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From: Astrid Lobo Gajiwala <asklo...@gmail.com>



http://americamagazine.org/content/dispatches/thirteen-cardinals-including-di-nardo-and-dolan-challenged-popes-decisions-synod


Thirteen cardinals—including Cardinals Di Nardo and Dolan—sent a letter to Pope 
Francis on the opening day of the Synod on the Family in which they challenged 
or raised serious objections to decisions taken or approved by him regarding 
the organization and the conduct of the synod. 
In it, they expressed “concerns” in relation to two important aspects of the 
synod, which they claim are shared by other synod fathers: the basic working 
document or “Instrumentum Laboris,” which they consider inadequate, and the 
synod procedures which they allege “lead to a predetermined conclusion.”
The letter was published in Rome one week after it was given to the pope, by 
Sandro Magister, a well-known writer on Vatican affairs, who is not much in 
sympathy with the direction of this pontificate, and who was suspended from the 
Holy See’s press office for his involvement in breaking the Vatican embargo on 
the pope’s encyclical, "Laudato Si'." 
On Oct. 12,  Magister published the text of the letter and the names of 13 
cardinals who he claimed had signed the letter. Within hours of publication, 
however, four of those publicly denied signing the letter: Cardinals Erdo 
(Hungary), Piacenza (Italy) Scola (Italy) and Vingt-Trois (France). Federico 
Lombardi, S.J., the director of the Holy See Press Office, would not comment on 
the letter.    America has learned from informed sources that 13 cardinals did 
indeed sign the letter, including four not named on Magister’s list:  Di Nardo 
(United States), Njue (Kenya), Rivera (Mexico) and Sgreccia (Italy). The full 
list of signatories is given below.  
In their letter, the cardinals wrote that some consider “the synodal 
procedures” as “lacking openness and genuine collegiality.” They charged that 
“the absence of propositions and their related discussions and voting seems to 
discourage open debate” and called for the restoration of the system of 
“crafting of propositions to be voted on by the entire synod.” They also stated 
that “voting on a final document comes too late in the process for a full 
review and serious adjustment of the text.”
The 13 cardinals, all of whom are synod fathers, challenged the composition of 
the special commission (of 10 members from all continents) set up by the pope 
to draft the final document, and said, “the lack of input by the synod fathers” 
on this “has created considerable unease. Members have been appointed, not 
elected, without consultation.”
They asked that “anyone drafting anything at the level of the small circles 
should be elected, not appointed.”
Please support our journalism. Subscribe now!The cardinals went on to express 
“concern that the new procedures are not true to the traditional spirit and 
purpose of a synod,” and claimed that “a number of fathers feel the new process 
seems designed to facilitate predetermined results on important disputed 
questions.”
“Finally and perhaps most urgently,” they said, “various fathers” have 
expressed “concern that a synod designed to address a vital pastoral matter – 
reinforcing the dignity of marriage and family – may become dominated by the 
theological/doctrinal issue of Communion for the divorced and civilly 
remarried.” 
If this were to be the case, they said, it would “inevitably raise even more 
fundamental issues about how the church, going forward, should interpret and 
apply the Word of God, her doctrines and her disciplines to changes in culture.”
Pope Francis' response to this and other questions came the following morning. 
He spoke after the synod’s secretary-general, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, 
clarified the process. Cardinal Baldisseri recalled that in past synods the 
final report was drafted by three or four members—the relator, special 
secretary and the secretary general with help of others—but in 2014 Francis 
decided to expand the groups. The cardinal stated that those drafting the final 
document were never elected by the synod. He also made clear that the 
moderators and rapporteurs of the language groups are in fact elected by the 
members of those working groups, as established in the procedures for the 
synod; they are not appointed by the secretariat.
Pope Francis confirmed the procedures of the synod when he spoke. He explained 
that the 2014 synod never challenged the church's teaching on marriage and the 
family, and that it is not up for debate at this synod either. He told the 
synod fathers that the three fundamental documents for discusion at this synod 
are the final report of the 2014 synod, plus his own introductory and 
concluding speeches to that assembly. He restated yet again that the synod 
cannot be "reduced" to the single issue of whether divorced and remarried 
Catholics can be admitted to the Eucharist. He concluded by warning the synod 
fathers against giving in to “the hermeneutic of conspiracy” (or conspiracy 
theories), which, he said, “is sociologically weak and spiritually unhelpful.” 
He encouraged them to trust each other, and to engage in “a profound 
discernment to seek to understand what the Lord wants of his church.”List of 
Signatories The names of the 13 signatories are, in alphabetical order:- Carlo 
Caffarra, archbishop of Bologna, Italy, formerly the first president of the 
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family;- Thomas 
C. Collins, archbishop of Toronto, Canada;- Daniel N. Di Nardo, archbishop of 
Galveston-Houston, vice-president of the U.S. Bishops Conference;- Timothy M. 
Dolan, archbishop of New York, United States;- Willem J. Eijk, archbishop of 
Utrecht, Holland;- Gerhard L. Müller, former bishop of Regensburg, Germany, 
since 2012 prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith;- Wilfrid 
Fox Napier, archbishop of Durban, South Africa, president delegate of the synod 
underway as also at the previous session of the synod of October 2014;-  John 
Njue, archbishop of Nairobi, Kenya.                       - George Pell, 
archbishop emeritus of Sydney, Australia, since 2014 prefect in the Vatican of 
the secretariat for the economy;- Norberto Rivera Carrera, archbishop of Mexico 
City, Mexico;- Robert Sarah, former archbishop of Conakry, Guinea, since 2014 
prefect of the congregation for divine worship and the discipline of the 
sacraments;- Elio Sgreccia,  president-emeritus of the Pontifical Academy for 
Life, Vatican City;- Jorge L. Urosa Savino, archbishop of Caracas, Venezuela.





                                          

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