By Jonathan Ekene Ifeanyi
Cardinal George Pell with his successor as archbishop of Sydney, Anthony Fisher.
Pell reportedly hand-delivered a letter to Francis I, signed
by 13 cardinals unhappy with the synod process.
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One Peter Five reports: "As the
evidence mounts that the Synod's outcome has been pre-determined, I have joined
a number of other concerned Catholics in writing an open letter. In it, we
request that those Synod fathers who are faithful to Christ's teachings, if
they continue to be thwarted in their efforts, walk out of the Synod before it
is over rather than allow their participation be interpreted as support."
The conservative blogger adds: "Even
at this late hour, we must try to protect the faith."
The online petition calling for a walkout, which can be found at change.org, has garnered roughly 2,300 signatures in two days.
It asks any bishop alarmed by the
prospect of progressive changes to Church doctrine to “do his sacred duty and
publicly retire from any further participation in the synod before its
conclusion,” and suggests that Francis I is responsible for promoting
“confusion and scandal.”
The petition urges:
"We thank you for your witness to and defence
of the truth of Matrimony and Family proclaimed by the Church, in fidelity to
our Lord Jesus Christ. As the Ordinary Synod on the Family continues its work,
confusion and scandal spread among the faithful. Catholics are concerned that
some members of this body of apostolic successors, under the guidance of the
Pope, are seeking to endorse homosexual relationships, effectively question the
indissolubility of marriage, and permit the distribution of the Holy Eucharist
to the unrepentant."
The last sentence above refers to the devilish argument
put forward by some apostate German bishops and others that people who have had
a civil “remarriage” after a divorce should no longer be barred from Holy
Communion and other sacraments. The petition says the Synod's working document—Instrumentum Laboris—is
"unacceptable from an orthodox Catholic point of view" regarding
divorce and attempted remarriage, homosexuality, and contraception, and
expresses "profound sorrow" at the ongoing development of the crisis.
The petition warns: "We fear, evidenced by all
of the above, that the Ordinary Synod will attempt to recommend changes in
teaching and pastoral practice that are contrary to the Gospel of Christ and
the constant teaching of the Church on the sacred mystery of Catholic marriage
and the nature of human sexuality. This would pose a clear and present danger
to souls."
The petition came as Italian papers are reporting that opponents of attempts to liberalise the Church are throwing
"poisoned meatballs" in a bid "to weaken the charisma and strength
of Francis". They claim that opponents are attempting to corner “the Pope”
in a battle between liberals and “conservatives”. The reports also claim that
much of the opposition to “the Pope” comes from “conservatives” in the United
States.
The liberal tone at the synod was criticised by
senior bishops including Australia's Cardinal George Pell. In his
intervention, he said: "We have no power to change the central teachings
of the New Testament or the essential teachings of popes and councils. We are
not like Moses, and while we are the successors of the apostles, we are not
their equals."
Pell added: “Too many have lost confidence in
Jesus' doctrines and doubt or deny that mercy is found in his hard moral
teachings. The crucified Jesus was not afraid to confront society, and he was
crucified for his pains, teaching his followers that life is a moral struggle
that requires sacrifices, and his followers cannot always take the easy
options. He did not tell the adulterous woman to continue in her good work, but
to repent and sin no more.”
Despite these statements,
however, Pell, one of the Synod’s most outspoken “conservatives”, rejects the
call to walk out, saying that “there’s no ground for anyone to walk out on
anything.”
Pell, who heads the Vatican’s
Secretariat for the Economy, told Crux on Friday that by the midway point of
the Oct. 4-25 synod, concerns about stacking the deck circulating in some
quarters have “substantially been addressed.”
Pell was among roughly a dozen
cardinals who signed a letter to Francis at the beginning of the synod raising
doubts about the process, but he says reassurances have been given by Vatican
officials that the final result “will faithfully present the views of the
synod.”
Among other things, Pell said
that Italian (unholy) Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, the synod secretary, has
stated from the floor of the synod hall that voting on a final document will
take place “paragraph by paragraph,” providing a clear sense of where the
bishops stand on individual issues.
He also said that members of a
drafting committee for the final document have vowed to be true to the content
of the synod’s discussions, rather than using the text to promote their own
views.
“That’s all we want, for whatever
the synod says, whether it’s good, bad, or indifferent, to be represented,”
Pell said.
“That’s in the long-term interest
of everyone, because no matter how it might turn out, people want to feel that
the bishops got to that situation fairly,” he said.
Asked if he feels the synod now
has a level playing field, Pell said it’s “level enough.”
Overall, Pell said he believes
the synod is making “solid progress”.
“I think a lot of good work has
been done on the first two parts of the document,” he said, referring to a
working text that’s the basis for synod discussions, the anti-Catholic Instrumentum Laboris. “I think there’s generally
a good atmosphere in the synod.”
Pell also said that he believes
the information flow this time is an improvement on the October 2014 edition of
the Synod of Bishops, when there were charges by “conservatives” that Vatican
briefings presented a selective vision that generally favoured progressive
positions.
“Both sides of the story are
getting out this time, I think,” he said.
“In terms of the [synod
participants] who are briefing the media, I think they’re getting a mix of
left, right, and centre …. it’s better than it was the last time, anyway,” Pell
said.
Pell said that he believes the
final report must deal with “sensitive issues”, such as proposals to allow
divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to receive Communion, even if there’s
no clear consensus among the bishops.
“I don’t think we’ll be in that
position,” he said, suggesting that opposition to those proposals represents a
strong majority in the synod.
“But even if it actually is 50/50
on some significant point, I think the Catholic world has to know that,” Pell
said. “I
think no matter what happens, it will be public,” he said.
Pell, however, said that the synod fathers are indeed concerned about the composition of the commission that will draw up the final report and about the synodal procedures. Put simply, the commission is full of wolves.
Meanwhile, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, also a “conservative”, wrote on his blog that those who remain faithful to Catholic teaching are now a new "minority" in danger of
feeling excluded. "They are looking to the Church, and to us, for support
and encouragement, a warm sense of inclusion. We cannot let them down."
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