BERLIN — Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, urged German Catholics to put aside visions and individual needs, noting, “the community must take precedence.”
Addressing several German bishops during a church service June 29, Parolin referred to Pope Francis’ 2019 letter on the Synodal Path of the Catholic Church in Germany, reported the German Catholic news agency KNA. This reform dialogue deals with controversial issues such as Catholic sexual morality, priestly life, power and the separation of powers as well as the role of women in the church.
Parolin urged the church in Germany “to return to a unity that does not depend on agreeing to common orientations, as is usual in politics, but on being rooted in God.” He opposed “reducing togetherness to only one particular part, however relevant and significant it may be.”
KNA reported that among those attending the service were Limburg Bishop Georg Bätzing, president of the German bishops’ Conference; Cardinals Reinhard Marx of Munich and Freising and Rainer Maria Woelki of Cologne; Berlin Archbishop Heiner Koch; and several other German bishops.
Bätzing had an audience with Pope Francis at the Vatican June 24 and said afterward that the pope had encouraged the Catholic Church in Germany to “continue on the Synodal Path.” He said he had assured Pope Francis that the church in Germany did not want to take any special paths with its reform project.
Parolin’s visit marked the celebration of the centenary of the beginning of diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Germany.
Earlier in the day, he met German Chancellor Angela Merkel and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, KNA reported.
A spokeswoman for Steinmeier said the president had discussed current political developments with Parolin. She said the president had expressed his concern about the growing loss of confidence in the Catholic Church due to the handling of clergy sex abuse and emphasized how important religious communities were for social cohesion.