Vatican draws line on women’s ordination and homosexuality in new letter to German bishops
The Vatican has
informed German bishops in writing that the ordination of women and changes in
the Church’s teaching on homosexuality cannot be subjects of discussion in the
upcoming meetings with delegates of the German Synodal Way in Rome.
The letter, dated
Oct. 23, also reminded the bishops of potential disciplinary consequences for
anyone defying the teaching of the Church, reported CNA Deutsch, CNA’s
German-language news partner.
Written by Cardinal
Pietro Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, and addressed to the secretary
general of the German Bishops’ Conference, Beate Gilles, the letter was shared
with all German diocesan bishops.
The document’s
authenticity was verified by CNA Deutsch with the German Bishops’ Conference on
Friday.
The latest in a
growing list of Vatican interventions regarding the German Synodal Way, the
letter was published in full on Nov. 25 by the newspaper Tagespost.
Danger of ‘parallel
initiatives’
German bishops and
representatives of the Roman Curia met in the Vatican in July for discussions
about the German Synodal Way. These talks will continue in January, April, and
July 2024. They are expected to cover ecclesiology, anthropology, morality and
liturgy, and texts of the Synodal Way.
The Vatican’s letter
reminded the German bishops of the Synod on Synodality underway in Rome:
“Considering the course of the German Synodal Way so far, one must first
realize that a universal Synodal Way is currently taking place, convened by the
Holy Father.”
The letter emphasized
that it was “therefore necessary to respect this path of the universal Church
and to avoid the impression that parallel initiatives are underway that are
indifferent to the effort to ‘journey together.’”
Line drawn on women’s
ordination, homosexual acts
In light of the
German Synodal Way resolving to push for the ordination of women, the letter
reminded the German bishops that Pope Francis has repeatedly and “expressly
reaffirmed” what St. John Paul II wrote in Ordinatio Sacerdotalis about the
Church having “no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women.”
While quoting Pope
Francis on the importance of recognizing the role and dignity of women — given
“a woman, Mary, is more important than the bishops,” as the pope said in
Evangelii Gaudium — the letter also warned of “disciplinary consequences” for
those who contravene doctrine, including potential excommunication for
“attempting to ordain a woman,” CNA Deutsch reported.
Regarding the
Church’s teaching on homosexual acts, Parolin’s letter to the German bishops
said this was “another issue on which a local Church has no possibility of
taking a different view.”
The letter
elaborated: “For even if one recognized that from a subjective point of view
there may be various factors that call on us not to judge people, this in no
way changes the evaluation of the objective morality of these acts.”
The Vatican’s note
also referenced Pope Francis’ 2019 letter to Catholics in Germany. In it, the
pope cautioned against “the great sin of worldliness and of the
anti-evangelical worldly spirit.”
In January, Pope
Francis was more explicit, decrying the German Synodal Way as “elitist” and
“neither helpful nor serious.”
More recently, in a
letter dated Nov. 10, the pope again expressed deep concerns about the German
Synodal Way. He warned that steps being taken by this local Church segment
threaten to diverge from the universal Church’s path, especially the Germans’
push to establish a permanent “Synodal Council,” a mix of laity and bishops to
govern the Catholic Church in Germany.
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