|
10/3/12
|
349 views
Cardinal Dolan to Serve at Synod of Bishops at Vatican Oct. 7-28
Cardinal Dolan is one of a number of bishops elected by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to serve at the Synod of Bishops Oct. 7-28 at the Vatican. Pope Benedict XVI has appointed Los Angeles Archbishop Jose H. Gomez and 35 other cardinals, bishops and priests to serve as members of the synod. The papal appointees, whose names were announced Sept. 18, will join more than 200 other synod members who were elected by their national bishops’ conference, serve as the head of a Vatican office or were elected by the Union of Superiors General, the organization for the heads of men’s religious orders. The synod will explore the theme, “New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith.” In addition to Cardinal Dolan, the synod members elected by the USCCB are: Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz of Louisville, Ky. and Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller of San Antonio. Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas of Tucson, Ariz., originally elected as an alternate, will participate instead of Cardinal Francis E. George of Chicago, who is undergoing chemotherapy treatment. Twelve cardinals, including Australian Cardinal George Pell of Sydney, and diocesan bishops from Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe also were named synod members by the pope. The prelate of Opus Dei, Bishop Javier Echevarria Rodriguez, and the president of the Communion and Liberation movement, Father Julian Carron, were among the papal appointees, as were the superiors general of three religious orders of men: the Camillians, the Schonstatt Fathers and the Carmelites. Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl of Washington, D.C., was appointed by Pope Benedict to serve as the synod’s recording secretary, a key role that involves presenting a broad overview of the topics to be discussed and then summarizing hundreds of speeches by synod members in preparation for the synod’s work in small groups to develop proposals and recommendations for Pope Benedict. According to Vatican rules, only priests, bishops and cardinals can serve as full voting members of the synod, but the popes always have appointed laymen and laywomen to be among the synod’s experts and auditors. For a listing of laity from the United States and Canada Pope Benedict has appointed to the upcoming synod, see page XX of this week’s issue of CNY. —CNS
|
|