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Bishops Focus on People, Issues at Peripheries

Immigrants and Refugees, Youth, Racism Among Topics at USCCB Spring Session

By Christopher White, The Tablet’s National Correspondent

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – While no one expected the U.S. Catholic bishops to use the beachfront hotel meeting site for their bi-annual meeting as a time for sunbathing and relaxation, few had predicted that this week’s gathering would gain such national attention.

Archbishop Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States, New Orleans Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond, and Los Angeles Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, vice president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, process into St. Pius X Catholic Church to concelebrate Mass June 13 during the bishops’ annual spring assembly in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Photo: Catholic News Service/Bob Roller)

But when Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, head of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), kicked off the first session with a strong rebuke to Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ decision not to allow women fleeing domestic violence to seek asylum in the U.S., much of the country took notice.

Yet, while the meeting began with a unified commitment among the bishops that they must serve as a prophetic voice in resisting the Trump administration’s immigration policies, a different tone swept over the meeting when they heard from the voices of young people. In preparation for the October Synod of Bishops from around the world to discuss young people, faith, and vocational discernment, there was widespread recognition that rather than speaking, in order to better understand the needs of the future Church, they must begin with a posture of listening.

Since the November 2016 election, immigration has become the defining issue for the U.S. bishops and support for finding a permanent solution for young undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as minors has brought significant unity among members of the conference.

While a DACA solution has been and will remain the priority for the USCCB, the administration’s recent policy of family separation – denounced by Cardinal DiNardo on Tuesday as “immoral” – has injected new momentum and anger among bishops over the current treatment of migrants.

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn criticized the “restrictionism, somewhat based on racism” of the two immigration proposals that are currently under consideration in Congress. “It’s hard for people to decide what they think about it,” he said. “But in fact that is what we are seeing. This is a crisis situation.”

A Real Sign of Solidarity

In a vigorous discussion on Tuesday, Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, N.J., recommended that the U.S. Bishops lead a delegation to the U.S.-Mexico border to inspect the conditions of migrant detention facilities and as a visible sign of  solidarity with migrants and refugees.

Soon thereafter, Cardinal DiNardo announced that the conference would look into such an initiative. In interviews following the announcement, multiple bishops told The Tablet that they were convinced that the delegation would take place.

During the discussion on immigration, multiple bishops insisted that immigration must be treated as a “life issue,” leading Bishop Edward Weisenburger of Tucson, Ariz., to suggest that the bishops should consider “canonical penalties” for Catholics who oppose immigration reform efforts.

Bishop Oscar Cantú of the diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico, spoke of the success of prayer vigils in front of abortion clinics in his dioceses that recently led to the closing of one facility.

“Visible gestures go a long way,” he said, adding that it was perhaps time that bishops consider prayer vigils in front of federal courthouses over immigration policy.

And in an intervention that spoke to the complexity of the Catholic population in the U.S., Bishop John Stowe of Lexington, Ky., said that the bishops could not neglect the fact that many Catholics work for detention agencies and as border enforcement agents, and that the bishops must provide pastoral support for them, especially as they may seek the need to conscientiously object from deportation orders.

In that same spirit of shaping Catholic consciences, the bishops spent the second day of their meeting engaged in a full-bodied 90-minute discussion on how to move forward with their current Catholic voting guidelines known as “Faithful Citizenship.”

Following a proposal to draft a short letter “to inspire prayer and action regarding public life” and a video that would complement rather than revise the latest version of “Faithful Citizenship,” numerous bishops expressed concern that the current source document fails to adequately reflect the teachings of Pope Francis on issues related to poverty, immigration, and climate change, among others.

Others, such as Bishop DiMarzio, noted that “Faithful Citizenship” was drafted to form consciences and today, consciences are “formed not by us but by the media.” He used the occasion to raise the fact that very few Catholic citizens will read lengthy documents and that the bishops should seek to utilize new media, particularly videos or podcasts, to reach Catholics via a different medium.

In the end, a compromise was reached: a new, short letter will be drafted, along with a video, yet language was added that the new materials would “apply the teachings of Pope Francis to our day.”

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, N.J., listens to a speaker June 13 during the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ annual spring assembly in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Photo: Catholic News Service/Bob Roller)

Listening Over Talking

In his opening remarks, Apostolic Nuncio to the U.S., Archbishop Christophe Pierre, encouraged listening over talking, especially to young people, Hispanics and Latinos, as the Church seeks to be attentive to the needs of those who will define its future.

“Spiritual fatherhood and effective evangelization require listening,” said Archbishop Pierre, as he urged the bishops to give special priority the October Synod in Rome called by Pope Francis to address the needs of young people.

Young people “need to be a priority for the Church in the United States,” he said, adding that they are seeking a “personal, living encounter with Christ … rather than a faith reduced to teaching and moralism.”

Later that day, the bishops turned over the floor to three young people who represented the U.S. in Rome at a meeting this past March in preparation for the Synod: Brother Javier Hansen, who teaches at Cathedral H.S. in El Paso, Texas; Nick Lopez, director of campus ministry for the University of Dallas, Texas; and Katie Prejean-McGrady, a mother and youth minister from the Diocese of Lake Charles, La.

Prejean-McGrady said the preparatory document that came from the March meeting should read as if the bishops were having a cup of coffee with a young person, seeking their honest answers and questions.

Honest Look at the Realities

Lopez said that Pope Francis specifically sought to hear from young people who have left the faith and that they were also invited to participate in the March gathering so that it would not be an echo chamber, but rather, an honest discussion of the realities facing both young people and the Church today.

Following the hour-long conversation, many bishops seemed energized and surprised at what had taken place – some later describing it as “electric” and “galvanizing.”

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia, Pa., head of the Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth, noted that the outcome document of the Synod in October will likely lead to a new apostolic exhortation from Pope Francis and it will be the first magisterial document focused on youth and young adults – a sign of the importance of the Synod process and its conclusion.

While the pre-Synod meeting and the theme of the Synod, in general, has been the subject of scrutiny and skepticism among some Catholics – Catholic commentator Raymond Arroyo asked, “Why are we listening to young people, who really haven’t experienced a lot of life, or God, frankly?” – Prejean-McGrady told The Tablet that she believed the bishops’ response in Florida was a vindication of the involvement of young people in this process.

“I hope that as we addressed the bishops, we proved what Raymond Arroyo said to be wrong,” said Prejean-McGrady. “There are young people that have something to say, who are articulate, and we do have an experience of the Church, and we’re willing to share it, and that the bishops are willing to listen.”

“I think it maybe turned his criticism on its head,” she added. “So many bishops afterwards were asking further questions and wanted contact information, and even their separate conversation after we were done with our piece, showed that they have been thinking.”

While the U.S. bishops will not meet again as a collective body until November, nearly 100 of them are expected to gather in Gaylord, Texas, this coming September for the V Encuentro, a gathering of nearly 3,000 Catholics that will serve as the capstone of a four-year process of discernment and reflection on the U.S. Church’s Hispanic and Latino ministry.

Between now and November, the bishops will also finalize a forthcoming pastoral letter on racism, which is on track for a vote at the November meeting, and follows the approval of a “pastoral response” document for Asian and Pacific Island Catholics during the Florida session – all of which could be described as signs that the U.S. bishops are spending much of their time focused on those on the peripheries or the margins of the Church, rather than those at the center.

As the U.S. bishops debated how to best implement the teachings of Pope Francis in their voting guidelines – revealing lingering tensions both over content and the medium of engagement – they moved from that discussion to a luncheon with refugees, immigrants, and Temporary Protected Status beneficiaries. Some bishops then visited Marjory Stoneman Douglas H.S. in Parkland, Fla., the site of one of the country’s most recent scenes of gun violence, in what could be described as quintessentially Pope Francis-styled gestures.

In his address, Archbishop Pierre reminded the U.S. bishops that Pope Francis has issued three apostolic exhortations, and encouraged the body to embrace the documents and the challenge to be “joyful witnesses” to holiness, which he described as “the lifeblood of the New Evangelization.”

In looking ahead to the Encuentro, the Synod and internal issues facing the country, the archbishop told the bishops that a re-reading of the pope’s words would help in discerning how to best aid their flock in the United States as they seek to overcome its challenges, “and so appreciate what it means to live, by grace, in the freedom of the children of God.”

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