STABLE FAMILIES
Society as
whole depends on stable families
As we approach
the new millennium, the promotion of marriage and the family is an important
responsibility facing the Christian community
At the General Audience
of Wednesday, 1 December, the Holy Father spoke on the commitment to
promoting marriage and the family, stressing the need to reflect and recognize
that proper relationships within the family constitute the foundations for
freedom, security and fraternity within society. "The family is the
original cell of social life. It is the natural society in which husband and
wife are called to give themselves in love and in the gift of life",
the Pope said, quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Here is
a translation of his catechesis, which was the 34th in the series on God the
Father and was given in Italian.
1. In order to be properly prepared for the Great Jubilee, the Christian
community should be seriously committed to rediscovering the value of the family
and marriage (cf. Tertio millennio adveniente, n. 51). This is all the
more urgent since today this value is questioned at many levels of culture and
society.
Not only are certain models of family life being challenged, which change under
the pressure of social transformations and new working conditions. It is the
concept itself of the family, as a community founded on marriage between a man
and a woman, that is attacked in the name of ethical relativism, which is
spreading in wide areas of public opinion and in civil legislation itself.
God's fatherhood is source of all human parenthood
The crisis of the family becomes, in turn, a cause of the crisis in society.
Many pathological phenomena - from loneliness to violence and drugs - are also
due to the fact that families have lost their identity and purpose. Wherever the
family falls apart, society loses its connective tissue with disastrous
consequences that affect individuals, especially the weakest: from
children to adolescents, to the handicapped, the sick and the elderly, etc.
2. It is therefore necessary to encourage a reflection that will help not only
believers, but all people of good will to rediscover the value of marriage and
the family. In the Catechism of the Catholic Church we read:
"The family is the original cell of social life. It is the natural
society in which husband and wife are called to give themselves in love and in
the gift of life. Authority, stability and a life of relationships within the
family constitute the foundations for freedom, security and fraternity within
society" (n. 2207).
Reason itself can rediscover the family by listening to the moral law inscribed
in the human heart. As a community "which is founded and given life by
love" (cf. Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris consortio, n. 18), the
family draws its strength from the definitive covenant of love by which a man
and a woman give themselves to each other, becoming together God's collaborators
in the gift of life.
On the basis of this fundamental relationship of love, the relationships that
are established with and among the other family members must also be inspired by
love and marked by affection and mutual support. Far from closing the family in
on itself, genuine love opens it to all society, since the little domestic
family and the great family of all human beings are not in opposition, but in a
close and primordial relationship. At the root of all this is the very mystery
of God, which the family evokes in a special way. Indeed, as I wrote a few years
ago in my Letter to Families, "in the light of the New Testament it
is possible to discern how the primordial model of the family is to be sought in
God himself, in the Trinitarian mystery of his life. The divine "We' is the
eternal pattern of the human "we', especially of that "we' formed by
the man and the woman created in the divine image and likeness" (n. 6).
3. God's fatherhood is the transcendent source of all human fatherhood and
motherhood. As we lovingly contemplate it, we feel impelled to rediscover that
wealth of communion, procreation and life that characterize marriage and the
family.
In families, interpersonal relations develop in which each member is entrusted
with a specific task, although without rigid patterns. I do not intend to refer
here to those social and functional roles which are expressions of specific
historical and cultural contexts. I am thinking, rather, of the importance, in
the mutual conjugal relationship and the shared parental commitment, of man and
woman as they are called to realize their natural characteristics in the context
of a deep, enriching and respectful communion. "To this "unity of the
two' God has entrusted not only the work of procreation and family life, but the
creation of history itself" (Letter to women, n. 8).
4. Children, then, must be seen as the greatest expression of the communion
between man and woman, or rather of their reciprocal receiving/giving which is
fulfilled and transcended in a "third", in the child himself. A child
is a blessing from God. He transforms husband and wife into father and mother
(cf. Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris consortio, n. 21). Both "come
out of themselves" and express themselves in a person, which, although the
fruit of their love, goes beyond them.
Family is place where life is welcomed and nurtured
The ideal expressed in the priestly prayer of Jesus, in which he asks that his
unity with the Father be extended to the disciples (cf. Jn 17: 11) and to
those who believe through their word (cf. Jn 17: 20-21), applies to the
family in a special way. Christian families, "domestic churches" (cf. Lumen
gentium, n. 11), are especially called to achieve this ideal of perfect
communion.
5. Therefore, as we reach the end of this year dedicated to meditation on God
the Father, let us rediscover the family in the light of the divine fatherhood.
Our contemplation of God the Father prompts an urgent concern which is
particularly in keeping with the challenges of this moment in history.
Looking at God the Father means understanding the family as a place where life
is welcomed and nurtured, a workshop of brotherhood where, with the help of
Christ's Spirit, "a new fraternity and solidarity, a true reflection of the
mystery of mutual self-giving and receiving proper to the Most Holy
Trinity" (Evangelium vitae, n. 76) is created among men.
From the experience of renewed Christian families, the Church herself can learn
how to foster among all the members of the community a more family-like
dimension, by accepting and encouraging a more human and fraternal style of
relationship (cf. Familiaris consortio, n. 64).
To the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors the Holy Father said:
I warmly welcome the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present at today's
Audience. I pray that you will be strengthened in faith, hope and love during
this season of Advent, so that you may celebrate Christmas and enter the Jubilee
Year with renewed hearts and minds. Upon all present I invoke the joy and peace
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
(ŠL'Osservatore Romano - 8 December 1999)