Feb 25, 2021
Believing as I do that synodality holds out much promise for the Church, I have watched with growing dismay--shared with many others--as a German concoction called the "Synodal Path" lurched erratically forward during the last couple of years. Now, with a key document of that strange enterprise in hand, I conclude that this particular "path" is a one-way road to disaster.
As in several other churches, synods have existed in the Catholic Church for a long time. Diocesan synods are fairly common today. Since Vatican Council II, a Synod of Bishops has been part of the Vatican structure, with an assembly scheduled late next year on the subject of synodality. And Pope Francis for some time has been talking up the idea of a "synodal Church."
But the Germans' Synodal Path is something else. The glaring faults of this joint project of the German bishops' conference and a lay group called the Central Committee of German Catholics are on full display in a document on "power" in the Church that appears to represent a semi-final stage in the deliberative process.
Dated January 22 of this year and marked "only for members of the synodal assembly," the 38-page single-spaced document carries the names of Bishop Franz-Josef Overbeck of Essen, representing the bishops' conference, and Dr. Claudia Luecking-Michel, vice president of the Committee of German Catholics. Bishop Overbeck is on record elsewhere approving of same-sex marriage and women priests. Dr. Luecking-Michel is a longtime Church activist and a former member of the German parliament, the Bundestag.