CHAPTER I FOSTERING THE NOBILITY OF
MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY
47.
The well-being of the individual person and of human and Christian society is
intimately linked with the healthy condition of that community produced by
marriage and family. Hence Christians and all men who hold this community in
high esteem sincerely rejoice in the various ways by which men today find help
in fostering this community of love and perfecting its life, and by which
parents are assisted in their lofty calling. Those who rejoice in such aids
look for additional benefits from them and labor to bring them about.
Yet the
excellence of this institution is not everywhere reflected with equal
brilliance, since polygamy, the plague of divorce, so-called free love and
other disfigurements have an obscuring effect. In addition, married love is too
often profaned by excessive self-love, the worship of pleasure and illicit
practices against human generation. Moreover, serious disturbances are caused
in families by modern economic conditions, by influences at once social and
psychological, and by the demands of civil society. Finally, in certain parts
of the world problems resulting from population growth are generating concern.
All these
situations have produced anxiety of consciences. Yet, the power and strength of
the institution of marriage and family can also be seen in the fact that time
and again, despite the difficulties produced, the profound changes in modern
society reveal the true character of this institution in one way or another.
Therefore,
by presenting certain key points of Church doctrine in a clearer light, this
sacred synod wishes to offer guidance and support to those Christians and other
men who are trying to preserve the holiness and to foster the natural dignity
of the married state and its superlative value.
48.
The intimate partnership of married life and love has been established by the
Creator and qualified by His laws, and is rooted in the jugal covenant of
irrevocable personal consent. Hence by that human act whereby spouses mutually
bestow and accept each other a relationship arises which by divine will and in
the eyes of society too is a lasting one. For the good of the spouses and their
off-springs as well as of society, the existence of the sacred bond no longer
depends on human decisions alone. For, God Himself is the author of matrimony,
endowed as it is with various benefits and purposes.1 All of these have
a very decisive bearing on the continuation of the human race, on the personal
development and eternal destiny of the individual members of a family, and on
the dignity, stability, peace and prosperity of the family itself and of human
society as a whole. By their very nature, the institution of matrimony itself
and conjugal love are ordained for the procreation and education of children,
and find in them their ultimate crown. Thus a man and a woman, who by their
compact of conjugal love "are no longer two, but one flesh" (Matt.
19:ff), render mutual help and service to each other through an intimate union
of their persons and of their actions. Through this union they experience the
meaning of their oneness and attain to it with growing perfection day by day.
As a mutual gift of two persons, this intimate union and the good of the
children impose total fidelity on the spouses and argue for an unbreakable
oneness between them.2
Christ
the Lord abundantly blessed this many-faceted love, welling up as it does from
the fountain of divine love and structured as it is on the model of His union
with His Church. For as God of old made Himself present3 to His people
through a covenant of love and fidelity, so now the Savior of men and the
Spouse4 of the Church comes into the lives of married Christians
through the sacrament of matrimony. He abides with them thereafter so that just
as He loved the Church and handed Himself over on her behalf,5 the
spouses may love each other with perpetual fidelity through mutual
self-bestowal.
Authentic
married love is caught up into divine love and is governed and enriched by
Christ's redeeming power and the saving activity of the Church, so that this
love may lead the spouses to God with powerful effect and may aid and
strengthen them in sublime office of being a father or a mother.6 For
this reason Christian spouses have a special sacrament by which they are
fortified and receive a kind of consecration in the duties and dignity of their
state.7 By virtue of this sacrament, as spouses fulfil their conjugal
and family obligation, they are penetrated with the spirit of Christ, which
suffuses their whole lives with faith, hope and charity. Thus they increasingly
advance the perfection of their own personalities, as well as their mutual
sanctification, and hence contribute jointly to the glory of God.
As a
result, with their parents leading the way by example and family Prayer, children
and indeed everyone gathered around the family hearth will find a readier path
to human maturity, salvation and holiness. Graced with the dignity and office
of fatherhood and motherhood, parents will energetically acquit themselves of a
duty which devolves primarily on them, namely education and especially
religious education.
As living
members of the family, children contribute in their own way to making their
parents holy. For they will respond to the kindness of their parents with
sentiments of gratitude, with love and trust. They will stand by them as
children should when hardships overtake their parents and old age brings its
loneliness. Widowhood, accepted bravely as a continuation of the marriage
vocation, should be esteemed by all.8 Families too will share their
spiritual riches generously with other families. Thus the Christian family,
which springs from marriage as a reflection of the loving covenant uniting
Christ with the Church,9 and as a participation in that covenant, will
manifest to all men Christ's living presence in the world, and the genuine
nature of the Church. This the family will do by the mutual love of the
spouses, by their generous fruitfulness, their solidarity and faithfulness, and
by the loving way in which all members of the family assist one another.
49.
The biblical Word of God several times urges the betrothed and the married to
nourish and develop their wedlock by pure conjugal love and undivided
affection.10 Many men of our own age also highly regard true love
between husband and wife as it manifests itself in a variety of ways depending
on the worthy customs of various peoples and times.
This love
is an eminently human one since it is directed from one person to another through
an affection of the will; it involves the good of the whole person, and
therefore can enrich the expressions of body and mind with a unique dignity,
ennobling these expressions as special ingredients and signs of the friendship
distinctive of marriage. This love God has judged worthy of special gifts,
healing, perfecting and exalting gifts of grace and of charity. Such love,
merging the human with the divine, leads the spouses to a free and mutual gift
of themselves, a gift providing itself by gentle affection and by deed, such
love pervades the whole of their lives:11 indeed by its busy generosity
it grows better and grows greater. Therefore it far excels mere erotic
inclination, which, selfishly pursued, soon enough fades wretchedly away.
This love
is uniquely expressed and perfected through the appropriate enterprise of
matrimony. The actions within marriage by which the couple are united
intimately and chastely are noble and worthy ones. Expressed in a manner which
is truly human, these actions promote that mutual self-giving by which spouses
enrich each other with a joyful and a ready will. Sealed by mutual faithfulness
and be allowed above all by Christs sacrament, this love remains steadfastly
true in body and in mind, in bright days or dark. It will never be profaned by
adultery or divorce. Firmly established by the Lord, the unity of marriage will
radiate from the equal personal dignity of wife and husband, a dignity
acknowledged by mutual and total love. The constant fulfillment of the duties
of this Christian vocation demands notable virtue. For this reason,
strengthened by grace for holiness of life, the couple will painstakingly
cultivate and pray for steadiness of love, large heartedness and the spirit of
sacrifice.
Authentic
conjugal love will be more highly prized, and wholesome public opinion created
about it if Christian couples give outstanding witness to faithfulness and
harmony in their love, and to their concern for educating their children also,
if they do their part in bringing about the needed cultural, psychological and
social renewal on behalf of marriage and the family. Especially in the heart of
their own families, young people should be aptly and seasonably instructed in
the dignity, duty and work of married love. Trained thus in the cultivation of
chastity, they will be able at a suitable age to enter a marriage of their own
after an honorable courtship.
50.
Marriage and conjugal love are by their nature ordained toward the begetting
and educating of children. Children are really the supreme gift of marriage and
contribute very substantially to the welfare of their parents. The God Himself
Who said, "it is not good for man to be alone" (Gen. 2:18) and
"Who made man from the beginning male and female" (Matt. 19:4),
wishing to share with man a certain special participation in His own creative
work, blessed male and female, saying: "Increase and multiply" (Gen.
1:28). Hence, while not making the other purposes of matrimony of less account,
the true practice of conjugal love, and the whole meaning of the family life
which results from it, have this aim: that the couple be ready with stout
hearts to cooperate with the love of the Creator and the Savior. Who through
them will enlarge and enrich His own family day by day.
Parents
should regard as their proper mission the task of transmitting human life and
educating those to whom it has been transmitted. They should realize that they
are thereby cooperators with the love of God the Creator, and are, so to speak,
the interpreters of that love. Thus they will fulfil their task with human and
Christian responsibility, and, with docile reverence toward God, will make
decisions by common counsel and effort. Let them thoughtfully take into account
both their own welfare and that of their children, those already born and those
which the future may bring. For this accounting they need to reckon with both
the material and the spiritual conditions of the times as well as of their
state in life. Finally, they should consult the interests of the family group,
of temporal society, and of the Church herself. The parents themselves and no
one else should ultimately make this judgment in the sight of God. But in their
manner of acting, spouses should be aware that they cannot proceed arbitrarily,
but must always be governed according to a conscience dutifully conformed to
the divine law itself, and should be submissive toward the Church's teaching
office, which authentically interprets that law in the light of the Gospel. That
divine law reveals and protects the integral meaning of conjugal love, and
impels it toward a truly human fulfillment. Thus, trusting in divine Providence
and refining the spirit of sacrifice,12 married Christians glorify the
Creator and strive toward fulfillment in Christ when with a generous human and
Christian sense of responsibility they acquit themselves of the duty to
procreate. Among the couples who fulfil their God-given task in this way, those
merit special mention who with a gallant heart and with wise and common
deliberation, undertake to bring up suitably even a relatively large
family.13
Marriage
to be sure is not instituted solely for procreation; rather, its very nature as
an unbreakable compact between persons, and the welfare of the children, both
demand that the mutual love of the spouses be embodied in a rightly ordered
manner, that it grow and ripen. Therefore, marriage persists as a whole manner
and communion of life, and maintains its value and indissolubility, even when
despite the often intense desire of the couple, offspring are lacking.
51.
This council realizes that certain modern conditions often keep couples from
arranging their married lives harmoniously, and that they find themselves in
circumstances where at least temporarily the size of their families should not
be increased. As a result, the faithful exercise of love and the full intimacy
of their lives is hard to maintain. But where the intimacy of married life is
broken off, its faithfulness can sometimes be imperiled and its quality of
fruitfulness ruined, for then the upbringing of the children and the courage to
accept new ones are both endangered.
To these
problems there are those who presume to offer dishonorable solutions indeed;
they do not recoil even from the taking of life. But the Church issues the
reminder that a true contradiction cannot exist between the divine laws
pertaining to the transmission of life and those pertaining to authentic
conjugal love.
For God,
the Lord of life, has conferred on men the surpassing ministry of safeguarding
life in a manner which is worthy of man. Therefore from the moment of its
conception life must be guarded with the greatest care while abortion and
infanticide are unspeakable crimes. The sexual characteristics of man and the
human faculty of reproduction wonderfully exceed the dispositions of lower
forms of life. Hence the acts themselves which are proper to conjugal love and
which are exercised in accord with genuine human dignity must be honored with
great reverence. Hence when there is question of harmonizing conjugal love with
the responsible transmission of life, the moral aspects of any procedure does
not depend solely on sincere intentions or on an evaluation of motives, but
must be determined by objective standards. These, based on the nature of the
human person and his acts, preserve the full sense of mutual self-giving and
human procreation in the context of true love. Such a goal cannot be achieved
unless the virtue of conjugal chastity is sincerely practiced. Relying on these
principles, sons of the Church may not undertake methods of birth control which
are found blameworthy by the teaching authority of the Church in its unfolding
of the divine law.14
All
should be persuaded that human life and the task of transmitting it are not
realities bound up with this world alone. Hence they cannot be measured or
perceived only in terms of it, but always have a bearing on the eternal destiny
of men.
52.
The family is a kind of school of deeper humanity. But if it is to achieve the
full flowering of its life and mission, it needs the kindly communion of minds
and the joint deliberation of spouses, as well as the painstaking cooperation
of parents in the education of their children. The active presence of the
father is highly beneficial to their formation. The children, especially the
younger among them, need the care of their mother at home. This domestic role
of hers must be safely preserved, though the legitimate social progress of
women should not be underrated on that account.
Children
should be so educated that as adults they can follow their vocation, including
a religious one, with a mature sense of responsibility and can choose their
state of life; if they marry, they can thereby establish their family in
favorable moral, social and economic conditions. Parents or guardians should by
prudent advice provide guidance to their young with respect to founding a
family, and the young ought to listen gladly. At the same time no pressure,
direct or indirect, should be put on the young to make them enter marriage or
choose a specific partner.
Thus the
family, in which the various generations come together and help one another
grow wiser and harmonize personal rights with the other requirements of social
life, is the foundation of society. All those, therefore, who exercise
influence over communities and social groups should work efficiently for the
welfare of marriage and the family. Public authority should regard it as a sacred
duty to recognize, protect and promote their authentic nature, to shield public
morality and to favor the prosperity of home life. The right of parents to
beget and educate their children in the bosom of the family must be
safeguarded. Children too who unhappily lack the blessing of a family should be
protected by prudent legislation and various undertakings and assisted by the
help they need.
Christians,
redeeming the present time15 and distinguishing eternal realities from
their changing expressions, should actively promote the values of marriage and
the family, both by the examples of their own lives and by cooperation with
other men of good will. Thus when difficulties arise, Christians will provide,
on behalf of family life, those necessities and helps which are suitably
modern. To this end, the Christian instincts of the faithful, the upright moral
consciences of men, and the wisdom and experience of persons versed in the
sacred sciences will have much to contribute.
Those too
who are skilled in other sciences, notably the medical, biological, social and
psychological, can considerably advance the welfare of marriage and the family
along with peace of conscience if by pooling their efforts they labor to
explain more thoroughly the various conditions favoring a proper regulation of
births.
It
devolves on priests duly trained about family matters to nurture the vocation
of spouses by a variety of pastoral means, by preaching God's word, by
liturgical worship, and by other spiritual aids to conjugal and family life; to
sustain them sympathetically and patiently in difficulties, and to make them
courageous through love, so that families which are truly illustrious can be
formed.
Various
organizations, especially family associations, should try by their programs of
instruction and action to strengthen young people and spouses themselves,
particularly those recently wed, and to train them for family, social and
apostolic life.
Finally,
let the spouses themselves, made to the image of the living God and enjoying
the authentic dignity of persons, be joined to one another16 in equal
affection, harmony of mind and the work of mutual sanctification. Thus,
following Christ who is the principle of life,17 by the sacrifices and
joys of their vocation and through their faithful love, married people can
become witnesses of the mystery of love which the Lord revealed to the world by
His dying and His rising up to life again.18
|