2014-10-07 08:17:00

Married couple tells Synod Fathers ‘Family life is ‘messy’


(Vatican Radio) The first general debate in the Synod on the Family got underway Monday in the afternoon session led by the President Delegate on duty,  Cardinal André Vingt-Trois, Archbishop of Paris. 

In his brief introduction he outlined the themes under discussion in the session set out by the Instrumentum laboris or Synod guidelines: The plan of God for marriage and family (Part I, chap. 1), and The Knowledge and Acceptance of the Teachings on Marriage and the Family from Sacred Scripture and Church Documents (Part I, chap. 2)

Emer McCarthy reports. Listen: 

The Cardinal noted that “even when Church teaching on marriage and the family is known, many Christians have difficulty fully accepting it”.  Consequently, pastors “need to able to introduce the truths of faith concerning the family, so its profound human and existential worth can be properly appreciated”.  The Cardinal spoke of the difficulties encountered in this journey which, he said, are often the result of fragile interpersonal relationships and a culture that rejects permanent choices, conditioned as it is by insecurity and short term vision.

He then introduced the first married couple to directly address the Synod Fathers about the reality of married life, Romano and Mavis Pirola, who have been married for 55 years are parents to four children and grandparents to eight. They are also the Directors of the Australian Catholic Marriage and Family Council.

They told the Synod Father’s that “family life is ‘messy’. But so is parish life, which is the ‘family of families’”. They presented the situations of the many Catholic’s who have experienced brokenness and tension in their family life but who heroically struggle on in their attempt to adhere to Church teaching, such as the divorced mother who feels unwelcome when she brings her children to Mass; the parents who wish to welcome their gay son and his partner home for Christmas holidays; the elderly widowed mother who is the lone care-giver for her middle aged disabled son.

“The Church constantly faces the tension of upholding the truth while expressing compassion and mercy”, the couple noted. “[These familes] could always benefit from better teaching and programs. However, more than anything they need to be accompanied on their journey, welcomed, have their stories listened to, and, above all, affirmed”.

However, perhaps the most revealing point made by the Pirola’s Monday was that the language of the Church in terms of the family needs to be changed.  Looking to the Church for guidance in times of trial and occasionally looking at Church documents, they said what they found “seemed to be from another planet” and “not terribly relevant” to their own experiences.

The Third Congregation of general debate takes place Tuesday morning in the Synod Hall.

 

Below please find the full text of the Pirola’s address to the Synod on the Family:

  

Fifty-seven years ago, I looked across a room and saw a beautiful young woman. We came to know each other over time and eventually took the huge step of committing ourselves to each other in marriage. We soon found that living our new life together was extraordinarily complex.Like all marriages, we have had wonderful times together and also times of anger, frustration and tears and the nagging fear of a failed marriage. Yet here we are, 55 years married and still in love. It certainly is a mystery.

That attraction that we first felt and the continued bonding force between us was basically sexual. The little things we did for each other, the telephone calls and love notes, the way we planned our day around each other and the things we shared were outward expressions of our longing to be intimate with each other.

As each of our four children arrived, it was an exhilarating joy for which we still thank the Lord daily. Of course, the complexities of parenting had great rewards and challenges. There were nights when we would lie awake wondering where we had gone wrong.

Our faith in Jesus was important to us. We went to Mass together and looked to the Church for guidance. Occasionally we looked at Church documents but they seemed to be from another planet with difficult language and not terribly relevant to our own experiences.

In our life’s journey together, we were primarily influenced through involvement with other married couples and some priests, mainly in lay spirituality movements, particularly Équipes Notre Dame and Worldwide Marriage Encounter.

The process was one of prayerful listening to each others’ stories and of being accepted and affirmed in the context of Church teaching. There was not much discussion about natural law but for us they were examples of what Pope John Paul would later refer to as one of the Church’s major resources for evangelization.

Gradually we came to see that the only feature that distinguishes our sacramental relationship from that of any other good Christ-centred relationship is sexual intimacy and that marriage is a sexual sacrament with its fullest expression in sexual intercourse. We believe that until married couples come to reverence sexual union as an essential part of their spirituality it is extremely hard to appreciate the beauty of teachings such as those of Humanae Vitae. We need new ways and relatable language to touch peoples’ hearts.

As the Instrumentum laboris suggests, the domestic church has much to offer the wider Church in its evangelizing role. For example, the Church constantly faces the tension of upholding the truth while expressing compassion and mercy. Families face this tension all the time. Take homosexuality as an example. Friends of ours were planning their Christmas family gathering when their gay son said he wanted tobring his partner home too. They fully believed in the Church’s teachings and they knew their grandchildren would see them welcome the son and his partner into the family. Their response could be summed up in three words, ‘He is our son’.

What a model of evangelization for parishes as they respond to similar situations in their neghbourhood! It is a practical example of what the Instrumentum laboris says concerning the Church’s teaching role and its main mission to let the world know of God’s love.

In our experience, families, the domestic churches, are often the natural models of the open doors for churches of which Gaudium Evangelii speaks.

A divorced friend of ours says that sometimes she doesn’t feel fully accepted in her parish. However, she turns up to Mass regularly and uncomplainingly with her children. For the rest of her parish she should be a model of courage and commitment in the face of adversity. From people like her we learn to recognize that we all carry an element of brokenness in our lives.

Appreciating our own brokenness helps enormouslyto reduce our tendency to be judgemental of others which is such a block for evangelisation. We know an elderly widow who lives with her only son. He is in his forties and has Down syndrome and schizophrenia. She cares for him inspiringly and her only expressed fear is who will care for him when she is no longer able.

Our lives are touched by many such families.These families have a basic understanding of what the Church teaches. They could alwaysbenefit from better teaching and programs.

However, more than anything they need to be accompanied on their journey, welcomed, have their stories listened to, and, above all, affirmed.

The Instrumentum laboris notes that the beauty of human love mirrors the divine love as recorded in biblical tradition in the prophets. But their family lives were chaotic and full of messy dramas. Yes, family life is ‘messy’. But so is parish, which is the ‘family of families’.

The Instrumentum laboris questions how ‘the clergy [could] be better prepared … in … presenting the documents of the Church on marriage and the family’.

Again, one way could be by learning from the domestic church. As Pope Benedict XVI said, ‘This demands a change in mindset, particularly concerning lay people. Theymust no longer be viewed as "collaborators" of the clergy but truly recognized as "co-responsible", for the Church's being and action’.

That would also require a major attitudinal change for laity. We have eight wonderful, unique grandchildren. We pray for them by name daily because

daily they are exposed to the distorted messages of modern society, even as they walk down the street to school such messages are on billboards or appear on their smartphones. A high respect for authority, parental, religiousor secular, has long gone. So their parents learn to enter into the lives oftheir children, to share their values and hopes for them and also to learn from them in turn. This process of entering into the lives of our other persons and learning from them as well as sharing with them is at the heart of evangelization.

As Pope Paul VI wrote in Evangelii Nuntiandi, ‘The parents not only communicate the Gospel to their children, but from their children they can themselves receive the same Gospel as deeply lived by them.’

That has certainly been our experience. In fact, we resonate with the suggestion of one of our daughters regarding the development of what she calls a nuptial paradigm

for Christian spirituality, onethat applies to all people, whether single, celibate or married but which would make matrimony the starting point for

understanding mission. It would have a solid biblical and anthropological basis and would highlight the vocational instinct for generativity and intimacy experienced by each person. It would remind us that each of usis created for relationship

and that baptism in Christ means belonging to his Body, leading us towards an eternity with God who is a Trinitarian communion

of love.

____________________

1

It amazes us that in any pharmacy we can buy tablets in a packet that contains a detailed pamphlet that explains complex scientific aspects of the medicine in simplelay language and which will withstand possible litigation in court. There is an urgent need for a comparable approachto the documents of the Magisterium. A practical example of how this might be done was given by Prof Jane Adolpheat the XXI Genreal Assembly of the Pontifical Council for the Family (PCF), Oct 23-25, 2013. The PCF’s Charter of the Rights of the Family is a beautiful Church document, complete with extensive Church references. Hence, it is generally viewed as a ‘Church document’ and rarely quoted in secular circles. Prof Adolph has re-drafted the document, making the same points with entirely secular references, thus making it a document likely to be quoted by secular organizations such as the UN and therefore much more likely to be read in the public domain.

2

We were deeply influenced also by contact with, or involvement in, other lay spirituality organizations and movements such as Charismatic Renewal, the Pastoraland Matrimonial Renewal Centre, the Antioch Youth Movement and Focolare.

3

Pope John Paul II, “the family is one of the Church’s most effective agents of evangelisationand not simply the object of the Church’s pastoral care’, 1999, Ecclesia in Asia, 46.

4

Instrumentum laboris, III Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the topic: The Pastoral

Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization, Vatican City, 2014. No.4. ‘… the Church, in order to

fully understand her mystery, looks to the Christian family, which manifests her in a real way.’

BOLLETTINO N. 0716 - 06.10.2014 5

5

Instrumentum laboris, III Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the topic: The Pastoral

Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization, Vatican City, 2014. Preface, para 2. ‘[The Synod] is

called to reflect on the path to follow to communicate to everyone the truth about conjugal love and the family and

respond to its many challenges (cf. EG, 66). The family is an inexhaustible resource and font of life in the Church’s

pastoral activity. Therefore, the primary task of the Church is to proclaim the beauty of the vocation to love which

holds great potential for society and the Church.’

6

Pope Francis, 2013, Evangelii Gaudium, 46.

7

When people are affirmed for the good they do, they do it better. Hence the value of St Pope John Paul II’s

statement, ‘Family, become what you are!’ (FC, 17).

8

Instrumentum laboris, III Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the topic: The Pastoral

Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization, Vatican City, 2014. No.12. ‘that the clergy be better

prepared and exercise a sense of responsibility in explaining the Word of God and presenting the documents of the

Church on marriage and the family.

9

Pope Benedict XVI, 26 May 2009, Address at RomeDiocese pastoral convention on the theme "Church

Membership and Pastoral Co-responsibility", as reported in Zenit, Vatican City, 4 June 2009.

10

Pope Paul VI, 1975, EN 71.

11

Teresa Pirola, ‘Family life in a post-conciliar pastoral agenda’, Aust eJournal of Theology, 2012, 19:2.

12

St Pope John Paul II, Wednesday General Audience, ‘The nuptial meaning of the body’, 8 Jan 1980.

[03008-02.01] [Original text: English]

 

 








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