Family Life as an
Experience of Communion and Sharing
43. The
very experience of communion and sharing that should characterize the family's
daily life represents its first and fundamental contribution to society.
The
relationships between the members of the family community are inspired and
guided by the law of "free giving." By respecting and fostering
personal dignity in each and every one as the only basis for value, this free
giving takes the form of heartfelt acceptance, encounter and dialogue,
disinterested availability, generous service and deep solidarity.
Thus the
fostering of authentic and mature communion between persons within the family
is the first and irreplaceable school of social life, and example and stimulus
for the broader community relationships marked by respect, justice, dialogue
and love.
The
family is thus, as the Synod Fathers recalled, the place of origin and the most
effective means for humanizing and personalizing society: it makes an original
contribution in depth to building up the world, by making possible a life that
is properly speaking human, in particular by guarding and transmitting virtues
and "values." As the Second Vatican
Council states, in the family "the various generations come together and
help one another to grow wiser and to harmonize personal rights with the other
requirements of social living."(106)
Consequently,
faced with a society that is running the risk of becoming more and more
depersonalized and standardized and therefore inhuman and dehumanizing, with
the negative results of many forms of escapism-such as alcoholism, drugs and
even terrorism-the family possesses and continues still to release formidable
energies capable of taking man out of his anonymity, keeping him conscious of
his personal dignity, enriching him with deep humanity and actively placing
him, in his uniqueness and unrepeatability, within
the fabric of society.
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