Bishops gathered at the Synod of the New Evangelization in 2012.
For those of us who covered a Synod of Bishops at the Vatican during the John Paul II and Benedict years, there was always a slightly surreal “Emperor has no clothes” dynamic about the experience.
An all-star cast of bishops from around the world would gather in Rome for a month to debate some critical issue, often pouring considerable time and effort into their speeches, a handful of which were memorable. (The late Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini’s “I have a dream” speech at the 1999 Synod for Europe, for instance, still makes the rounds.) Working groups would assiduously go over the final propositions, which for a long time were considered a state secret – making their inevitable leak 24 hours later a cherished guilty pleasure.
Reporters would describe the synod’s fault lines, document the push for compromise, and speculate about the final result, sometimes giving the impression that we were covering the Congress of Vienna.
In other words, everybody acted as if the synod mattered. The unspoken truth, however, was that all the cards were in the hands of the pope, and in most cases the big-picture decisions were already made.
When John Paul II used to attend sessions of the synod, he would sit in the front and read his breviary, the book of daily prayers for Catholic priests. Wags would quip it wasn’t actually a breviary but the final conclusions of the synod, which had already been written.
To be fair, the Synod of Bishops has always been a fascinating window on the realities of Catholic life around the world, as bishops from Africa, or Asia, or the Middle East, had a chance to explain just how different their challenges and priorities often are.
In that sense, as the Rev. Tom Rosica puts it, the synod is like an “MRI” into the global church. (Rosica has handled English-language media for several synods.) From personal experience, I’ve long noted a difference between bishops who have been to a synod and those who haven’t, because the former tend to think more globally.
To be fair, too, both John Paul II and Benedict XVI took synods seriously, genuinely wanting to hear what bishops had to say.
Still, the impression of high drama was always a little fake, because everyone knew that no synod was ever going to alter Catholic teaching or practice unless the pope wanted it to, and in that case he didn’t really need a synod to do it.
All of which brings us to the Oct. 5-19 Synod of Bishops on the family, the first edition of the synod in the Francis era. It looms as the biggest Vatican story of the fall, in part because for the first time in recent memory, something may actually hinge on the result.
The novelty is both substantive and procedural.
Substantively, perhaps the single most burning question facing the bishops is whether Catholics who divorce and remarry without obtaining an annulment, a declaration from a church court that their first union was invalid, should be able to take Communion at Mass and receive the other sacraments of the Church.