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| Luigi de Paoli
Noi Siamo Chiesa Via U. Vivaldi, 10 I-00122 Roma Tel.: ++39-(0)6-56 47 06 68 Fax: ++39-(0)6-56 47 06 68 e-mail: luigi.depaoli@eurodatabank.com |
Maureen Fiedler, SL
National Coordinator, Catholics Speak Out P.O.Box 5206 Hyattsville, MD 20782 USA Tel.: ++1-(0)301.699-0042 Fax: ++1-(0)301-864-2182 e-mail: cso@quixote.org |
Dr. Thomas Plankensteiner
Plattform "Wir sind Kirche" Salurner Str. 10 A-6020 Innsbruck Tel.: ++43-(0)512-56 57 66 Fax: ++43-(0)512-56 57 66 e-mail: t.plankensteiner@tirol.com |
Elfriede Harth, Spokesperson
International Movement We Are Church (IMWAC) 28, rue des Etats Généraux F – 78000 VersaillesTel.: ++33-(0)1-39490554 Fax: ++33-(0)1-39490244 e-mail: imwac@aol.com |
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"Now is the acceptable time" (2 Cor. 6) for Catholics throughout the whole world to reflect on what type of leadership, indeed what model of church, we need for the new millennium. The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) invited all of us to read the signs of the times in the light of the gospel. It called our faith community to perpetual renewal. We have tried to be faithful to that call as we examine the life of our church and our need for a Bishop of Rome who can lead our faith community in a "universal agapé," or assembly of charity. The millennium now passing away has been an age of division among Christians. It is our hope that the third millennium will become an age of reconciliation and unity. In this spirit, Pope John Paul II invited all Christians to reflect on the future of the Papacy "…that we may seek - together, of course - the forms in which this ministry [of Peter] may accomplish a service of love recognized by all concerned…to find a way of exercising the primacy which, while in no way renouncing what is essential to its mission, is nonetheless open to a new situation." (Ut Unum Sint, No.95). At the same time, voices within the World Council of Churches are calling all Christian churches to commit themselves in the year 2000 to begin preparation for a Universal Christian Council. We join our voices with these calls, and declare our readiness to renew our faith community in light of the signs of our times, and to dialogue and work with other churches on the basis of equality. To realize these dreams, we offer our reflections on the qualities needed by our age in the next Bishop of Rome. We share our thoughts in the spirit of the woman in the gospel who mixed yeast with flour so that her bread might expand and nourish a community. This is our "yeast."
We would be greatly helped in renewing our church by a leader who reads the "signs of the times" in concert with the people, a collaborative Bishop of Rome who can listen as well as preach, and dialogue as well as teach. We need a leader who truly embraces and consults the sensus fidelium (sense of the faithful). We especially need a leader who recognizes the awakening of women's consciousness as a significant "sign of our times." Women, more than half of our church, have grown conscious of their dignity and equality with men. They are calling our faith community to respect and implement that equality in its own life. We need a Bishop of Rome who respects the differences among us as well as challenges us to live the gospel. We need a Pope who distinguishes between his pastoral ministry as the Bishop of Rome, and the ministry of Peter in which he is in dialogue with the universal church. As Bishop of Rome, he serves the faithful of Rome as any bishop serves a diocese. He would retire at the age established for all bishops. As president of the worldwide agapé, he would act as a brother bishop who invites the world's bishops to share leadership with him and with other members of the People of God who are called forth by the faithful. In that spirit, he would reform the Curia (papal cabinet) so that it might serve, rather than dominate, other bishops and the church universal. But most of all, we need a Bishop of Rome and a Universal Pastor who is:
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