Australia: Second Plenary Council Assembly kicks off in Sydney
By Vatican News staff reporter
The Fifth Plenary Council of Australia is reaching its final stage this week with its second assembly in Sydney running from 4-8 July.
A four-year process
The Council, which is the most important national Catholic gathering in the country since 1937, was convened by the local bishops in 2016 with the aim of renewing the life and mission of the Church in Australia, heeding ĐÓMAP”Œșœ Francisâ invitation to dialogue with society, in the light of the significant changes that have taken place over the past decades, and also of the findings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Sexual Abuse in the Church.
The preparation process began in 2018, with the launch of âDialogue and Listeningâ meetings involving in, a synodal manner, bishops, priests, religious and laypeople, to give a picture of the reality of the Church in Australia today, but also of the concerns and aspirations of Australian Catholics. It was followed in 2019 by a second phase of "Listening and discernment", to identify the issues to be included in the Council's Agenda which has identified six thematic areas, including conversion, prayer, formation, governance, structures and institutions.
Themes discussed
These themes were discussed by a first Assembly which had to be postponed and was subsequently held online due, to the COVID-19 pandemic in October 2021. Delegates listened to victims and survivors of abuse in the Church recalling the âgreat wounds and failures of the Church and the continuing need to discern pathways of true healing and renewalâ.
They also heard from Aboriginal peoples, reaffirming the need for reconciliation with Australian Indigenous communities, as well as the need for justice and for the healing of the land through an âintegral ecology'.
In responding to the questions on the Agenda, the Council Members considered ways of living as Church today, focusing on what it can offer the world on the one hand, and on how the world can inform the ways and structures of the Church, on the other. They reflected on questions of leadership and governance in light of ĐÓMAP”Œșœ Francisâ call for the Church to be more synodal.
A key theme of the Assembly was missionary discipleship as well as the call to âgo outâ to the margins of society. Participants discussed how a missionary Church might connect with those who feel distant from the community of faith. Another highlight of the Assembly was the âcall to conversion and fidelityâ, as well as to âimagination and renewalâ. A recurring theme was also the need for ongoing processes of âecclesial listeningâ which can form and inform how the Church lives out its mission today.
Over 30 Motions
In this second session in Sydney, the 277 Council Members will discuss and vote over 30 Motions contained in a Framework document published early in June resulting from the proposals that emerged in the first assembly.
The gathering was officially launched on Sunday with a 'Welcome to Country' ceremony that included an apology to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander First Nation peoples.
Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB opening the session
At the Councilâs opening session introduced on Monday morning by its president, Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB, delegates were invited to carry âa deep consciousness of who we areâ as the People of God, called to discipleship in the Australian context.
In his address, the prelate acknowledged the failure of the Church to live up to this calling.
The challenge ahead means ensuring âthat when people engage with the Church they experience healing, hope and safety: that they experience the compassion and mercy of Godâ, he said.
Guided by the Holy Spirit
Looking ahead to the deliberations, Archbishop Costelloe also admitted that things may not turn out as people planned.
[ None of us is perfect and none of us I suspect is free from the tendency to presume that the way we see things must be right and must be Godâs way and that therefore those who see things differently must be mistaken or not as wise and full of insight as we are. It is this reality of our giftedness and our frailty, which helps us understand why we must speak boldly, and listen humbly. ]
However âwe should not doubt that the Spirit, in spite of our weakness and frailty, has responded to our prayer over the course of our journey so farâ, he said. âIt is the Holy Spirit" who will take the Council to a ânew placeâ by the end of the week, and âinto a future in which, through Godâs grace, we can be the signs and bearers of Godâs love for all people that the Lord is calling us, as his Church, to be".
In his address, Archbishop Costelloe also welcomed those attending the Council as observers, including Archbishop Charles Balvo, Apostolic Nuncio to Australia; Cardinal Charles Bo SDB, Archbishop of Yangon, Myanmar; Cardinal John Dew, Archbishop of Wellington, New Zealand; and Rev. John Gilmore, President of the National Council of Churches in Australia.
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