More of this, please: Reflection on the national convocation

IMAGE: CNS photo/Bob Roller

By David Cloutier

Cloutier,
a professor of moral theology at The Catholic University of America in
Washington, provided the following reflection to Catholic News Service on last
July’s “Convocation of Catholic Leaders: The Joy of the Gospel in
America.” More than 3,200 Catholic leaders gathered for four days in Orlando,
Florida.

Just
about a year ago, the U.S. bishops held an enormous convocation in Orlando. I was invited to be on a panel discussing the environment and “Laudato
Si’,” but I was not quite prepared for what I encountered.

As
I stepped off the public bus from the airport, I saw the enormous convention
center in which the convocation was being held. This was no tiny theology
gathering, I realized!

What
was it? For me, what I discovered there was the enormous and enormously diverse
energy that the laity are bringing to the church. Among the most striking
things were the huge number of exhibitors. They not only filled a large space
in the main center, but a whole other set ranged along the walls of the
gigantic dining space elsewhere in the center.

Hundreds
of groups, all putting energies into so many different (Catholic) things. I had
a spontaneous lunch with a guy who had started Creatio, more or less a Catholic
outing club, with planned hiking trips and the like, but intertwined with
Catholic beliefs and practices. You might call this a “Catholic start-up” and
there were so many of them, almost all being run by idealistic young people
trying to find new ways to live out their faith and help others do so, too.

While
the large-group sessions were also effective, I found some of the breakout
sessions particularly vibrant. The fact is, it is all too rare to have the
various ecclesial stakeholders in a room together, really talking and listening
to one another. The speakers in all the sessions were a mix of clergy and
laity, with different interested bishops facilitating. We were instructed to
keep presentations brief — they were a jumping-off point for discussion and
shared wisdom. Each session I attended certainly lived up to that.

The
90 minutes on “Laudato Si'” were filled with laity ask tough questions about
how to get better implementation of the encyclical. But possibly the most
impressive session I attended was a full house on ministry to the LGBT
community. Everyone knew the parameters of the discussions. So I was unprepared
for the enormous honesty about the struggles involved in so many people’s lives
— the bishops facilitating, the panelists and most remarkably the audience.
People shared stories with a candor and honesty that I simply have never seen
in any other church venue on this topic.

To
do so in a room of 250 people with plenty of clergy and bishops — well, I just
left thinking, we need more of this, much more! And it was all conducted with
genuine respect and sensitivity — completely the opposite of the uncivil
twitter battles that too often are seen to dominate the discourse of national
Catholicism on difficult topics.

We
need to have all the people of God gathered together, in joy, in mission, and
in a face-to-face setting that both leads us to more charity and energizes us
for more work on behalf of the Gospel. We don’t need to go to a national
gathering in Orlando to do it, either. But we do need to gather as a people, in
sustained and deeper ways.

One
example in which I recently participated was the “Though Many, One” conference
on overcoming polarization in society, sponsored by the Initiative on Catholic
Social Thought and Public Life at Georgetown. Over three days spent together — talks, meals,
socializing and Mass every day — a group of 75 Catholics, clergy and lay,
bishops and women religious, practitioners and academics talked through our
divisions. The gathering was intentionally ideologically diverse, and enabled
productive conversations to happen in the future because we met and talked and
prayed and ate together face-to-face.

But
this sharing need not even require big-university programming. The point is to
get committed people, people who are clearly committed to working in the church
at all levels, and have them meet one another as members of the same Body.

One
wonders if mini-convocations could be had for groups of dioceses, where we
could cross over our usual communication groups in the local church, and
experience some of that same energy. In the same way, lay and clerical and professional
leaders could gather — preferably for more than just an afternoon or an
evening — to pray, learn, and connect.

It
might not have the initial visual impact I had stepping off the bus in Orlando
and seeing that convention center. But it would continue to spread the energy
for mission that I discovered inside that center — and that spiritual energy
is what the convocation was really about.


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Cloutier
also is editor of the group academic blog, catholicmoraltheology.com.

 

 

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