From
Newsmax and ain't it interesting?
Vatican Criticized Over Spinning Contentious Debates
Thursday, 09 Oct 2014 08:49 AM
As the Vatican Synod on the Family completed its third day of
discussions Wednesday, concerns were growing that a few key officials in
Holy See are controlling what comes out of the debates, ensuring the
meeting is spun with a liberal bias.
The two week synod, which was called by Pope Francis and runs until Oct.
19, is made up of 250 prelates and experts who are debating a wide
variety of contentious topics regarding marriage, the family and
relationships.
Although assurances have been made by various church officials that
doctrine won’t be changed, there is widespread unease that innovations
in pastoral practice will make it seem that the church’s teachings have
been weakened on such issues as artificial contraception, same-sex
rights and crucial teachings held for two millennia.
The way the Vatican is handling the media during the synod has not
reassured observers, with accusations that the synod administrators are
muzzling and spinning the debate.
For example, they point out that unlike previous synods, full texts of
the discourses will not be published. The reason, according to the synod
organizers, is to “promote a more open dialogue” and speak freely.
“No one really believes this,” one Vatican commentator told me. “It’s a
way of controlling the outcome, and goes completely against Pope
Francis’ wish for greater transparency and openness in the Church.”
Supporters of the new reporting process, however, say it’s very much
consistent with Pope Francis’ approach to debate. “He wants the synod
participants to undergo a process of calm discernment, hearing proposals
without factions developing that could hijack the debate,” another
church commentator told me.
But the restrictions mean that the media only has access to a
generalized summary, and it’s unclear who is saying what and whether one
or more participants might be sharing any particular view.
More seriously, it makes disclosure of the synod's discussions
susceptible to the whims of the few reporting press secretaries and the
Vatican press office, many of whom are known to have liberal leanings.
There’s no knowing what is being filtered out, nor what is being given undue attention.
“It seems bizarre conservative voices aren’t being presented, at least
on an equal basis with others,” said John Smeaton, chief executive of
the UK’s Society for the Protection of Unborn Children. “One has to ask
the question: is it because the truth has a force and power which means
they’re afraid of addressing it?”
So far, the press have been fed much on how participants all seem to
agree that the church should make herself more attractive to the world.
The importance of holding up dogmatic truths or acknowledging that the
church should always be counter-cultural seem to be scarcely raised, if
at all.
During Tuesday’s discussions, there was particular surprise over what
seems to be a unanimous wish to tone down the use of terms such as
“living in sin”, “contraceptive mentality”, and “intrinsically
disordered.”
Even more significant was that the Vatican made no mention of any
criticism of such a controversial proposal from inside the synod hall.
The reason, say supporters of this synod process, is because of a wish
to challenge the status quo and introduce new ideas. Everyone already
knows the church’s stand on these issues, they argue. Not everyone
agrees, however. “They pretend that everybody knows Catholic teaching on
these issues but that’s completely false,” said John Henry Westen,
editor of Lifesite News. “In reality, we’ve had virtual silence on these
issues for 50 years now.”
Quoting a 1986 Vatican letter to bishops on pastoral care of homosexual
persons, Westen recalled the Vatican saying that if, in making an effort
to be caring and pastoral, bishops fail to tell people of the
immorality of this behavior, they’re failing because they’re not giving
them what they need. “It’s the only path to healing, in a physical,
psychological and eternal sense,” he said. “To abandon souls for the
sake of political correctness is insanity.”
Some see this synod as similar to the "Council of the Media" — during
the Second Vatican Council of the 1960s — when the debates were
politicized by the liberal press, making the perception of the council
far different to the intentions of its participants.
But now, critics say, the situation is even worse as the media
manipulation seems to be being conducted by the synod administration
itself. “This had never happened, even in Vatican II,” commented the
traditionalist Catholic blog, Rorate Caeli. “It is as if they took the
media manipulation that happened in Vatican II, decried openly by
Benedict XVI, and made it official policy.”
Others have criticized the communications strategy during this synod as
resembling the media control of a dictatorial regime, or harking back to
a time before the Second Vatican Council when the laity were simply
meant to pray and obey and not be informed.
“It shows a lack of respect for the world’s media,” one source close to the Vatican told me.
The Vatican insists these are early days and the proposals are only
being presented, not yet agreed upon. This is also only one of two
synods to take place on marriage and family life, the next one will be
held a year from now.
But should the perceived one-sided, liberal spin continue during this
synod and beyond, expect the clamor demanding a fairer representation of
the debates to increase.
Edward Pentin began reporting on the Vatican as a correspondent
with Vatican Radio in 2002. He has covered the Pope and the Holy See
for a number of publications, including Newsweek and The Sunday Times.
Read more reports from Edward Pentin
3 comments:
Well, in a way, this is actually good news. Some encouraging things have been trickling out of the Synod lately, and if this article is right, then the actual proceedings of the Synod are going better than we know.
This whole thing is what is called, in military parlance,
a "cluster-you know what."
Lombardi and Rosica.
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