Today, the Vatican released the latest working document for the Synod on Synodality. This document, known as the Instrumentum Laboris, will guide deliberations at the Synod’s final General Assembly in Rome this October. This week, Bondings 2.0 will provide ongoing coverage about the document and its reception, beginning with the following statement.
A statement from Francis DeBernardo, New Ways Ministry’s Executive Director:
Even without specific mention of LGBTQ+ issues, the latest working document for the Synod on Synodality opens the door for greater inclusion in the Catholic Church, if Catholics commit to living its vision.
Instead of providing answers to the many immediate, practical questions raised by Catholics in the last three years, the working document focuses on methods and processes the Church must employ to better discern those answers through the participation of all. If this approach is sincerely enacted, especially by Church leaders, LGBTQ+ equality will be realized.
Why is there promise? The working document points to a church of dialogue—with the People of God in their entirety, along with the scientific community, and responsive to local contexts and cultures. Vatican II sought such dialogue, but the Church had never established guidance and methods to facilitate such openness and participation.
The new document calls for practical ways for church members to be in dialogue and journey together, such as emphasis on listening and consultation, formation of more collaborative members of the clergy, attention to a community’s context and place, allowance for diversity of practices in a unified global church, and openness to insights from science. If all of these reforms are carried out, a renewed church with greater justice and equality for LGBTQ+ people will emerge.
The Synod’s General Assembly in October 2024 is a moment to live out such reforms. The conversations there must continue to raise up Catholics’ insistent and repeated desire for a broader welcome to LGBTQ+ people. Questions about providing appropriate pastoral ministry, erasing harmful language from church documents, and revising church teaching to provide LGBTQ+ people with full equality in the church and access to all the sacraments need urgent attention. They are a litmus test for how the church can live synodally.
Such reforms can provide “new wineskins” for the church, but, as the Gospel warns, these new wineskins cannot be filled with old wine, or they will burst (Luke 5:37-39). Delegates to the assembly must speak boldly and insistently about the experiences and hopes of Catholic LGBTQ+ people, finding creative ways to discuss gender and sexuality issues within the given framework. The Catholic faithful have been praying for such changes over the past five decades—and with renewed fervor particularly during the synodal process—and they expect to see at least some movement in a positive direction. Change may not come swiftly, but today there is further hope that change will happen.
Resolving the impasse on LGBTQ+ issues benefits more than just one marginalized community. For many Catholics, the credibility and sustainability of this synodal process is tied to whether this October’s assembly avoids the disastrous approach to LGBTQ+ issues at last year’s assembly. As the working document states, “When the members of the Church allow themselves to be led by the Spirit of the Lord to horizons that they had not previously glimpsed, they experience immeasurable joy.” Hopefully, the Synod on Synodality will help the entire People of God move to the horizon of justice and equality for LGBTQ+ people where there is certainly immeasurable joy.
—Francis DeBernardo, New Ways Ministry, July 9, 2024
In preparing the working document, the voices of LGBTQ+ Catholics and allies like you were heard at the Vatican. New Ways Ministry submitted a synod report based on spiritual conversations held this spring to the General Secretariat of the Synod and other church leaders. The report recognized “the new and renewed ways that LGBTQ+ Catholics and allies have once again answered Pope Francis’ invitation to journey together on the synodal path” and found a “persistent LGBTQ+ hope for the synod.” You can read and share the report by clicking here.