Skip to content

Vatican synod report urges women’s input in preparing future priests

Nineteen men lie prostrate for their ordination as priests for the Diocese of Rome on April 26, 2015. | Credit: Bohumil Petrik/CNA

The report also warns seminaries must not become an “artificial environment” detached from the ordinary life of the faithful.

The General Secretariat of the Synod has published a preliminary report urging that women’s “views and assessments” be given due weight in the discernment of candidates for priesthood and warning against seminary models that separate future priests from the ordinary life of the people of God.

The text gathers conclusions from a synod study group tasked with examining priestly formation in a synodal key. The proposals are not definitive and have been forwarded to Pope Leo XIV for review.

One central concern in the report is the need to rethink seminary formation so it does not foster a culture of separation from parish life. “The formation itinerary must not create artificial environments detached from the ordinary life of the faithful,” the document says, calling instead for formation in “close contact with the daily life of the people of God.”

The report says the seminary “should not be a prolonged experience far from the people of God” and proposes “other formative modules along the way, not alternative but complementary to the ‘place/time’ of the seminary.” Those modules could include residence in parish communities or other ecclesial settings, while avoiding any further extension of overall formation time.

Such isolation, it warns, can become fertile ground for unhealthy dynamics. The report says this approach “will avoid the condition of separation where irresponsibility, dissimulation, and clerical infantilism are more easily bred.”

The document also stresses the importance of a “real experience of the life of faith and commitment in the Christian community” before entering specific vocational paths, describing it as an indispensable condition for initial discernment.

On selection for ordination, the report says the people of God should be “truly listened to” in the process “in view of the conferral of holy orders,” including consultation with the candidate’s pastor and those who have known his pastoral service — “giving due importance also to the views and assessments of women.”

The publication is part of a broader move toward transparency as the synod releases the work of its study groups, with additional reports expected in the coming weeks, including texts on liturgy in a synodal perspective and on the status of episcopal conferences, ecclesial assemblies, and particular councils.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.

Receive the most important news from EWTN Vatican via WhatsApp. It has become increasingly difficult to see Catholic news on social media. Subscribe to our free channel today

Share

Would you like to receive the latest updates on the Pope and the Vatican

Receive articles and updates from our EWTN Newsletter.

More news related to this article

Cookies and empanadas in Dilexit Nos: food references in the teachings of Pope Francis

Food references in the pontificate of Pope Francis and especially in Dilexit Nos.

The True Face of the Virgin Mary

Unraveling the Enigma: Depicting the Virgin Mary in Art and Her Shifting Iconography Across Cultures and Centuries

Secretary of Benedict XVI explains why he destroyed his personal documents

Monsignor Georg Gänswein, the personal secretary of Pope Benedict XVI for decades, explained that he destroyed the late

Ahead of consistory, priest urges new canonical structure to resolve Latin Mass standoff

As cardinals gather this week in an extraordinary consistory convened by Pope Leo XIV on Jan. 7–8, a

Cardinal Koch meets with Serbian Orthodox Church bishop Andrej

The Holy See is considering a meeting between Pope Francis and the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church Porfirije in Koper, Slovenia, in June, as a first step towards dialogue and cooperation between the Catholic and Serbian Orthodox Churches.

Pope Francis: Reading literature can enrich the Christian life, aid in priestly formation

In a new letter released Sunday, Pope Francis touts the benefits of reading literature for priests and all

LIVE
FROM THE VATICAN

Be present live on EWTNVatican.com