Preparation for Marriage
66. More than ever necessary in our times is
preparation of young people for marriage and family life. In some countries it
is still the families themselves that, according to ancient customs, ensure the
passing on to young people of the values concerning married and family life,
and they do this through a gradual process of education or initiation. But the
changes that have taken place within almost all modern societies demand that
not only the family but also society and the Church should be involved in the
effort of properly preparing young people for their future responsibilities.
Many negative phenomena which are today noted with regret in family life derive
from the fact that, in the new situations, young people not only lose sight of
the correct hierarchy of values but, since they no longer have certain criteria
of behavior, they do not know how to face and deal with the new difficulties.
But experience teaches that young people who have been well prepared for family
life generally succeed better than others.
This is even more applicable to Christian
marriage, which influences the holiness of large numbers of men and women. The
Church must therefore promote better and more intensive programs of marriage
preparation, in order to eliminate as far as possible the difficulties that
many married couples find themselves in, and even more in order to favor
positively the establishing and maturing of successful marriages.
Marriage preparation has to be seen and put into
practice as a gradual and continuous process. It includes three main stages:
remote, proximate and immediate preparation.
Remote preparation begins in early childhood, in
that wise family training which leads children to discover themselves as being
endowed with a rich and complex psychology and with a particular personality
with its own strengths and weaknesses. It is the period when esteem for all
authentic human values is instilled, both in interpersonal and in social
relationships, with all that this signifies for the formation of character, for
the control and right use of one's inclinations, for the manner of regarding
and meeting people of the opposite sex, and so on. Also necessary, especially
for Christians, is solid spiritual and catechetical formation that will show
that marriage is a true vocation and mission, without excluding the possibility
of the total gift of self to God in the vocation to the priestly or religious
life.
Upon this basis there will
subsequently and gradually be built up the proximate preparation, which-from
the suitable age and with adequate catechesis, as in a catechumenal
process-involves a more specific preparation for the sacraments, as it were, a
rediscovery of them. This renewed catechesis of young people and others
preparing for Christian marriage is absolutely necessary in order that the
sacrament may be celebrated and lived with the right moral and spiritual
dispositions. The religious formation of young people should be integrated, at
the right moment and in accordance with the various concrete requirements, with
a preparation for life as a couple. This preparation will present marriage as
an interpersonal relationship of a man and a woman that has to be continually
developed, and it will encourage those concerned to study the nature of
conjugal sexuality and responsible parenthood, with the essential medical and
biological knowledge connected with it. It will also acquaint those concerned
with correct methods for the education of children, and will assist them in
gaining the basic requisites for well-ordered family life, such as stable work,
sufficient financial resources, sensible administration, notions of
housekeeping.
Finally, one must not overlook preparation for
the family apostolate, for fraternal solidarity and collaboration with other
families, for active membership in groups, associations, movements and
undertakings set up for the human and Christian benefit of the family.
The immediate preparation for the celebration of
the sacrament of Matrimony should take place in the months and weeks
immediately preceding the wedding, so as to give a new meaning, content and
form to the so-called premarital enquiry required by Canon Law. This
preparation is not only necessary in every case, but is also more urgently
needed for engaged couples that still manifest shortcomings or difficulties in
Christian doctrine and practice.
Among the elements to be instilled in this
journey of faith, which is similar to the catechumenate,
there must also be a deeper knowledge of the mystery of Christ and the Church,
of the meaning of grace and of the responsibility of Christian marriage, as
well as preparation for taking an active and conscious part in the rites of the
marriage liturgy.
The Christian family and the whole of the
ecclesial community should feel involved in the different phases of the
preparation for marriage, which have been described only in their broad
outlines. It is to be hoped that the Episcopal Conferences, just as they are
concerned with appropriate initiatives to help engaged couples to be more aware
of the seriousness of their choice and also to help pastors of souls to make
sure of the couples' proper dispositions, so they will also take steps to see
that there is issued a Directory for the Pastoral Care of the Family. In this
they should lay down, in the first place, the minimum content, duration and
method of the "Preparation Courses," balancing the different
aspects-doctrinal, pedagogical, legal and medical-concerning marriage, and
structuring them in such a way that those preparing for marriage will not only
receive an intellectual training but will also feel a desire to enter actively
into the ecclesial community.
Although one must not underestimate the
necessity and obligation of the immediate preparation for marriage-which would
happen if dispensations from it were easily given-nevertheless such preparation
must always be set forth and put into practice in such a way that omitting it
is not an impediment to the celebration of marriage.
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