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Brazilian Marcivana Rodrigues Paiva in the offertory procession during the concluding Mass of the Amazon Synod at the Vatican in 2019 (CNS/Paul Haring)

Five years after the Amazon Synod, members of the region’s Church gathered in Manaus, Brazil, to discuss ways to implement the changes suggested during the meeting in Rome in 2019. Source: Irish Catholic.

The need to increase the women’s participation in ecclesial life and alternatives for the Church’s financial challenges in the Amazon were among the most pressing themes debated by the participants between August 19-22.

The meeting was led by the Brazilian bishops’ conference’s Special Episcopal Commission for the Amazon and was attended by members of the Pan-Amazon Ecclesial Network and of the Amazonian Ecclesial Conference.

The message released by the participants on August 22 demonstrates the local churches’ biggest concerns and how they expect the Church to deal with them.

“We structured the discussion and the themes of the letter according to the reality of several Amazonian communities,” Bishop Raimundo Vanthuy Neto of São Gabriel da Cachoeira told Crux.

The document establishes six commitments assumed during the event regarding the Church’s challenges to keep evangelising the Amazonian communities.

The first concerns the formation of Catholics in the region. The participants agreed to establish a committee to accompany the education of priests, to keep promoting dialogue between Catholic universities and seminaries, and to allow the exchange between schools and experiences of education of lay people.

Bishop Vanthuy Neto said there was much debate about the participation of the Church in the UN Convention on Climate Change [known as COP 30], which will take place in Belém, Brazil, next year.

“There’s an urgent need to stop deforestation in the region in the face of a continuous climatic crisis.” 

FULL STORY

Amazonian Church discusses new rite, finance, and participation of women (Irish Catholic)