Plenary Council is key moment for church in Australia

By The Catholic Weekly Staff Writers | Catholic News Service

SYDNEY (CNS) — The Second Assembly of Australia’s Plenary Council runs July 3-9. A Plenary Council has wide-ranging power, and Australia has gone through an extensive process to get to this point.

Q. What is the Plenary Council?

A Plenary Council is a gathering of the local church; it has both legislative and governance authority and can pass binding resolutions or decrees.

The fifth Australian Plenary Council has been convoked under canon law and, according to its statutes, “aims to bring to fuller realization within Australia the vision of the Second Vatican Council regarding the nature and mission of the church.”

The Aboriginal Cross stands in front of the lectern for the Book of the Gospels during the opening Mass of the First Assembly of the Plenary Council at St. Mary’s Cathedral in Perth, Australia, Oct. 3, 2021. The Second Assembly convenes July 3-9, 2022, in Sydney. (CNS photo/Ron Tan, courtesy Archdiocese of Perth)

Q. What has happened to date?

The Plenary Council has unfolded in a number of phases. The first phase, “Listening and Dialogue,” was an open listening exercise in which the plenary asked Catholics, “What do you think God is asking of us in Australia at this time?”

Submissions were received from 12,758 individuals and 4,699 groups. People aged 50 or over made up 44% of individual submissions, while under-25s made up 14%.

Around 50% of participants in this first phase were female, 30% were male and the remainder did not state their sex.

The second phase took this material and transformed it into the “national themes for discernment” through further writing and discernment groups, and from there transformed it into an “Instrumentum Laboris,” or working document.

The first assembly was held Oct. 3-10, 2021. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was held virtually.

The key themes discussed at the first assembly were conversion, prayer, structures, institutions, formation and governance. Of particular importance was the discussion of “going to the peripheries” and listening to those hurt by the church.

The discussion was at times quite vigorous, as the closing statement of the first assembly noted: “There is no shortage of passion and charisms among the community of believers.”

The drafting committee was tasked with transforming the first assembly proposals from small groups and individuals into motions to be voted on at the second assembly. The final Framework for Motions was released in May.

Q. How will the second assembly work?

The second assembly opens with Mass at the shrine of St. Mary MacKillop in North Sydney July 3. The closing Mass will take place July 9.

Each day, the 277 members will gather at St. Mary’s Cathedral College Hall to debate and vote on each of the motions in the framework.

All members who aren’t bishops get a nonbinding consultative vote on motions, which pass with a two-thirds majority. An approved motion is then referred to the bishops for a decisive vote the following morning, also on a two-thirds majority. The final decrees of the Plenary Council will be sent to Rome for review and approval before being published.

Q. Who participates in the Plenary Council?

The president of the Plenary Council is Archbishop Timothy Costelloe of Perth, president of the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference. The vice president is Bishop Shane Mackinlay of Sandhurst.

Each diocese has nominated members to represent it at the Plenary Council. There are also steering committee support staff, theological advisers, canon lawyers and others to support the plenary’s work.

Members of Catholic Religious Australia, the church’s seminaries and universities, Catholic agencies like St. Vincent de Paul, and representatives from the Eastern Catholic churches and ecclesial movements are present.

Q. What are the issues?

The Framework for Motions has around 30 motions, the full text of which are available on the Plenary Council website, https://plenarycouncil.catholic.org.au/.

Key issues include an apology for victims of child abuse; the promotion of women; moves to incorporate First Nations Catholics more into the life of the church and to endorse the Uluru Statement from the Heart; and an awareness of the need for ecological conversion.

Further motions propose to introduce a “ministry of preaching” for laypeople at Mass, increase the use of the communal “third rite” of reconciliation, and establish new governance structures.

Q. What does synodality mean?

The term synodality comes from Greek words meaning “to walk together” and signals a shift from a “top-down” church to one in which laypeople and clergy are co-responsible.

Listening, dialogue, attentiveness to the “signs of the times,” spiritual discernment and openness to those on the margins are some of the hallmarks of the synodal approach.

Author: Catholic News Service

Catholic News Service is the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ news and information service.

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