C9 to
meet again in September and draft text on Curia reform is not
available yet
Vatican Insider July 7, 2014 http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/the-vatican/detail/articolo/francesco-francis-francesco-c9-35080/
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the dome of St. Peter's
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During this week’s meeting, the
Council of Cardinals discussed the IOR, the Governorate, the
Secretariat of State and the role of women, lay people and
couples in the Vatican. Procedures for the appointment of
bishops were also discussed.The overall tone of the meeting was
“free, frank and friendly”
The nine cardinals assisting the Pope
with the reform of the Roman Curia and the government of the
universal Church, the “C9” as it is called,
will meet again in September following a four-day meeting,
which ran from Tuesday to today, the fifth since the start of
the pontificate. Other meetings will also be held in December
and February but it is not certain that the February gathering
will give birth to the new apostolic constitution that would
replace the “Pastor Bonus”, the blueprint
for the Vatican’s various
congregations, pontifical councils and offices. The Pope
and his cardinal advisors discussed the role of women, lay
people and married couples in the Roman Curia and of the
Nunciatures, with a focus on the process for the nomination of
bishops. In terms of the IOR, changes are expected in the
Institute’s governance and these will be presented at a
press conference with Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican
Secretary of the Economy, next Wednesday.
The C9 will next meet from 15 to
17 September, from 9 to 11 December and from 9 to 11 February,
the Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi said during a press
briefing. But Fr. Lombardi did not confirm whether the Council
of Cardinals would conclude its work at the last of these
meetings: “It is too premature to say whether it is the
final meeting,” he said. “No drafts have been
produced for a new apostolic constitution,” Fr. Lombardi
said. “We are moving along at a steady pace but more time
is needed” before the Council concludes its work. The
Vatican spokesman denied one journalist’s suggestion that
the work of the C9 is slowing down. The downside of an assembly
that “represents the Church and all its various components
across various continents and throughout the world” is
that meetings cannot “last that long” and the
group’s work “cannot be completed quickly.”
There is no sense of urgency in the process of Church reform but
the Pope is, of course, free to decide to speed things up.
The nine-member Council of Cardinals
started off this week’s meeting by examining the Vatican
Governorate, the Secretariat of State and the IOR. It ended by
focusing on “the role of lay people, married couples and
women” in the Vatican dicasteries that deal with the
laity and the family, Lombardi said. He also mentioned the
possibility of the two Pontifical Councils being merged into
one single dicastery, stressing that the discussion about
“the issue of the laity and the family” focused on
the future “of these bodies, or this body, depending on
how the project unfolds.”
Following an initial screening of the
Vatican dicasteries – Congregations and Pontifical
Councils –the C9 is now looking at each individual
dicastery to try to come up with a solution that may involve
mergers and cutting back on Vatican bureaucracy. Another area
of focus in the C9’s latest meetings (the last work
session takes place this afternoon), were “the nunciatures and their work, and the
procedures for the appointment of bishops,” Fr. Lombardi
said. So far, Apostolic Nunciatures in individual countries
have acted as the Holy See’s peripheral offices for the
pre-selection of bishops from various parts of the world, who
are then chosen by the Vatican Congregation for Bishops and
appointed by the Pope.
During the press briefing, Fr.
Lombardi confirmed that the Council for the Economy, led by the
German cardinal Reinhard Marx, will meet in the Bologna Hall,
in the Vatican Apostolic Palace. The meeting will take place
while Pope Francis is on his visit to the southern Italian
region of Molise.
A press conference is scheduled for
Wednesday and will be attended by Australian cardinal
George Pell, head of the new Secretariat for the Economy, the
Vatican’s economy super-dicastery. Changes are also
expected in the management of the Institute for the Works of
Religion (IOR). A statement recently expressed esteem for the
president of the IOR, Ernst von Freyberg. Meanwhile, the new
Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors will meet
Sunday, with the Archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean
O’Malley. The attendance of six European paedophilia
victims at the Pope’s mass in St. Martha’s House on
Monday morning has been announced but not officially confirmed.
Cardinals O’Malley, Pell and Marx are members of the C9
and so the aim is to make the most of their presence in Rome
that is why the bodies they are members of have tried to squash
in so many meetings over the past few days.
The overall tone of the Pope’s
meetings with his nine advisors was “free, frank and
friendly”, Fr. Lombardi said, quoting the words used by
an Anglophobe cardinal: “There is freedom of expression,
sincerity and cordiality,” the Vatican spokesman said,
adding that “sometimes the English word
“frank” is too strong, “sincere” would
be a faithful translation.” The
Pope participates naturally in the dialogue, promoting a
climate of free expression and the development of dialogue,
without trying to influence others” although “the
Council obviously makes suggestions and then the Pope has the
authority and the freedom to decide.”
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