Draft:Synodal Way

The Synodal Way (Der Synodale Weg or Synodaler Weg, sometimes translated as Synodal Path) is a series of conferences of the Catholic Church in Germany to discuss a range of contemporary theological and organizational questions concerning the Catholic Church, as well as possible reactions to the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church in Germany. It is controversial among many traditionalist and conservative Catholics due to supporting a number of liberal opinions on Church matters.

Organization
The Synodal Way's supreme body is the Synodal Assembly. It consists of 230 members, made up of archbishops, bishops and auxiliary bishops, as well as an equal number of lay members from the Central Committee of German Catholics. This number is further increased by representatives of religious orders or other ecclesial groups.

The Synodal Way is further divided into four Synodal Forums that each focus on a particular topic:
 * Power and Separation of Powers in the Church - Joint Participation and Involvement in the Mission
 * Life in succeeding relationships - Living Love in Sexuality and Partnership
 * Priestly Existence Today
 * Women in Ministries and Offices in the Church

Meetings
The Synodal Way meetings began on 1 December 2019 and ended on March 2023.

At the second conference, which was held from 3 to 5 February 2022, The majority of the assembly – some of whom displayed LGBT pride flags – endorsed the following propositions:
 * 1) Women's ordination should be allowed by the Vatican.
 * 2) The laity should have more influence on the election of bishops.
 * 3) Same-sex partnerships/unions should get a public blessing ceremony.
 * 4) The Catholic catechism's teachings on sexual ethics should be reformed. Gay sex within same-sex unions/partnerships should be theologically accepted and not seen as a sin.
 * 5) Married priests should be allowed.
 * 6) There should be changes to the labour laws of the German church to prohibit the firing or refusal to hire people based on marital status.

On September 9, 2022, a text on the position of women in the Roman Catholic Church and a document "New teaching over Homosexuality in Catechism of the Catholic Church" was supported, and a third document was a reform of the Roman Catholic Church labour law for homosexual workers supported.

During its last meeting, from 9 to 11 March 2023, the Synodal Way approved the blessing of same-sex unions, the normalisation of lay people preaching, a guideline of "concrete improvements for intersex and transgender faithful", and requests to reexamine the Catholic Church's stance on clerical celibacy and on women's ordination.

Consequences
Due to the decisions taken by the Synodal Way, bishop, deputy chairman of the German bishops' conference, "invited Catholics in his diocese to contact parishes for liturgical blessings of their same-sex partnerships and other relationships regarded as morally illicit in the Catholic Church".

Reception
The Synodal Way has drawn a range of criticism and support both domestically and internationally. Support comes for example by Italian bishop Erio Castellucci, while criticism comes for example from Archbishop Cordileone of San Francisco.

A common topic is a perceived lack of fidelity to the established doctrines of the Catholic Church, e.g. due to the refusal of the Synodal Assembly to rule out decisions that run counter to Catholic doctrines. Another common criticism concerns over the legitimacy of the organizational form chosen as the Synodal Way is not using an established organisational form sanctioned by canon law.

On 29 June 2019, Pope Francis wrote a letter "To the Pilgrim People of God in Germany". The letter supported synodal deliberations but also called for a focus evangelization over pure reorganization. Consecutive attempts by some German bishops to redirect the Synodal Way towards "evangelization" were declined.

In early September 2019, Cardinal Marc Ouellet of the Roman Curia's Congregation for Bishops sent a letter to the German Bishops' Conference to warn them that the organizational structure chosen by the Synodal Way was invalid and could not make binding decisions about some of its key topics.

On 21 September 2019, prior to the start of the Synodal Way, Professor Marianne Schlosser of the University of Vienna and a member of the International Theological Commission resigned from her planned role in the Synodal Forum "Women in Ministries and Offices in the Church" citing the forum's "fixation on ordination" of women.

On 28 May 2020 Auxiliary Bishop Dominik Schwaderlapp, of the Archdiocese of Cologne resigned from his position in the Synodal Forum "Life in Successful Relationships" in protest to the forum's view on sexual morality which he claimed contradicted the Catholic Church's view as stated in Humanae vitae.

Prior to the Regional Conferences on 4 September 2020, Bishop Rudolf Voderholzer of Regensburg criticized the conference's working papers in an open letter, dated 2 September. Points criticized included the creation of the working papers which he said deviated from the agreed-upon procedure, leaving the participants no room for comment prior to the conference, as well as the papers' one-sided biblical theology, despite earlier agreements to leave biblical theology for later meetings.

During a general audience held on 25 November 2020, Pope Francis commented on people gathering in "a Synodal path" and warned that they were lacking the Holy Spirit. While not directed officially at the Synodal Way, the statement was widely considered to refer to Germany.

In June 2022 the results of national synodal paths in the Netherlands were nearly the same: women ordination, married priests, and reform of world catechism in sexual ethics were supported.

On 21 July 2022, the Holy See released a statement in which it stated that "The 'Synodal Way' in Germany does not have the power to compel bishops and the faithful to adopt new forms of governance and new orientations of doctrine and morals".

In August 2022, the results of national synodal paths in Switzerland and in Austria were nearly the same: women ordination, married priests, and reform of world catechism in sexual ethics were supported.

In November 2022, the Roman Catholic church in Germany reformed church labour law. Homosexual priests/bishops can out themselves as gay. They do not fear longer a termination. Homosexual workers at the Roman Catholic church can do a same-sex marriage

Roman Curia in November 2022
The Vatican published on Nov 24 2022 the critiques of Cardinal Ouellet, and Cardinal Luis Ladaria Ferrer, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Ouellet, after praising the seriousness of the Germans in tackling sexual abuse, referred to “serious difficulties from an anthropological, pastoral, and ecclesiological point of view" in the proposals of the Germans. He said they were making “concessions” under “very strong cultural and media pressure.” It is striking, however, that the agenda of a limited group of theologians from a few decades ago has suddenly become the majority proposal of the German episcopate." "It is difficult to avoid the impression that the extremely serious matter of the abuse cases has been exploited to push through other ideas not directly related to it.” These are "proposals that openly contradict the teaching affirmed by all the popes since the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council.

Ladaria warned the Germans of “reducing the mystery of the Church to a mere institution of power, or viewing the Church from the outset as a structurally abusive organization that must be brought under the control of superintendents as quickly as possible.” “In this respect, the greatest danger of many operative proposals of the synodal way’s texts is that one of the most important achievements of the Second Vatican Council is lost, namely the clear teaching of the mission of the bishops and thus of the local Church."

Bätzing response
Bishop Georg Bätzing stated: "The Synodal Path of the Church in Germany neither seeks a schism nor leads to a national church. Whoever speaks of schism or national church knows neither the German Catholics nor the German bishops. I am saddened by the power this word has acquired, with which one tries to deny us catholicity and the will to stay united with the universal Church."

Pope Francis criticism in January 2023
On January 2023, in an interview with AP, Pope Francis warned that the German Synodal Way is both "elitist" and "ideological." He also said that is neither helpful nor serious, and contrasted it with the worldwide Synod on Synodality. He urged that the Church "be patient, dialogue and accompany these people on the real synodal path" and to "help this more elitist [German] path so that it does not end badly in some way, but so is also integrated into the church."