International News

Bishops Say Young Want a Sincere, Welcoming Church

By Junno Arocho Esteves

Bishop Mario Enrique Quiros Quiros of Cartago, Costa Rica, holds a prayer booklet as bishops pray at the start of a session of the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith and vocational discernment at the Vatican Oct. 9. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Bishops from Chile and Puerto Rico told the Synod of Bishops that the Church must do more to help young people live out their faith and involve them in the life of the Church rather than leaving them to find guidance elsewhere.

Bishop Moises Atisha Contreras of San Marcos de Arica, Chile, told synod members Oct. 16 that young people have not stopped believing in God, and they continue to search for the transcendent “in other places and experiences.”

“There are studies that indicate an increasing dissatisfaction among young people within the ecclesial institutional experience because it does not respond to their most profound seeking,” Bishop Atisha said.

The 49-year-old Chilean bishop said young people need a sincere accompaniment that gives them a true experience of being loved as they are “without condition, without prejudices and freely.”

Bishop Atisha made several suggestions for how the Church could respond to the needs of young men and women, especially their longing for a Church that is “a place of refuge and care for the excluded.”

A servant church, he said, is a “church that accompanies without persecuting or ‘flattening out’ the expectations of those being accompanied; a sincerely free accompaniment is longed for, where what matters is that each young person encounters the meaning of their existence.”

Efficient Outreach

Bishop Atisha said the Church must find ways to reach out to the places where young people spend their time, especially on social media “where the Gospel message can be placed in an efficient matter.”

“The Church, its pastoral ministry and way of being today,” he added, “is perceived as slow in its response, like a ‘grandmother church,’ that is not in line with the current times and media; with good reason there are complaints since it continues doing the same thing it always has, without reading into what is happening, responding with new methods, or new actions and priorities.”

Also speaking to the synod Oct. 16, Bishop Ruben Gonzalez Medina of Ponce, Puerto Rico, said young Catholics have an “urgent need” to have a “personal and communal encounter” with Christ in the Church.

Speaking on behalf of the Puerto Rican bishops, the bishop offered six concrete proposals to help young people experience a “conscious and committed discernment” that responds to the Gospel message.

Among the proposals was a two-year “missionary discipleship” formation program before the young person receives the sacrament of confirmation.

The program, he said, would allow young people to obtain “an adequate catechesis that lays the foundation and strengthens the gift of faith received at baptism.”