On October 28th, after four weeks of discussions in Rome at the general assembly of the Synod on Synodality, the Summary Report titled “A Synodal Church in Mission” was released.
That now seems, just weeks later, like a lifetime ago, for the simple reason that the time since has been dominated by significant news that began in the final days of the synodal gathering. First, that accused abuser and disgraced Jesuit priest/artist Fr. Marko Rupnik had been incardinated into a diocese in his native Slovenia; then Pope Francis (whose support of Rupnik has been widely criticized) expressed his dislike for “the scandal of young priests trying on cassocks and hats or albs and lace-covered robes”; then Francis relieved Bishop Joseph Strickland from his position as head of the Diocese of Tyler (Texas); and then, even more surprisingly, Francis stripped Cardinal Raymond Burke of his Vatican housing and salary privileges.
The document is not as important as the experience that we had. I think the document tries to convey that experience. And it does a good job. But my hope would be that we are able to take that experience back home and share it with our people because that really is what the synod is about. It’s a new way of being church.
Such a statement might seem curious, but there hasn’t been much normal or straightforward about this 2021–2024 synodal process. And this remark, by Blase Cardinal Cupich of Chicago, raises several points.
First, why does the document apparently struggle to convey the synodal experience? And if those going home can convey the experience, why is it that all involved cannot convey it together? How exactly are the 363 voting participants to “take that experience back home” and share it?
Secondly, it has been evident from previous documents that “experience” is going to be, for the staunch synodalists like Cupich and others, key to the synodal goal of manifesting “a new way of being church” into being. Thus, it’s not surprising that “experience(s)” appears almost 80 times in the synthesis report, and that the favored term “discern(ment/ing”) is used 38 times. Which is quite a few more times than words such as “teaching” (18), “truth” (8), “doctrine” (6), or “dogma” (0). Experience certainly has its rightful place, and proper discernment is a good thing, but there are questions aplenty about the basis for making proper judgments and decisions.
This is especially the case when the words “new” and “change” are used constantly. And more than a few instances are so banal as to be essentially meaningless, as when we read: “Our synodal path shows the need for relational renewal and structural changes” (9g).
And it doesn’t help that, in the Introduction, we read this bit of tortured explication:
The multiplicity of interventions and the plurality of positions voiced in the Assembly revealed a Church that is learning to embrace a synodal style and is seeking the most suitable ways to make this happen.
This and other passages suggest that “synodality” is either a word in search of a definition or a word too vague for a definition. This, thankfully, did not escape the attention of everyone at the Assembly:
Building on the reflective work already undertaken, there is a need to clarify the meaning of synodality at different levels, in pastoral, theological, and canonical terms. This helps to avert the risk that the concept sounds too vague or generic or appears as a fad or fashion. It enables us to offer a broad understanding of walking together with further theological deepening and clarification. Likewise, it is necessary to clarify the relationship between synodality and communion and between synodality and collegiality. (1j)
I agree completely. But it’s hard to avoid the disconcerting contrast between the appeal for clarification of an essential term and seeing that term being used repeatedly, to the point of exhaustion, in the following ways: “synodal process” (24), “synodal Church” (23), “synodal journey” (6), “synodal configuration” (3), “synodal approach” (3), “synodal style” (3), “synodal dynamic” (2), “synodal life” (2), and “synodal spirit” (1). Quite often, there is a sense that the synodal cart has been put before the ecclesial horse, and there are more than a few bumps, bruises, and dents to show for it.
On the positive side, the synthesis report is certainly an improvement on the The Working Document for the Continental Stage (DCS) of the 2023 Synod on Synodality, released in October 2022 (which I described as the “most incoherent document ever sent out from Rome”) and the “Instrumentum Laboris” (IL), released this past June (which I said was “turgid” and “swollen with sociological terminology and bureaucratic bloviation”). While still shot through with constant references to “process(es)” (59) and plenty of sociological jargon, there are some serious attempts to root the text in recognizable Catholic teachings. In my October 3rd essay “Synodality, Soteriology, and ‘Sharing the journey’,” I argued that “the IL severs the missionary nature of the Church from its Source.” So, it is good to see a strong reference to the Trinitarian missions in the synthesis document:
According to the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, the Church is “a people brought together by virtue of the unity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit” (LG 4). The Father, through the mission of the Son and the gift of the Spirit, involves us in a dynamism of communion and mission that moves us from the “I” to the “we” and places us at the service of the world. Synodality translates the Trinitarian dynamism with which God comes to meet humanity into spiritual attitudes and ecclesial processes. (2a)
Of course, there is the inevitable use of “processes”—a term that never appears in Lumen Gentium and is drawn from the realm of management and bureaucracy. This is more than a little ironic, as the report, in Part 1, says the synodal “process” is aimed at providing an “experience of and desire for the Church as God’s home and family, a Church that is closer to the lives of Her people, less bureaucratic and more relational” (1b).
But this sort of conflicted and sometimes discombobulated language is perhaps inevitable in a document co-authored by numerous hands within a very short period of time. There were reportedly around a thousand changes made to the initial draft of the document. And one of those changes is worth noting here, as it provides a microcosm of the very real tensions and incompatible anthropologies of key participants.
The synthesis draft contained the sentence:
In different ways, people who feel marginalized or excluded from the Church because of their status or sexuality, such as divorced people in second union, people who identify as LGBTQ+, etc., also ask to be heard and accompanied.
That was changed, in the final document, to:
In different ways, people who feel marginalized or excluded from the Church because of their marriage situation, identity or sexuality also ask to be heard and accompanied. (16h)
No one was surprised that Cardinal Cupich and Fr. James Martin, S.J. complained about this change, with Martin lamenting, shortly after the report was released that despite the “community” of “L.G.B.T.Q. Catholics” being “explicitly mentioned in the Instrumentum Laboris twice,” no such mention is in the synthesis report. He implied that those supporting “L.G.B.T.Q. Catholics” were caring and pastoral souls, while those opposed to pro-“L.G.B.T.Q.” language were actually the real ideologues. He doubled down on this a few days later, essentially saying that those opposed to anything “L.G.B.T.Q.” were possibly infested with bad spirits—the same fearful “counterspirits” that want the synod to fail. Neither Cupich nor Martin refer to clear and perennial Church teaching on sexuality (ranging from masturbation to fornication to pornography to homosexuality), but fixate on experiences and feelings, as if the subjectivity of such trump objective moral truths about the human person and his actions.
In contrast, Bishop Robert Barron, in a recent essay about his experience at the assembly, emphasized the proper relationship between love and truth, noting that “one cannot authentically love someone else unless he has a truthful perception of what is really good for that person.” Further, he highlighted a problematic passage in the report, which states:
Certain issues, such as those relating to matters of identity and sexuality, the end of life, complicated marital situations, and ethical issues related to artificial intelligence, are controversial not only in society, but also in the Church, because they raise new questions. Sometimes the anthropological categories we have developed are not able to grasp the complexity of the elements emerging from experience or knowledge in the sciences and require greater precision and further study. It is important to take the time required for this reflection and to invest our best energies in it, without giving in to simplistic judgements that hurt individuals and the Body of the Church. (15g)
Bishop Barron flatly rebuffs this deeply problematic passage:
A final point—and here I find myself in frank disagreement with the final synodal report—has to do with the development of moral teaching in regard to sex. The suggestion is made that advances in our scientific understanding will require a rethinking of our sexual teaching, whose categories are, apparently, inadequate to describe the complexities of human sexuality.
He notes, rightly, that the report here is “condescending to the richly articulate tradition of moral reflection in Catholicism” and makes a “category error”: thinking that advances in scientific knowledge require changes in moral doctrine. “Evolutionary biology, anthropology, and chemistry,” he writes, “might give us fresh insight into the etiology and physical dimension of same-sex attraction, but they will not tell us a thing about whether homosexual behavior is right or wrong.”
The head of the Polish Episcopal Conference, Archbishop Stanisław Gądecki, in a detailed interview about his time at the assembly, also criticized the report’s remarks about science and morals, saying they “stem either from an unconscious inferiority complex or from a superstitious approach to science.” Further, he remarks, “one can get the impression that some theologians and bishops believe in the infallibility of social sciences, and not even the sciences, but some mainstream sociologists and theories, which in a few decades will only be mentioned in history textbooks.”
The reference to “an unconscious inferiority complex” resonated with me as I read this report. Yes, again, there are some positive and thoughtful sections. But, overall, the repetitive jargon, the appeal to sociological lingo and bureaucratic perspectives, and the repetitive sense of uncertainty about Divine Revelation and objective truth is troubling.
Equally bothersome to me is the strange chronological snobbery. All of the various synodal documents create a narrative in which the Second Vatican Council sought to renew and revive the Church, but failed. (In the words of Cupich: “I have said before that the bishops of the Second Vatican Council only brought back the decisions. They never shared with us the experience or replicated it.”) But, now, the synodal Church is here; this is “the Church that young people first declared they desired in 2018 on the occasion of the Synod of Youth,” (1b) and so we now are all going to enjoy it.
There are many flaws to this facile (and laughable) account. One, as I’ve written about before, is the tenuous ties of this synodal enterprise with the documents and vision of Vatican II. This synodal process, so far at least, is like Vatican II but without the substance, heft, and foundations; this version of synodality is like communio without the vertical dimension, the proper focus on worship, and the evangelistic fervor. Yes, the report mentioned “mission” over a hundred times, but hardly ever mentions “evangelization,” “salvation,” or “redemption.” It criticizes “clericalism,” but hardly even mentions families, with almost no references to “mothers” (2), “parents” (2), and “fathers” (0).
There is lots of verbiage about the laity, but it is almost all focused on what the laity can do in the Church rather than in the world, which is the opposite of what is found—in detail and depth—in Lumen gentium and Christifideles laici (to give just two examples).
The emphasis on conversation between clergy and laity is good in principle, but much of it, again, is navel-gazing. Lumen gentium (37–38) envisions a mature laity who are confident in living their faith in the world, whereas this current synodality is often obsessed with everyone’s struggles and difficulties, to a degree that swerves deeply into therapeutic territory, as if the laity are too fragile to do anything outside the Church and the clergy are too uncertain to do much of anything inside the Church.
There is much discussion of shared responsibilities, but it is, again, within the Church. The Council’s repeated and strong emphasis on the vocation of the laity, rooted in holiness, has been transformed into an unrelenting focus on “what can the Church do for me?” that manages to sidestep much mention of conversion, avoids the call to holiness, and ducks any discussion of growth in virtue.
In conclusion, I point readers to an exceptional essay by Douglas Bushman on this “synodal myopia,” in which Bushman makes a recommendation that I heartily support:
Following its first session, the synod on synodality should engage in a principled self-inspection, a kind of examination of conscience, in order to purify its functioning and perhaps uncritically examined presuppositions. The criteria for this examination of conscience is the very council it claims to be taking direction from in order to move into a new phrase of implementation. A fresh look at certain teachings of Vatican II that are closely related to the notion of synodality will provide corrective lenses to counteract a myopia affecting the understanding of synodality and its activation in synodal events. A deeper theological understanding of Vatican II and the post-Conciliar popes prior to Francis will assure that the synod on synodality is effectively implementing the Council through its efforts to unleash the full potentiality of synodality for the promotion of the Church’s mission.
(Editor’s note: This essay was published originally on December 5, 2023, on the “What We Need Now” Substack, and is reposted here with kind permission.)
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A generous initial preview by author Olson, “This synodal process, so far at least, is like Vatican II but without the substance, heft, and foundations. Almost all focused on what the laity can do in the Church rather than in the world”.
An observation after multiple critiques, including Bushman’s good analysis complemented at the end is that the tail chasing doggerel has a purpose. A search for what doesn’t exist to cloud what does. I would prefer to conjure some mystery benevolent rationale, except that the words of John of the Cross read in this morning’s office of readings compel otherwise, “Paul is saying that God has spoken so completely through his own Word that he chooses to add nothing. He has given us everything, his own Son. Therefore, anyone who wished to question God or to seek some new vision or revelation from him would commit an offense (The Ascent of Mount Carmel).
Otherwise I would favor the advice of Olson and Bushman, which in fact do, although that happy turn within the Synod seems more unlikely as precious time is burned. The Body of Christ is emaciated for lack of sustenance. Time is being engineered to disassemble a beautiful, spacious structure. A kick against the goad.
We read of: “…the Church that young people first declared they desired in 2018 on the occasion of the Synod of Youth.”
About which, and in the detail of deleting the legitimizing term “LGBTQ,” the synod in Rome does in fact recall the Synod on Youth. Remember? Three Points:
FIRST, Archbishop Chaput asked politely and in writing, of headmaster Cardinal Baldiserri, that the term be removed—because the Church is about “persons” and not politicized categories, but Baldiserri refused. Then, as was widely reported, the eighteen (18!) bishop-roundtables unanimously “demanded” that the gratuitous term be removed….And, the term which had been inserted by the back room editors—not by the Youth Synod—was deleted. So, now, the same gratuitous insertion is withdrawn, so to speak. Consistency! And Cupich and Martin are frustrated.
SECOND, we are reminded of the scene in “The Young Victoria (2009),” where the young queen-to-be is defended against the wannabe mother-regent (the Duchess of Kent) and the operative (Sir John Conroy) who then would control the mother. When their maneuver has failed, says Victoria’s defender, Lord Melbourne, to the still uncomprehending Duchess and the uppity John Conroy:
“I see that I have not spoken clearly….You have ‘played the game,’ and lost!”
THIRD, on the other hand, we also recall that it was not the youth who asked for a mutated form and scope of “synopdality,” but rather that the bulk of these generous paragraphs were groomed into the final report ex post facto. Yes? Another, guided outcome and which now has played out not so well. (The shotgun mailing of the German ultimatum, and all that sorta stuff). Too bad, because a still untested two-way (!) listening would be a healthy style for a real Vatican II Church. You know—both the assembled Laity and the Successors of the Apostles, who are more than “facilitators” because “sent” (apostello) by the incarnate Jesus Christ.
I am grateful for this continued analysis of the Synod reports/documents. I am past losing patience with them.
Thank God for clarity from Bishop Barron and Archbishop Gadecki.
Next up: Bushman.
Mr. Olson writes in praise of Bishop Barron concerning an obvious error arising out of the Synod on Solidarity:
“In contrast, Bishop Robert Barron, in a recent essay about his experience at the assembly, emphasized the proper relationship between love and truth, noting that ‘one cannot authentically love someone else unless he has a truthful perception of what is really good for that person.”’
Yes, this is a good reflection by Bishop Barron, but it is nowhere near enough to praise him any further because of his wrong-headed overall attitude toward the Synod itself for which he should be duly criticized as will be provided below. In his own words in a reflection on the Synod and its summary statement that was written a few weeks ago, Bishop Barron unequivocally states that
“The summary statement very accurately expresses the fact that the overwhelming concern of the synod members was to listen to the voices of those who have, for a variety of reasons, felt marginalized from the life of the Church. … Women, the laity in general, the LGBT community, those with disabilities, young people, men and women of color, etc. have felt unappreciated and, most importantly, excluded from the tables where decisions are taken that affect the whole life of the Church. I can assure everyone that their demand to be heard was heard, loud and clear at the synod. And I’m glad it was. …Therefore, if there are armies of Catholics who feel excluded or condescended to, that’s a major pastoral problem that must be addressed with humility and honesty. And I can say, as someone who has been a full-time ecclesiastical administrator for the past twelve years, I am delighted to receive the counsel of laity in regard to practically all aspects of my work. Expanding the number and diversity of those who might aid the bishops in their governance of the Church is all to the good, and bravo to the synod for exploring this possibility.” (“My Experience of the Synod” by Bishop Barron. Nov. 21, 2023)
Note how Bishop Barron enthusiastically accepts the false narrative of the need to “listen” to many supposedly oppressed “marginalized” groups within the Church. This narrative is just another manifestation of left wing, Marxist-type propaganda rubbish that is being used by leaders of the Synod to promote its agenda of destroying the traditional hierarchical Church established by our Lord. Because of this, many wrong prescriptions will be provided by Bishop Barron and others to “cure” non-existent problems and thereby bring about greater problems and harm to the Church based on numerous falsehoods accepted as truth.
Returning to Mr. Olson’s quote from Bishop Barron wherein the Bishop declares that “one cannot authentically love someone else unless he has a truthful perception of what is really good for that person,” I submit that Bishop Barron cannot authentically serve the Church as any faithful bishop should serve unless he has a truthful perception of the fundamental flaws of the Synod on Synodality that are simply harmful to the Church, and he unequivocally rejects all of them; not just one or two. Wishful thinking at present, because by his own declaration, not only does Bishop Barron fail to reject the fundamental flaws of the Synod, he fully embraces the underlying narrative and modus operandi of the Synod that have foisted these egregious flaws on the Church.
Cardinal Cupich is a most apt spokesman for a bankrupt papacy. No Catholic I know who takes the kerygma seriously pays any attention to these clowns at the Vatican and Francis’ minions in the domestic Church.
Only the remnants of the Kumbaya Movement of the 60’s and 70’s who revel in the dismantling of Church Teaching think that what’s currently happening is God’s Will.
The document would sound better if it was sung by the Kumbaya Choir.
Excellent idea!
The most disturbing observation that I can make, is that among all of those five and six syllable words, nowhere is found a single occurrence of the name “Jesus Christ”. As He said, “when the blind leas the blind, they both fall in the ditch.” In retrospect, under PF’s slow, methodical, calculated guidance, he has led us into the deepest part of the ditch without our even realizing it.
When our Lord speaks of the blind leading the blind and both falling into a ditch, I don’t think that He meant a dry, shallow roadside ditch from which one could easily extract oneself without assistance.
Rather, when one falls into the kind of ditch to which He referring, it is one that is deep – where one has the very real possibility of drowning, or, at minimum, a stagnant, putrid environment where the unsuspecting victim is exposed to malaria-carrying mosquitos, leeches, brain-eating amoeba, anaerobic bacteria of all kinds, a very malevolent environment to say the least. The point that our Lord is making is to follow a “blind” man is not, by any means, a neutral, incidental, happenstance, but a real occasion to put both one’s life and soul in very real danger.
This is the very environment into which PF and his hand-picked cronies are knowingly leading us all.
Thank you Carl. In addition to muddled, messy and myopic, Synodaling is a minimalistic approach to God’s sacrificial love. The Report is seeking the most it can get away with and still technically be Catholic in name, if not in practice. It reads like Groucho Marx browbeating his wife after she caught him with his mistress: “Who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?”
Synodaling demands we listen to everyone, except Christ.
Synodaling is weaponized boredom.
Synodaling is a Synod of Sycophants, et al.
Synodaling discusses the potential contents of a pre-written final document.
Synodaling is a smokescreen to introduce pastoral heresies.
I don’t believe Francis has good intentions and the Synod on Synodality is what Cardinal Muller referred to as “a hostile takeover of the Church.” https://onepeterfive.com/francis-lower-sink/
I concur w Cdn Mueller’s observation.
But, really, I no longer care. It’s all very bad theater.
Remember the Jesus Quest that Rudolph Bultmann et al. that sought to revive in the mid 20th century, which “demythologized” the Jesus of historical accounts and replaced it with a new paradigm devoid of Scripture and tradition? Here we are with the latest liberated theology fad. We so badly need another “quest” of post-post modern theologians – a fourth quest. Please pray for this generation that will lead us out of this quagmire with Aquinas leading the way. God bless.
My comments were eliminated by the moderator yesterday- I did not think they were inflammatory in any way. I will restate in brief that if we remember Rudolph Bultmann, who tried to save the Jesus Quest of the mid-20th century, established a new paradigm of replacing the Jesus of Scripture and tradition of the Church with his brand of Heideggerian existentialism. This blueprint of “replacement” remains to this day- moving through various ideologies. We sorely need post-post modern theologians to establish a fourth Jesus quest, and pray that St. Thomas leads the way.
No, they weren’t eliminated. May have taken a little while to approve. Thanks!
Ran across this synodal tidbit which surely should make all of us “feel” better:
People who feel marginalized/excluded because of their “‘marital situation, identity, and sexuality’ the final Synod document said, ‘ask to be heard and accompanied and that their dignity be defended.”
THEN THIS: “The final document also said the synodal assembly is close to those who feel lonely because they have chosen to stay faithful [!] to the Church’s teaching on marriage and sexual ethics, and Christians should listen to and accompany [!] those who have made this commitment” (quotes from “The Synod on Synodality is (finally) Over,” Inside the Vatican, November/December 2023).
SAY WHAT? We are assured that Big Tent “synodality” is even big enough to include faithful Catholics! Accompaniment! The (c)church now inverted as a polyglot congregation, but with a table still set aside even for Catholics…
Anticipating the current embroglio, a previous Shepherd gave us Veritatis Splendor (VS), to which synodal clericalists (temporarily) allow us to “listen:”
“Each of us knows how important is the teaching which represents the central theme of this encyclical and which today is being restated with the authority of the Successor of Peter. Each of us can see the seriousness of what is involved, not only for individuals but also for the whole of society, with the REAFFIRMATION OF THE UNIVERSALITY AND IMMUTABILITY OF THE MORAL COMMANDMENTS [italics], particularly those which prohibit always and without exception INTRINSICALLY EVIL ACTS [italics]” (VS, n. 115).