A First Look at Amazon Special Synod
Analysis of Fr. Rossano Sala, SDB
(ANS – Rome – October 30) – A few days after
the closure of the Synod of Bishops on the Pan-Amazon region, Fr. Rossano Sala,
SDB, who participated in the Synod at the invitation of the Holy Father,
presented an analysis of this important ecclesial appointment.
The cry of the poor and of the earth
Last Sunday at the Angelus, Pope Francis said that “the cry of
the poor, together with that of the earth, reached us from the Amazon.” In my
soul, the force of several interventions of individual synod fathers who
brought us the cry of the poor and of the earth have remained impressed;
together, I am very grateful for the wealth of work done in the small
discussion group to which I belonged; Pope Francis’s words were edifying at
some moments, because he pushed us to deal with what’s essential.
A combination of the last two synods
It is natural for me to observe the two synods in which I took
part: the synod on young people and, this year, the Synod on the Amazon. The
first was “ordinary”; the second “special.” In the first I was special secretary,
hence engaged from the beginning of the process and a protagonist in writing
the Final Document; in the second I was a “simple” Synod Father. In the
first, there were young auditors, and their voice was strong, lively, and
purposeful; in the second, there were indigenous auditors, women, and community
animators who brought the concreteness of their faith experience.
I realized with increasingly more strength that the problems of
all are the problems of each and that every small part of the Church is a
fragment that refers to the whole.
The two lungs of this Synod
As in the body we have two lungs to breathe with; even in the
Synod on the Amazon we had two lungs. The first lung is called Evangelii
gaudium, a document that marks the missionary turning point that Pope
Francis is giving to the whole life of the Church. It is a matter of
understanding that mission is the life of the Church and that the Church
herself exists to evangelize. The second lung is called Laudato sì, and
we know that this document seeks to make everyone aware of the really critical
situation of our mother earth in these first decades of the third millennium.
Indeed, the Final Document of the Synod starts from the concept
of “integral conversion” and then develops it in the following four chapters:
at the pastoral, cultural, ecological, and synod
levels.
Generate processes rather than occupy spaces
We know that the Synod is a “walking together,” not a “deciding
together.” Then the Pope, in full freedom, decides which parts to adopt and
indicates how to proceed, concluding the discernment and re-launching it from
the operational point of view.
Knowing this is important to overcome the sterile polemics that
fill newspaper headlines. Beyond the proposals and suggestions contained in the
Final Document, it’s important to recognize that this Synod has not really
ended, but has inaugurated processes that will necessarily have to continue.
The promised land is always before us, and only by walking
together can we reach it. This thought will also be good for the Salesian
Family, called to assume synodality and discernment as a concrete style of
living and working together for years to come.
The complete text of Fr. Sala’s
reflection is available in the Italian version of the in-depth study.
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