FOR RELEASE FEBRARY 20, 2014
International Church Reform Groups Seek Meeting with Pope Francis
Groups Send Letter
Urging Increase in Women’s Leadership, Access to Communion
Contact: Anthony
Padovano, 973-539-8732
Linda Pinto, 570-296-5326
As the
first anniversary of Pope Francis’ election approaches, leaders of 52
organizations from the United States, Europe, and Asia working towards renewal
and reform in the Catholic Church have sent a letter to the Pope. They are
urging him to take immediate steps to appoint more women to Church leadership
positions, and to stop the practice of banning people from Communion. They have
also asked the pontiff to meet with them, saying they represent “millions of
Catholics around the world who are deeply committed to our Church, but hope for
changes on issues of governance and care.”
They
ask the Pope to appoint women to positions of policy and pastoral leadership,
including as heads of offices in the Vatican Curia. They said this was “for the
good of God’s people,” and that there were many Church leadership positions
where “the only sacramental qualification for service is Baptism.”
They
also told the Pope, “we hope to experience an end to the use of Communion as a
reward for doctrinal orthodoxy.” They said Communion, also known as Eucharist,
should “offer love and healing to Catholics who experience alienation and
rejection. Communion gives a place at the table to those who have been made to
feel they were not worthy. This includes many who have felt alienated from our
Church and its sacramental life for many years, including divorced and
remarried Catholics, Catholics in same-sex relationships, and others.”
The
groups said that their proposals “are free of theological complexity and are
readily able to be advanced without a break with what some might see as
imperative continuity with former teachings.”
Many
of the organizations represented by the letter’s signers work on a wide variety
of reform issues (www.catholic-organizations-for-renewal.org).
In addition, three national associations of priests are among the signatories.
Representatives
said that Pope Francis has inspired “abundant hope” with his vision of the
Church, and asked him to pray for them. They said they were praying for the
Pope’s health and ministry.
A
copy of the letter was also sent to Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal-elect
Pietro Parolin, Papal Nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Carlo Maria
Vigano, and Member of the Team of Consulters to Pope Franics, Cardinal Sean
Patrick O’Malley.
February 14, 2014
Bishop Francis,
We share with people throughout
the world the great joy of your election to the Chair of Peter and the abundant
hope engendered by your vision for our Church.
Of the many issues you have
addressed this first year in your new ministry, two have emerged early and
often in your remarks: the status of women in the Church and the pastoral care
of God’s people. As leaders of a movement of steadfast Catholics, committed to
the best to and for our Church, we offer you reflections that we believe would
bring a greater measure of compassion and courage to the world and to God’s
People. These proposals are free of theological complexity and are readily able
to be advanced without a break with what some might see as imperative
continuity with former teachings.
For the good of God’s people, we feel it vital that there be increased
leadership of women in roles where they would be among our Church’s most influential
policy-makers, and in offices where the only sacramental qualification for
service is Baptism. We urge you to appoint talented, committed women to
positions that recognize the significant pastoral leadership they are already
providing, and as heads of leading curial offices, including the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments, the Sacred Congregation for the Clergy, the
Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic
Life, the Pontifical Council for the Laity, the Pontifical Council for the
Family, and others.
With regard to pastoral care of
God’s people, we hope to experience an end to the use of Communion as a reward
for doctrinal orthodoxy. Communion is a sacrament of love and peace, of mercy
and forgiveness offered by Jesus to all on the night before he died. It does not imply conformity with Church
teachings in all instances and it does not endorse all aspects of moral choice
made by the recipient. It does, however, offer love and healing to Catholics
who experience alienation and rejection. Communion gives a place at the table
to those who have been made to feel they were not worthy. This includes many
who have felt alienated from our Church and its sacramental life for many
years, including divorced and remarried Catholics, Catholics in same-sex
relationships, and others.
Finally, we would welcome the
opportunity to bring our experience as representatives of the millions of
Catholics around the world who are deeply committed to our Church, but hope for
changes on issues of governance and care. We invite you to personal dialogue
with us, and with leaders of similar organizations in other parts of the world.
We pray, Pope Francis, for your
ministry and your health, and ask you to remember us in your prayers, as well.
We look forward to your gracious response, which can be made to Linda Pinto,
Coordinator of Catholic Organizations for Renewal, at pinto.linda@gmail.com or
00-1-570-296-5326.
Yours in Christ,
(see separate list for endorsers
of this letter)
cc: Archbishop Pietro Parolin
Archbishop
Carlo Maria Vigano
Cardinal Sean
Patrick O’Malley
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