Pope Francis meeting participants in the conference hosted by the Vatican Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life on lay co-responsibility. (Vatican Media)
By Lisa Zengarini
Feb 20 2023
Pope Francis addresses the presidents and representatives of Episcopal Commissions for the Laity participating in the Conference “Pastors and lay faithful called to go forward together” and urges them to promote lay co-responsibility in their Churches in a spirit of synodality.
For the Church to carry out its mission of proclaiming the merciful love of God effectively “emphasis must be placed on unity and not on separation” between clergy and laypeople, Pope Francis told participants in a conference hosted by the Vatican Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life on lay co-responsibility.
“The path that God is showing to the Church is precisely that of living communion and walking together more intensely and more concretely. He invites you to overcome the ways of acting independently”, the Pope said on Saturday as he addressed 200 presidents and representatives of Episcopal Commissions for the Laity who gathered this week in the Vatican to discuss how to improve the collaboration among laity, priests and consecrated persons in the service of the Church.
Titled “Pastors and lay faithful called to go forward together”, the Conference was aimed at exploring the nature and foundation of lay co-responsibility in the Church also in light of the ongoing synodal process on synodality.
The Church as a body with shared responsibilities in the mission
In his address, Pope Francis insisted on the missionary dimension of synodality, in which all baptized in the Church, as one body and one People of God united by one faith in Christ, share their responsibilities like Jesus’s disciples did. “Indeed”, he said “sharing the mission brings pastors and laity closer together, creates a communion of intentions, manifests the complementarity of the different charisms and therefore arouses in everyone the desire to journey together”.
A missionary Church
This missionary dimension, continued the Pope, must be at the center of the formation of the laity, “which doesn’t have to be scholastic, limited to theoretical ideas”, because this leads to ideologies, “but also practical”, involving the faithful in various forms of witness, which brings them closer other people.
One People of God
Pope Francis went on to recall that valuing lay people in the Church is not the result of some “theological novelty”, or a “functional” solution for the shortage of priests, or worse a sort of “revenge” for those who have been put aside in the past. “Rather, it is based on a correct vision of the Church: that is of the Church as the People of God, of which the laity are full members together with ordained ministers.”
The laity live in the world and are part of the People of God
“In this one People of God, which is the Church, the fundamental element is belonging to Christ”, not a specific status , Pope Francis stressed. “In this unitary vision of the Church, where we are above all Christians, the laity live in the world and at the same time are part of the People of God“, he said, recalling Lumen Gentium, the Second Vatican Council Constitution on the Church, and the Puebla Document containing the renderings of the Third General Conference of Latin American Bishops in 1979.
Pope Francis further noted that, although the laity are mainly called to live their mission in the secular realities in which they are immersed, this does not exclude that they also have the “skills, charisms and competences to contribute to the life of the Church”: for example, in liturgical animation, catechesis , formation, in government structures and the administration of Church goods. This is why, he said, it is important for pastors to be trained, right from the seminary, “in a daily and ordinary collaboration with the laity”.
No to clericalism
Bringing his address to an end, Pope Francis therefore insisted on the crucial importance of promoting the role of lay people , and above all women, in the Church involving them in the various fields of pastoral care and apostolate, and in the decision making processes, and entrusting them with resposibilities . “This co-responsibility lived between lay people and pastors – he said – will make it possible to overcome dichotomies, fears and mutual mistrust”.