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Tuesday, 01 November 2022 23:04

Groups invited to prepare for next phase of Synod on Synodality

The National Centre for Pastoral Research is inviting groups of seven to 10 people to express their interest in participating in the next round of consultation for the global Synod of Bishops on Synodality.
 
The Document for the Continental Stage, draws content provided in national syntheses from around the world, as well as contributions from Eastern Churches, religious institutes, lay movements and other groups, has recently been published.
 
Groups – using the working document and assisted by a reflection guide being produced by the national Synod of Bishops committee to support prayer, discernment and response – will be able to gather and share their feedback through an online portal.
 
National Centre for Pastoral Research director, Trudy Dantis said the opportunity for groups to contribute during the next phase will help the global process that still has about two years to run.
 
“With Pope Francis recently announcing that the Synod on Synodality will be comprised of two sessions – one in October 2023 and a second a year later – there exists a chance for even deeper prayer and reflection,” Dr Dantis said.
 
“The contributions that Australian groups will work on in the weeks after the Document for the Continental Stage is published form part of the ongoing preparations for the meeting of bishops from Oceania, which will take place in February next year.”
 
Those continental gatherings will then provide responses to the Secretariat for the Synod of Bishops as it prepares the instrumentum laboris, or working document, for the Synod assemblies.
 
People wishing to coordinate groups for discernment on the Document for the Continental Stage should email the NCPR’s Stephen Reid (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) to express interest in coordinating a group that meets the following criteria:
 
• Groups should be comprised of a mix of clergy, laity and religious.
• Group members are expected to be aware of Church matters at the diocesan and national level.
• Group members should be able to read and reflect prayerfully on the document and have experience doing so with similar documents.
 
“We had thousands of people participate in the diocesan consultations, which enriched our national data,” Dr Dantis said.
 
“We look forward to once again drawing on the People of God to see how our Australian lived experience might support the Synod of Bishops journey. This is seen as a ‘deepening’ of what has taken place so far, not a replication in any way.”
 
The National Centre for Pastoral Research will host an online training session for group coordinators once the Document for the Continental Stage has been published.
 
Find out more about the Synod of Bishops at: www.catholic.org.au/synodalchurch