Synodality in the Thought of Joseph Ratzinger

Tomasz Samulnik

Institute of Religious Studies of St. Thomas Aquinas in Kijow , Ukraine
https://orcid.org/0009-0009-7156-4827


Abstract

The aim of this article is to present Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger's line of thought on the idea of synodality. In the following steps of his reflection, the Bavarian theologian poses seemingly rudimentary, yet fundamental questions: What is a synod? What is the function of the institution of synod in the Church? Ratzinger also does not shy away from questions on current issues related to the synodal path. They take on a provocative tone: Shouldn't there be an uninterrupted synod in the Catholic Church that combines the principle of synodality with the principle of papal primacy? Can a synod function only as its own independent body of part or all of the college of bishops of a region? Who ultimately governs the Church? The author's own attempts to answer the questions posed are set primarily in the Tradition of the Church and in the context of an ecclesiology of communio close to Bavarian theologian. The pragmatic dimension of the approach to the question of synodality contained in the reflection is also an important asset.


J. Ratzinger, Wykłady bawarskie z lat 1964–2004, przeł. A. Czarnocki, Warszawa 2009.

J. Ratzinger, Kościół - znak wśród narodów, Opera omnia VIII/1, przeł. W. Szymona, Lublin 2013.

Maximilian H. Heim, Joseph Ratzinger – Life in the Church and Living Theology. Fundamentals of Ecclesiology with Reference to Lumen Gentium, translated by Michael J. Miller, San Francisco 2007.

Św. Hilary z Poitiers, O Trójcy Świętej, przeł. E. Stanula, Warszawa 2005.


Published
2023-12-21



Tomasz Samulnik  tomaszsamulnik@gmail.com
Institute of Religious Studies of St. Thomas Aquinas in Kijow https://orcid.org/0009-0009-7156-4827



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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.