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The young people have asked us, pastorally speaking, for greater closeness. Closeness, tenderness,
gentleness, and consolation are words that echo through many of the Synod’s passages. If we want to
go deeper, we find in the heart of every young person a great desire for reconciliation.
Everyone at the Synod was struck by the humble and prophetic presence of Brother Alois, prior of
the monastic community of Taizé. This experience came about through a clearly ecumenical intention,
that is, to create a platform for listening, forgiveness and dialogue between the different Christian
denominations. Then it became, little by little, a place that is frequented especially by young people.
Why? Because young people seek unity, peace and joy!
4. Searching: Young People Showed They Were always Open and Available
We lack fixed points today. Change and fragility set us on a quest, a journey. This is a great
opportunity for our ministry with young people. Throughout the synodal journey, there was no
sense of a preconceived closure towards the world of faith and the reality of the Church, but a
“healthy restlessness typical of youth [that] continues to dwell in every heart that remains young, open,
and generous. True inner peace coexists with that profound discontent. As Saint Augustine said:
“You have created us for yourself, Lord, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in you”
(Pope Francis 2019, no. 138). The healthy restlessness of young people, a sign of their openness to God,
is a great pastoral opportunity.
Young people have shown themselves to be open to exchange, respectful of different positions,
open to dialogue and others’ reasoning. Ours was an atmosphere of genuine quest and search. The
keywords, to myself, have been “openness” and “availability.” At an ecclesial level, priests and bishops
have much to learn about this because sometimes they show themselves to be as rigid as the Pharisees,
incapable of really giving the floor to others, and closed to listening to different positions. Sometimes,
bishops and priests have a very monolithic and not very symphonic concept of truth.
Jesus in the Gospels reveals himself to be a great companion of people who are searching. He
has the temperament to ask the right questions at the right time, he knows to wait for the right time,
and he stands by young people patiently without judging. He really has authority, in the true sense of
the term, because “In its etymological meaning, auctoritas indicates the capacity for enabling growth;
it does not express the idea of a directive power, but of a real generative force” (XV Ordinary General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops 2018c, no. 71).
5. Discernment: We Are all Called to Examine Ourselves
Searching is not an end in itself, but has, by its very nature, the desire to find. The restlessness
of the heart that sets us in motion is generated by a search for fullness which takes the path of life.
It is an arduous path, full of obstacles, where recognizing the right life is not automatic. Temptation,
evil and sin can easily find a place. There is great difference between light and being dazzled by it,
yet sometimes they can be confused. It is sometimes hard to distinguish between truth and error; it is
very difficult to judge between good and evil; one can be deceived between the living God and the
many idols who try to imitate him (cf. Pope Francis 2013, no. 51).
The abovementioned is why one of the great words of the Synod’s journey was “discernment.”
This is the right attitude to have in times of great confusion. It is the attitude that goes to the root of
things and thus avoids being deceived by appearances. It is the style capable of distinguishing between
the superfluous and the essential, between the useless and the necessary. Discernment means not
having the immediate solution at hand, but seeking what God urges us to be, because “Discernment
leads us to recognize—and become attuned with—the action of the Spirit, in true spiritual obedience”
(XV Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops 2018d, no. 2).
The entire Synod’s journey was set up, methodologically, as a communal journey of discernment
marked by three stages: recognizing, interpreting, and choosing. Both the Instrumentum Laboris and the
Final Document are structured around these three verbs. To recognize is to look and listen: it is a matter
of understanding not only intellectually but, above all, with a heart capable of evangelical compassion.