Amazon Synod Briefing: New challenges and new solutions
By Pope
The 9th General Congregation, held on Monday morning, was attended by 179 Synod Fathers, together with Pope Francis, who opened the session with a prayer for Ecuador.
This was confirmed by the Prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for Communications, Dr Paolo Ruffini, before he invited Jesuit Fr Giacomo Costa, Secretary of the Information Commission, to provide a summary of what was discussed in the Synod Hall.
Summary by Fr Giacomo Costa SJ
Fr Costa began by affirming how Pope Francisâ Encyclical, Laudato sì, is proving to be more than just a text, but truly rooted in the realities discussed at the Synod. This is being demonstrated by the way âeverything is connectedâ, he said.
Summarizing what was discussed in the Synod Hall on Monday morning, Fr Costa listed several themes: dialogue with indigenous people, and the importance of participating in their lives, protecting local peoplesâ rights and safeguarding nature. He said the need to remain rooted in the ground of experience coming from local territory was also mentioned.
The Synod Fathers discussed the challenges to local ministries, he said, how to inculturate the liturgy, and how to respond better to the needs and cultures of the people. The Eucharist, continued Fr Costa, was presented as âa source of unity and lightâ. Participants at the General Congregation, he said, confirmed we are âcustodians of natureâ, and stressed the integral and ecological focus of the Synod.
Participants at the morning session, said Fr Costa, affirmed the Churchâs role of protecting and promoting the local people, of accompanying those without a voice. A suggestion was put forward to set up an international ecclesiastical observatory on the rights of indigenous people. Some Synod participants confirmed the importance of the Church integrating her perspectives into practices concerning human rights.
Fr Costa continued his summary of the proceedings that included the topic of âcircular economic modelsâ: access to food that respects the environment, and has a positive impact on local populations. These models can be achieved through an âintegral educationâ that helps promote an equitable consumption of goods, he reported.
Not just education, but information too, was a topic that came under discussion, said Fr Costa. According to Synod participants, the âcommunication cultureâ is growing rapidly in the Amazon Region, and we need to âbridge the communications gapâ. This means training local indigenous communicators, and establishing communications networks based on community and solidarity.
Ms Josianne Gauthier, Secretary General CIDSE (Canada)
Ms Josianne Gauthier is Secretary General CIDSE, the âCoopération Internationale pour le Développement et la Solidarité", an umbrella organization for Catholic development agencies from Europe and North America. She began her presentation by saying how CIDSE has spent over 50 years supporting communities, including in the Amazon, promoting integral ecology and defending human rights.
We are here at the Synod, she said, in a âlistening positionâ, to hear stories and to begin work on how to support these messages outside the Synod âin political spacesâ. The task of CIDSE, she explained, is to âtake struggles and turn them into political pressureâ.
Ms Gauthier said those of us who live âfrom the benefits of the tragic exploitationâ that takes places in that part of the world, have a âheightened responsibilityâ. We need to recognize that âour wellbeing and comfort comes at a costâ, she said: human life, security, peace, and ecological justice.
Ms Gauthier concluded saying we need to promote consciousness and concentrate on âdoing what we can after the Synod to transmit these messagesâ.
Bishop José Ángel Divassòn Cilveti, S.D.B. of Bamaccora (Venezuela)
Bishop José Ángel Divassòn Cilveti is a Salesian. The Salesians, he said, have been working in the south of Venezuela since 1957. Reflections after the Second Vatican Council led to a new approach that began in 1976, he said: developing new forms of evangelization that support people and help them âtake control of their own destiniesâ. Priests, laypeople, men and women religious, are all involved in this mission and have developed criteria based on participating in peopleâs live, and respecting communities, educating them, and assisting them with projects, he said.
In order to evangelize effectively, said Bishop Cilveti, we need to be familiar with peopleâs feelings, to understand what they think. Speaking in terms of his own experience, he said people âwant to follow Jesus Christ, they want to changeâ. The Gospel has brought new concepts like mercy and forgiveness, he said, and these become the keys to solving many problems and conflicts.
The Bishop concluded by describing the Church in his region as a âyoung Church with different featuresâ, one that helps people to help themselves.
Bishop Carlo Verzeletti of Castanhal (Brazil)
Bishop Carlo Verzeletti comes from Castanhal, in Brazil. His diocese comprises over 1,000 villages beside the mouth of the Amazon River. His priests, he added, âare few and agingâ. They are able to meet people only a few times a year when they visit to celebrate Mass. This ârunning from one place to anotherâ, does not offer the âpresence and proximity, the support and comfortâ, the people desire, he said.
The priest becomes the âdistributor of the sacramentsâ, he added. Which is why Bishop Verzeletti supports the ordination of âviri probatiâ, approved married men, âso that the Eucharist can become a reality that is closer to people and communitiesâ. These would not be âsecond-rate priestsâ, he added, but men who are formed accordingly, âdevoting their lives to othersâ.
Bishop Verzetti said his region has been severely affected by colonization and globalization: the result is secularization, religious indifference, and the influence of the Pentecostal churches. âPopular piety cannot resist the impactâ, he said.
As an example, Bishop Verzetti said there are 750 Pentecostal churches in his city alone, and only 50 Catholic churches.
He has ordained 110 Permanent Deacons, he said, and works at empowering laypeople, âbut with difficultyâ. Were the Pope to consider the reality of âviri probatiâ, concluded the Bishop, âwe have worthy people who could be ordained priestsâ.
José Gregorio Dìaz Mirabal (Venezuela)
Mr José Gregorio Dìaz Mirabal is Coordinator of COICA, the Congress of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin. His organization represents 4 million indigenous people spread over 4,500 communities in all six countries of the Amazon Region.
The Catholic Church, he said in his presentation, is the only organization calling for the world âto wake upâ. Speaking as an indigenous person, he said âwe will disappear if we donât do somethingâ.
The presence of COICA at the Synod, said Mr Mirabal, is to support those who are struggling to protect the land, to stop the âviolent invasion of development projectsâ, including hydroelectric schemes, uncontrolled mining, and the agri-food industry. He spoke of those who are imprisoned and murdered for speaking out against land grabbing, or while trying to stop the pollution of the air and water.
Mr Mirabal concluded by inviting the media to help disseminate these messages.
A question about statistics
The first question was addressed to Dr Paolo Ruffini and concerned statistics from the Amazon Region. The Prefect of the Vatican Communications Dicastery responded that, while pre-Synod preparations had produced statistical materials, this is not a study conference that requires statistical data. The Church is reflecting on âhow to serve the Amazon though pastoral activitiesâ, he said.
The Synod is not about âpercentagesâ, he added, but about âhow the Universal Church relates to a territoryâ. And a territory is best described by those who live there, said Dr Ruffini.
Bishop José Ángel Divassòn Cilveti confirmed that studies on the Church in the Amazon Region have been made by REPAM, and that this data was collected and published in preparation for the Synod.
A question about sovereignty
Responding to a question on possible interference in the Synod by local governments in the Amazon Region, Bishop Carlo Verzeletti re-affirmed the Churchâs respect for the sovereignty of Brazil, in particular. The Church does not give âtechnical solutionsâ, he added, but guidelines so that life and rights in the Amazon Region are respected. Resolving economic problems in Brazil doesnât mean opening up areas in the Amazon that will improve the lives of the rich, but not âthe lives of our peopleâ, he said.
With regard to a meeting in the Vatican between the Vice President of Brazil and the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Parolin, Dr Ruffini said it had âno influence on the Synodâ. The meeting was about âdiplomatic relations between statesâ, he said, and there was âno connectionâ with the Synod for the Amazon.
A question about future Pan-Amazonian organization
A question was asked about the possibility of setting up a future Pan-Amazonian organization after the Synod. It was confirmed that the topic had been raised in one of the small working groups, but there was a concern about multiplying too many organizations when the REPAM network already exists.
Ms Josianne Gauthier added that any form of collaboration is helpful when it comes to defending human rights. As long as there is âclarity of intentionâ, she said her organization would work with whatever structure is decided upon.
A question about viri probati
In connection with the ordination of approved married men, or âviri probatiâ, Jesuit Fr Giacomo Costa stressed the desire of the Pope that âall issuesâ be discussed in order to discern appropriate solutions. Fr Costa confirmed there are âdifferent positionsâ on this issue, but that âeveryone is listening in a respectful wayâ.
Dr Ruffini added that while some may be in favour and others against, in the end it is not the Synod that decides. The Synod will eventually entrust its reflections to the Holy Father as âsomething that is still in progressâ.
A question about Ecuador
Responding to a question about the ongoing violence in Ecuador, José Gregorio Dìaz Mirabal said that what is happening throughout the region, âpains all of usâ. There are so many challenges in search of solutions, he said.
Bishop José Ángel Divassòn Cilveti added that it is important to be aware of what is happening in these situations. We can only understand if we âlook at the overall pictureâ, he said.
A question about Church investments
A question was asked regarding Church investments in projects in the Amazon Region. Fr Costa responded saying the Church has already disinvested and is disinvesting from certain products and companies.
Ms Josianne Gauthier added that disinvestment is a way by which the Church can show her âcoherence with Laudato sì and integral ecologyâ, the connection between âwords and actionsâ.
A question about the Churchâs Amazonian face
The last question was about the kinds of changes that need to be made if the Church in the Amazon Region is truly to have an âAmazonian faceâ.
José Gregorio Dìaz Mirabal responded by repeating that it is not up to the Synod to make decisions. He confirmed, however, that the Church âmust reach outâ, and must be reflected in the realities of the local people.
He admitted that the Church needs support, and needs to build greater unity with the indigenous people in some parts of the Amazon Region.
In order to make one another stronger, he concluded, we need to âwalk togetherâ â even if it means âgoing barefootâ.
Thank you for reading our article. You can keep up-to-date by subscribing to our daily newsletter. Just click here