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VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Even on the ninth day of the 25-day-long Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment, two bishops said they already had ideas for things they would want to start in their ministries.
Auxiliary Bishop Robert E. Barron of Los Angeles told reporters Oct. 12 that the presence and input of 34 young adults at the synod has convinced him of the importance of having regular structures for listening to young people and seeking their opinion.
Auxiliary Bishop Everardus de Jong of Roermond, Netherlands, said he was so struck by the personal testimony of Safa al Abbia, a 26-year-old Chaldean Catholic dentist from Iraq, that he vowed to do more in his diocese to raise awareness of and help persecuted Christians. “Global solidarity is part of the faith,” he said.
Both bishops also said the 30 or so women at the synod are being heard and offering important insights, but neither could address the question of why, when two religious brothers are voting members of the synod, no religious sisters are.
“We listen to women, but voting is not so much about having power or steering roles” since the synod is an advisory body to the pope, Bishop de Jong said. “This is a bishops’ synod, we have to listen to women, but there are no women bishops. We don’t have women cardinals. We have to live with that.”
Bishop Barron said he only could echo what Bishop de Jong said in noting it is a bishops’ synod. “Are women present, especially young women? Absolutely. Are they speaking? Absolutely. Are they present around the tables in the small groups? Absolutely.”
Sister Mina Kwon, a member of the Sisters of St. Paul of Chartres from South Korea, who repeated to journalists what she had told the synod that young people are put off by “inequality and exclusion,” said, “the situation is improving.”
Members of the synod – bishops, observers and experts – began meeting in small groups Oct. 12 to discuss what they had heard about spiritual guidance and vocational discernment.
Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, major archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, had told the synod that a survey of young Ukrainian Catholics completed for the synod already had led him to action. After many young people – both in Ukraine and abroad – said they wanted help in learning to pray, the archbishop said he asked every Ukrainian Catholic monastery to open its doors and every bishop to open his residence to young people at prayer times.
“Entire generations of young people have grown up never seeing their father or mother pray and never having prayed at home,” he told the synod.
Some said they had attended a divine liturgy in a church, “but they never had seen a priest pray alone or pray with them.”
Young people, he said, have learned to pray on pilgrimages or at prayer events organized by the France-based Taize community, which “is becoming a center of prayer for young people on a global level and is forming a youth culture of prayer.”
Cardinal Gerald Lacroix of Quebec reminded the synod, “Our church is full of inspiring models of young people who have left a mark of ‘physical vigor, strength of spirit and courage to risk.’ As Mark Twain would have said, ‘They did it because they did not know it was impossible.’”