
It's not the big shift people think it is
The Catholic world and the media were riled Monday by a
Vatican document interpreted by many as signaling a softer church stance toward
homosexuality, but the inclusive tone of the document is a long way from actual
policy change.
At issue are three words most people have never heard of: Relatio
post disceptationem. That’s the name of the document the Catholic Church’s
Extraordinary Synod of the Bishops released Monday, one week into the Synod’s
gathering to discuss the state of the family in the modern world. It
translates, “Report After Debate,” and it was read aloud in the Synod hall to
kick off the Synod’s second week. One of the report’s 58 sections—the one
causing the biggest stir—is titled, “Welcoming homosexual persons.”
“Homosexuals have gifts and qualities to offer to the
Christian community,” the passage begins. “Are we capable of welcoming these
people, guaranteeing to them a fraternal space in our communities? Often they
wish to encounter a Church that offers them a welcoming home. Are our
communities capable of providing that, accepting and valuing their sexual
orientation, without compromising Catholic doctrine on the family and
matrimony?”
For a Church that has historically linked the word
“homosexual” with the word “sin,” the idea of welcoming gays in any capacity
can appear to be a significant move. Headlines immediately spoke of a “dramatic
shift” and a “more tolerant” stance from the church.
But before rushing to conclusions, everyone, on all sides,
should calm down.
First, here’s what the document actually is:
The relatio is a mid-Synod snapshot of 200+
Catholic leaders’ conversations that happened in the Synod hall last week. It
is a starting point for conversations as the Synod fathers start small group
discussions this week. It is a working text that identifies where bishops need
to “deepen or clarify our understanding,” as Cardinal Luis Antonia Tagle put it
in Monday’s press briefing. That means that the topic of gays and Catholic life
came up in the Synod conversations so far and that it is a topic for continued
reflection.
Second, here’s what the document is not:
The relatio is not a proscriptive text. It is not
a decree. It is not doctrine, and certainly not a doctrinal shift. It is also
not final. “These are not decisions that have been made nor simply points of
view,” the document concludes. “The reflections put forward, the fruit of the
Synodal dialogue that took place in great freedom and a spirit of reciprocal
listening, are intended to raise questions and indicate perspectives that will
have to be matured and made clearer by the reflection of the local Churches in
the year that separates us from the Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of
bishops planned for October 2015.”
So, what does all of that mean? Cardinal Tagle perhaps said
it best when he said at Monday’s press briefing, with a smile, “The drama
continues.”
The relatio reaffirms at several points that
marriage is between a man and a woman. Substance on that point is not changing.
The Vatican has been repeatedly clear that this Synod will bring no changes to
doctrine, or even a final document with new rites. To “welcome gays” does not
mean the Church is no longer equating “gay” with “sin.”
Instead, tone—as it has always been with the Francis
papacy—is what is on the table. The style that Pope Francis lives is one that
starts with a spirit of embrace, of mercy, and not with sin. It begins with
figuring out at what points embrace is possible before determining the points
at which it is not. That may be one reason why people like top Vatican watcher
John Thavis are calling this mid-synod report “an earthquake.”
But it is also important to remember that the Synod on the
Family is almost a two-year-long process, and this snapshot is just that, a
snapshot of one week in that process. There will be more such snapshot
documents in the coming months. The conversation started earlier this year when
bishops around the world surveyed their congregations about family life, it
kicked off more formally last week with the gathering in Rome, next the bishops
will take the conversations back to their communities, next summer there’s the
World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia (a traditionally conservative
American diocese), and then finally next fall there will be the second Synod
with even more bishops from around the world with even more discussion.
Looking for revolution can be misleading. It can mar the
actual story of what is and what is not happening. Casual Vatican observers—especially
those in the United States, where conversations about sexuality have a
different trajectory than in the Vatican or in many developing countries—should
be careful to not read into the conversation what they want to hear. The
interest in a relatio, a relatively obscure document, does however
point to another shift: people actually care about what a group of bishops is
doing.
That itself, for many, may be a revolution.
Source: www.time.com
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