Pope announces a second session for Synod of Bishops assembly: now to be held Oct. 2023 and Oct. 2024

Pope Francis waves to the crowd as he leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican Oct. 16, 2022. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service

[Vatican City – CNS] – Saying he did not want to rush the process of discerning how the Holy Spirit is calling the church to grow in synodality, Pope Francis announced that the next assembly of the Synod of Bishops would take place in two sessions.

The Synod assembly, with mostly bishops as voting members, will meet Oct. 4-29, 2023, as previously announced, the pope said, but the assembly will have a second session in October 2024 as well.

Pope Francis made the announcement Oct. 16 at the end of his Angelus address. He had met Oct. 14 with the Synod leadership.

Pope Francis poses for a photo with leaders of the Synod of Bishops’ general secretariat in the library of the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican Oct. 14, 2022. Pictured with the pontiff are Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich of Luxembourg, relator general; Jesuit Father Giacomo Costa, consultant; Cardinal Mario Grech, secretary-general; Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín, undersecretary; and Xavière Missionary Sister Nathalie Becquart, undersecretary. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

The General Secretariat of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops announced Oct. 17 that the following Bishops will represent this Episcopal Conference at the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the theme of Synodality:

Representing the English Sector
The Most Rev. J. Michael Miller, C.S.B., Archbishop of Vancouver (first delegate)
The Most Rev. William T. McGrattan, Bishop of Calgary and CCCB Vice President (second delegate)
The Most Rev. Daniel Miehm, Bishop of Peterborough (substitute)

Representing the French Sector
The Most Rev. Marc Pelchat, Auxiliary Bishop of Quebec (first delegate)
The Most Rev. Raymond Poisson, Bishop of Saint-Jérôme-Mont-Laurier and CCCB President (second delegate)
The Most Rev. Alain Faubert, Auxiliary Bishop of Montreal (substitute)

The pope and local bishops kicked off the listening and discernment process for the “Synod on Synodality” in October 2021, and by November the synod secretariat is expected to release a working document for continental assemblies.

With 112 of the 114 bishops’ conference in the world having sent in a synthesis of what emerged in the listening sessions in their countries, Pope Francis said that “the fruits of the synodal process underway are many, but so that they might come to full maturity, it is necessary not to be in a rush.”

“To have a more relaxed period of discernment,” the pope announced, “I have established that this synodal assembly will take place in two sessions” rather than the one originally planned.

“I trust that this decision will promote the understanding of synodality as a constitutive dimension of the church and help everyone to live it as the journey of brothers and sisters who proclaim the joy of the Gospel,” Pope Francis told thousands of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the Sunday Angelus prayer Oct. 16, 2022.

Related:  Canadian Synod national report – solutions sought for ‘Church on the move’

Related: Canadian national Synod synthesis by the CCCB – ENGLISH  /  FRENCH

Related: Regional Synod synthesis by the Association of Western Catholic Bishops – ENGLISH  /  FRENCH

Related: Diocesan Synod synthesis for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saskatoon – PDF

The website of the synod secretariat describes synodality as a style seen in the church’s life and mission that reflects its nature as “the people of God journeying together and gathering in assembly, summoned by the Lord Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit to proclaim the Gospel.”

While it does not imply everyone has a vote on issues facing the church, it does mean that all the members of the church — ordained or lay — have a responsibility to contribute to the church’s mission and to pray, offer suggestions and join in discerning the voice of the Holy Spirit.

A statement from the synod secretariat Oct. 16 said Pope Francis’ decision to add a second assembly “stems from the desire that the theme of a ‘synodal church,’ because of its breadth and importance, might be the subject of prolonged discernment not only by the members of the synodal assembly, but by the whole church.”

Although it did not feature the same widespread, grassroots listening sessions, the deliberations of the Synod of Bishops on challenges and joys facing families also met in two sessions. First, Pope Francis convoked in 2014 an “extraordinary general assembly” on “the pastoral challenges of the family in the context of evangelization.” Then, using the 2014 gathering’s final report as an outline, the ordinary general assembly of the Synod of Bishops met in 2015 to look at “the vocation and mission of the family in the church and contemporary world.”

Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, then secretary-general of the synod, wrote to bishops’ conferences at the time explaining that, “the two synodal assemblies, sharing the same topic of the family, become part of a single synodal process, which includes not only the two celebrative phases but also the intervening time between synods, a time to reflect on the reaction to the first synod and to make a thorough theological examination of the church’s pastoral activity in light of the succeeding one.”

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