Obama's election a 'divine
sign,' African bishop tells synod
John L Allen Jr on Oct.
06, 2009 NCR Today
Archbishop Pasinya
Barack ObamaÕs
election as the first African-American President of the United States could be
interpreted as a Òdivine sign,Ó according to a senior African prelate,
suggesting that in GodÕs plan for salvation history, 500 years of slavery and
racial oppression may be giving way to a new era of reconciliation.
The comments
came yesterday afternoon from Archbishop Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya of the
Democratic Republic of Congo, as part of the Synod of Bishops for Africa
meeting in the Vatican Oct. 4-25.
Monsengwo called
on the synod and the universal church not to ÒignoreÓ the significance of
ObamaÕs election, which he said was the result of much more than Òa banal game
of political alliances.Ó
Monsengwo has
long been seen as the more impressive Catholic bishops in Africa, and yesterday
delivered a formal report on trends in the church since the last Synod for
Africa in 1994.
In that context
Monsengwo argued that the election of an Africa-American in the United States
could offer a Òhermeneutic keyÓ to reading the last five decades of global
history, especially the slave trade and its aftermath.
ÒIf the election
of a black as head of the United States of America was a Ôdivine signÕ and Ôa
sign from the Holy Spirit for the reconciliation of races and ethnic groups,
for peaceful human relations ..." Monsengwo said, Òthis Synod and the
universal church would gain from not ignoring this primordial event of
contemporary history, which is far from being a banal game of political
alliances.Ó
This morning,
the synod began with an ecumenical touch: an address from His Holiness Abune
Paulos, Patriarch of the Orthodox Church in Ethiopia. Paulus processed into the
synod hall this morning in the company of Pope Benedict XVI, was seated next to
the pope, and delivered his remarks as the morningÕs first order of business.
Paulos recalled
the long history of Christianity in Ethiopia, including its tradition of
martyrdom. (Paulos himself had been imprisoned in the 1970s under EthiopiaÕs
Communist military junta.)
The Orthodox
patriarch then called upon AfricaÕs various Christian churches to work together
in promoting Òjustice, peace, reconciliation and development,Ó asserting that,
ÒSocial work is the meaning of apostleship.Ó
In a brief
response, Benedict expressed the hope that Òour churches may draw closer in the
unity which is the Holy SpiritÕs gift,Ó and pledged support for common efforts
to foster Òthe integral development of AfricaÕs peoples.Ó
Yesterday
afternoon, bishops representing Latin America, Oceania, Asia and North America
addressed the synod, as well the lone American prelate in the gathering:
Archbishop Wilton Gregory of Atlanta, Georgia, who was the first
African-American to be elected president of the United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops.
ÒOur Catholic
community has benefitted directly during the past generation from a growing
number of clergy and religious from the great African continent,Ó Gregory said,
Òwho now serve Catholics throughout our nation and who serve them generously
and zealously.Ó
ÒThese new
arrivals come, not like those of an earlier moment in time, wearing chains and
as human chattel, but as skilled workers, professionally trained businessmen,
and students eager to make a new life in a land that they view as promising,Ó
he said.
Gregory
suggested that those Africans may be able to provide a spiritual shot in the
arm to the church in the States.
ÒMany of these
new peoples bring with them a profound and dynamic Catholic faith with its rich
spiritual heritage,Ó he said. ÒThese wonderful people challenge us to
rediscover our own spiritual traditions that so often are set aside because of
the influence of our secular pursuits.Ó
In general, the
bishops from the other regions stressed the things they have in common with
African Catholics, including a common concern with social ills such as
HIV/AIDS, global warming and climate change, problems of corruption and good
governance, populist and nationalist political movements, poverty, and social
violence and armed conflict.
The early tone
of the Synod for Africa would appear to have a decidedly ad extra
emphasis, focused on broad social and political challenges rather than insider
Catholic baseball.
Archbishop
Orlando Quevedo of Cotabato in the Philippines, speaking on behalf of the
bishops of Asia, also used the conclusion of his speech yesterday afternoon to
issue the pope an invitation: ÒMay we invite you, beloved Holy Father, to visit
our region in the near future.Ó
After overseas trips to Brazil, Australia, the United States, Cameroon and Angola, and the Holy Land, Asia remains the lone continent which has yet to host a visit from Pope Benedict XVI.