Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, head of the Synod of Bishops, has played down the importance of the Amazon synod’s working document, saying it is neither a “papal document” nor “magisterium.”
In response to a question about the criticisms some bishops and cardinals have expressed about the working document, or Instrumentum laboris, Baldisseri said, “criticisms are good.” The Instrumentum laboris was the work of two years of listening to the questions of people in the Amazon, he stated, saying he thinks “it is necessary to listen and not to judge.”
The cardinal also underlined that synod assemblies are consultative, not deliberative, and said the real “final document” of a Synod of Bishops is whatever document the pope may decide to issue afterward, and not the synodal and pre-synodal documents themselves.
“They do not have the signature of the pope,” he said, noting that for this reason, he does not think it is necessary to make judgements about the Instrumentum laboris.
Cardinals Gerhard Mueller, Walter Brandmüller, and Raymond Burke have all penned letters or documents expressing concern about some of the content of the Instrumentum laboris of the October 6-27 Synod of Bishops on the Pan-Amazonian region.
“Some points of the synod’s Instrumentum laboris seem not only in dissonance with respect to the authentic teaching of the Church, but even contrary to it,” Brandmüller wrote to fellow cardinals in a letter obtained by CNA in August.
Cardinal Claudio Hummes, a native of Brazil, is the relator general of the Amazon synod. He is the archbishop emeritus of São Paulo and served as prefect of the Congregation for Clergy from 2006-2010.
Hummes said on October 3 that the Instrumentum laboris is for the synod, “not of the synod.” He added the document it is about seriously listening to the people of the Amazon.
About the issue of ordaining viri probati — that is, proven, married men — to the priesthood, one of the themes of discussion promoted in the Instrumentum laboris, Baldisseri said, “you ask” and “you study the possibility.”
“The synod fathers are free to discuss it.”
One synod father, Salesian Fr Martin Lasarte, told CNA on October 3 that to focus only on the lack of priests in the Amazon region is to miss the deeper, more fundamental questions about Christian life in the region.
“We only talk about the lack of priests, but the lack of priests is a deeper problem, which is maybe a very weak Christian life or very incomplete evangelization processes,” he said.
Lasarte is participating in the synod as one of as one of 33 members nominated by Pope Francis. He is a coordinator of the Salesian Missions Department, where he helps prepare missionaries. He served as a missionary in Angola for 25 years.
Drawing from his experience in Africa, he said, “the problem is a very poor Christian life… The Churches that are rich [in faith], that live the Christian life… they do not lack vocations.”
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