16 May 2022

Pope calls for a Church that listens

The Southern Cross  |  May 2022

Pope calls for a Church that listens

'Listening with the ear of your heart' is the theme of Pope Francis’ message for World Communications Day being celebrated in Australia on May 22 this year.

In his message, the Pope speaks of the temptation to speak without listening, as well as the tendency to hear people speaking but not actually listen to them.

“What specifically makes communication good and fully human is listening to the person in front of us, face to face, listening to the other person whom we approach with fair, confident and honest openness,” he wrote.

“The lack of listening, which we experience so often in daily life, is unfortunately also evident in public life, where, instead of listening to each other, we often ‘talk past one another’.”

Australian Catholic Media Council chair, Debra Vermeer, said the Fifth Plenary Council of Australia – and its stages of listening and dialogue and listening and discernment in particular – has sought to bring Catholics into a space of deeper and prayerful listening.

“That has been accomplished through listening to that which stirs within us, listening to each other and listening to the promptings of the Holy Spirit,” she said.

“Now in its 56th year, the papal message for World Communications Day has always been challenging and in an age when everyone can act as a broadcaster, this call to be people who listen is timely and necessary.”

Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president Archbishop Mark Coleridge, in his homily at the start of this month’s bishops’ plenary meeting, reflected on the importance of listening.

“In recent times we have heard a good deal about the need to listen, and rightly so,” he said.

“At the heart of Scripture we hear the call Shema Israel, ‘Listen Israel’ (Deut 6:4); the first word of the West’s most influential text, the Rule of St Benedict, is Ausculta, ‘Listen’; and ‘listening’ is the word Pope Francis set at the head of his seminal speech on synodality in 2015.”

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