On Popes and Synod Majorities

Rocco just pointed out something interesting andย directly relevant to questions of what the synod might decide and what the pope might do with that and what collegiality means.

At the synod on the Word of God back in 2008, no less than 80% of the synod fathers favored opening the instituted ministry of lectors to women. (It’s a bit complicated: women can read at Mass, but they can’t be instituted in the official ministry.)

And thenย the synod proposalย went to Pope Benedict … who did nothing with it.

 

 

Anthony Ruff, OSB

Fr. Anthony Ruff, OSB, is a monk of St. John's Abbey. He teaches liturgy, liturgical music, and Gregorian chant at St. John's University School of Theology-Seminary. He is widely published and frequently presents across the country on liturgy and music. He is the author of Sacred Music and Liturgical Reform: Treasures and Transformations, and of Responsorial Psalms for Weekday Mass: Advent, Christmas, Lent, Easter. He does priestly ministry at the neighboring community of Benedictine sisters in St. Joseph.

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3 responses to “On Popes and Synod Majorities”

  1. And then the synod proposal went to Pope Benedict โ€ฆ who did nothing with it.

    Popular history also recalls Good Pope Paul 6 received extraordinary consultation before the promulgation of Humanae vitae and chose to not only distance himself from that, but revised its contents in accord with the magisterial pronouncements. IIRC.

  2. Felipe Gasper

    Thereโ€™s also a theory that Bl. Paul VI purposely โ€œstacked the deckโ€ in the committee to (re)consider contraception less for the โ€œvoteโ€ and more to ensure the best possible favorable argumentโ€”a โ€œdevilโ€™s advocateโ€, if you will.

    I wonder if the beatification of Paul VI at the end of the โ€œsynodal goings-onโ€ last year was symbolic: โ€œsay what you want, write what you want, but this same thing can very easily still happen.โ€

  3. Todd Orbitz

    It’s true that these synods are only advisory – and the Holy Father always makes the final call. However, they have the real possibility of dividing the Church.

    The issue of instituted lectors (whom virtually no Catholic in the pew knows or cares about because we generally just appoint them regarless of sex) of course seems confined to the seminarians for the most part. But this is largely an irrelevant issue to dividing the Church because it is tangential to doctrine, and Paul VI made it clear that it is NOT an ordination to any minor orders.

    Other issues do touch on Catholic doctrine however – and some of those really could divide the Church.

    Of course, some on both sides think this is a good thing and want that to occur.


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