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Home News Australia

Plenary Council 2020 take a major step forward with release of national themes for discernment

byMark Bowling
12 June 2019 - Updated on 1 April 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Lana Turvey-Collins: "The emergence of the national themes for discernment is an important moment in our journey towards the plenary council”.

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Lana Turvey-Collins: “The emergence of the national themes for discernment is an important moment in our journey towards the plenary council”.

PLENARY Council 2020 has moved into its next preparation phase with an announcement of six national themes for discernment that emerged from a historic process of listening to the voices of more than 222,000 people.

National Plenary Council facilitator Lana Turvey-Collins outlined the themes and the next phase “Listening and Discernment” on June 9, speaking to nearly 100 parish and community leaders from across the Brisbane archdiocese.

Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge attended the event.

The six themes inviting people to reflect, to pray and to consider how God is calling the People of God to be a Christ-centred Church in Australia are: 

– Missionary and Evangelising

– Inclusive, Participatory and Synodal

– Prayerful and Eucharistic

– Humble, Healing and Merciful

– A Joyful, Hope-Filled and Servant Community

– Open to conversion, Renewal and Reform.

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“The emergence of the national themes for discernment is an important moment in our journey towards the plenary council,” Ms Turvey-Collins said.

“It is an expression of the sense of the faith from the faithful and, from this, we can proceed in our discernment of what the Spirit is saying to us in Australia.” 

Between May 2018 and March 2019, almost 17,500 submissions, from individuals and groups of all sizes, addressed the plenary council’s central question: “What do you think God is asking of us in Australia at this time?”

Following this, with intense moments of prayer and discernment, the Bishops’ Commission for the Plenary Council and its executive committee, joined by the plenary facilitation team, considered what people were longing for. 

“The National Centre for Pastoral Research was able to pinpoint more than 100 recurring subject areas from those 17,500 submissions,” plenary council president Perth Archbishop Timothy Costelloe said.

“In some ways, those subject areas described what one might call ‘the messy reality’ of Catholic life in Australia today. 

“The voices of the faithful help all of us to understand something of the historical experience and the current reality of the Catholic Church in Australia.  

“We worked to discern what people were yearning for as we move into this next stage of preparing for the plenary council.”

Ms Turvey-Collins said “Listening and Discernment” would be a time of prayerful consideration of the “big” questions that have been raised by the faithful.

Part of that progression will take place as the Australian bishops gather for a retreat prior to their Ad Limina Apostolorum visit in Rome.

“We will take the opportunity to reflect carefully on the national themes for discernment and share our reflections and conclusions with the plenary council’s facilitation team and the executive committee, based on our own prayerful discernment and pastoral experience,” Archbishop Costelloe said.

Ms Turvey-Collins said those reflections and conclusions would be supplemented by a period of several months, beginning in August, when people across the country would again be asked to engage locally with the plenary council process.

“This discernment process will involve establishing working groups for each national theme for discernment,” she said. “People in faith communities across Australia will also be called to participate locally in their own communal Listening and Discernment encounters.

“The fruits of what is discerned during this time will shape the agenda for the first session of plenary council in October 2020.”

More information on the National Themes for Discernment can be found on the re-launched plenary council website: www.plenarycouncil.catholic.org.au

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Mark Bowling

Mark is the joint winner of the Australian Variety Club 2000 Heart Award for his radio news reporting in East Timor, and has also won a Walkley award, Australia’s most-respected journalism award. Mark is the author of ‘Running Amok’ that chronicles his time as a foreign correspondent juggling news deadlines and the demands of being a husband and father. Mark is married with four children.

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