting and defending the functions of his subordinates, he absorbs their functions into his own, turning the Church into one huge diocese, then he is acting out of synergy with the Holy Spirit, not taking into account the nature of the Church.   In fact, following the teaching of St Gregory the Great, anyone who exercises authority in the Church must do so in humble obedience.   Humility is the characteristic of any authentic Christian authority, but most of all, of the Servant of the Servants of God.

THE POPE, THE SYNOD AND DE-CENTRALISATION

This aspect of the synod will be treated in greater detail a little later; but it seems that Pope Francis is trying to kill two birds with one stone.  He wants a Church completely organised for mission - and thus he is beginning with the Family; and he aims to radically de-centralise the Church so that it can be adapted to the culture and conditions where people live.

Here we see him functioning in his classical role in the petrine ministry.  His power, which is the power of love, works in synergy with that of the bishops.  Because each bishop fulfils his ministry within particular circumstances, the bishops represent proper diversity within the Church; but, because of the central role of the Roman See, as St Irenaeus taught, the successor of St Peter makes sure that they are exercising there roles within a Catholic horizon which will be wider than their own.

To use an example from Orthodoxy: the Patriarch of Moscow fulfils his ministry in a very different context from the Patriarch of Costantinople.  This means that they have different horizons, different problems, different points of view.  Within the Catholic set-up, the Pope would be using his papal power, not to limit the power of the two patriarchs but to broaden the horizon of each, in the interests of unity.

Thus, for many generations, the mediaeval popes refused to put the "filioque" in the Creed, against much pressure from the Franks.  They did so because it is their job to put petitions like this within an ecumenical context.  Unfortunately, in the 11th century, the pope gave up that papal role in favour of joing the West against the East; and this is one of the causes of the Schism.  Pope Benedict XVI fulfilled his petrine ministry, while respecting the majoroty position in Vatican II, by motu propio, permitted the minority to continue to use the old version of the Latin Rite: the majority view is not always sufficiently Catholic: our Catholicism is as wide as our charity.

In the Synod, the pope is making sure that all sides have an opportunity to talk; but he is guiding the Synod towards acknowledgement of the wider picture.   If the bishops represent diversity, the pope represents unity in the context of diversity.

The next article is from an Orthodox source about what the Orthodox can learn from Francis.  In the article following that, we will find out what Pope Francis wants to learn from the Orthodox, especially about how synods work in Orthodoxy



NEXT

from Pravmir.com


WHAT ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS CAN LEARN FROM POPE FRANCIS






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