The latest update from the synod of synodality in Rome indicates that SECAM President has just Outlined “four-phases plan” to Address Challenges of Polygamy in Africa. Details has it that the President of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) has outlined “a four-phase plan” that he said Catholic Bishops in Africa have agreed upon to address the challenge of polygamy on the continent.
In his Wednesday, October 2 presentation at the ongoing Synod on Synodality in Rome, Fridolin Cardinal Ambongo said that a team of experts will spearhead discussions and the formulation of a document on pastoral response to polygamy to be examined for approval during the July 2025 SECAM Plenary Assembly.
Delegates at the 4-29 October 2023 session of the Synod on Synodality encouraged Catholic Bishops in Africa “to promote theological and pastoral discernment on the issue of polygamy”.
In their 42-page Summary Report following the first session of the multi-year Synod, which Pope Francis extended to 2024, the delegates also encouraged members of SECAM to foster “the accompaniment of people in polygamous unions coming to faith.”
In his October 2 presentation, Cardinal Ambongo said that Catholic Bishops are “currently working on a four-phase plan to address this issue” as agreed upon by members of the SECAM Standing Committee.
The working, he said, “embraces the synodal method of consultation and collaboration, and seeks to develop a comprehensive pastoral response to polygamy.”
According to the Local Ordinary of the Catholic Archdiocese of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the first phase has entailed constituting a working group of experts tasked with identifying “certain fundamental elements for an appropriate pastoral response” to the reality of polygamy in Africa
Guided by the question, “What is the most appropriate form of pastoral care to support people in polygamous relationships?”, the team of experts is to put together a text that seeks to provide “comprehensive answers” to the question.
“The second phase will begin, with the text’s distribution to African Bishops’ Conferences to examine improvements and proposals of pastoral lines, because the prevalence and characteristics of polygamy vary considerably from one region to another,” Cardinal Ambongo said.
The Vatican Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith will also be asked to weigh in on the draft document, he added.
The President of SECAM said that in the third phase of the plan, Catholic Bishops in Africa “will have the task of examining, approving and adopting the contents of this document during the next Plenary Assembly of SECAM in July 2025.”
As a final phase, “the consensus document that will have been voted for and adopted by the Bishops will then be submitted to Dicastery for the Doctrine of Faith for further theological and doctrinal orientation,” Cardinal Ambongo said during his October 2 presentation.
“The Church in Africa, faithful to Catholic doctrine on marriage, is committed to finding the most suitable to accompany its brothers, its sons and daughters in polygamous marital situations,” he added.
The Congolese member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin (OFM Cap) went on to describe polygamy as “a well-known reality in many African countries”, which, he added, “represents a real pastoral challenge.”
“There are people who have joined the Christian faith when they are in a situation of polygamy. But there are also baptized people who live in polygamy after their conversion,” Cardinal Ambongo said.
In Africa, he said, polygamy takes several forms, including polygyny, where a man has multiple wives; and polyandry, where a woman has multiple husbands.
The President of SECAM noted that “in modern Africa, we see the emergence of new forms of polygamy through new forms of cohabitation where children are recognized as legitimate.”
“The evangelizing work, making an eruption in our cultures, has faced a legitimately very rooted polygamy, so much so that the valiant first missionary found himself in the abyss in relation to the monogamous marriage desired by Christianity,” the Catholic Church leader said.
However, he said the missionaries “firmly proposed the monogamous doctrine to which a multitude of our African compatriots adhere with faith to this day.
“Relying on the Bible, they made it clear that the many cases of polygamous figures found in the Bible were inscribed in the plan of God, leading his people to discover that the model to be reached was rather the monogamy found from the beginning of the book of Genesis and extended in the New Testament writings,” Cardinal Ambomgo explained.
He continued, “The catechesis in force teaches that polygamy is not the ideal of the couple desired by God. The Creator at the beginning made men and women and said, this is why the man will leave his father and mother to attach himself to his wife and the two will make only one flesh. This is the doctrine that we maintain in our churches in Africa.”
“There is an urgent need for a pastoral accompaniment of polygamy. The accompaniment of people in a situation of polygamy in our churches remains to be specified,” Cardinal Ambongo said.
Earlier, in April, SECAM leadership announced the establishment of a Commission to discern pastoral care towards persons in polygamous unions.
The Secretary General of SECAM, Fr. Rafael Simbine Junior, confirmed the creation of the Commission at an April 25 press conference on the sidelines of the four-day meeting of delegates representing Africa at the Synod on Synodality, ahead of the 2-29 October 2024 session.
“We set up this Commission made up of mainly theologians from different fields who are doing this work,” Fr. Simbine said, adding that members of the created Commission have the mandate to study “special issues”, including “the matter of polygamy”.
The theological discernment is likely to entail calling to mind the stance of the Catholic Church on polygamy in relation to the Church’s understanding of the institution of marriage and the Sacrament of Matrimony.
The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church (CSDC 217), a publication of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 1645), the December 1965 Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, Gaudium et Spes (GS, 48#1), and the November 1981 Apostolic Exhortation on the role of the Christian family in the modern world, Familiaris Consortio, are likely to be referenced.
Meanwhile, a pastoral discernment is likely to involve reflections on ways of journeying with persons in situations of polygamy in the world’s second-largest and second-most populous continent.
In November 2023, members of the Inter-Regional Meeting of the Bishops of Southern Africa (IMBISA), who include Catholic Bishops in nine countries of Southern Africa tasked theologians in the region to “shed light” on the practices of traditional initiation and polygamy.
In Kenya’s Catholic Archdiocese of Kisumu, Saint Monica Women Group was established to rescue Catholic widows whose other option was to be inherited and be part of a polygamous union.
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