The Situation of the
Family in the World Today
6. The
situation in which the family finds itself presents positive and negative
aspects: the first are a sign of the salvation of Christ operating in the
world; the second, a sign of the refusal that man gives to the love of God.
On the
one hand, in fact, there is a more lively awareness of personal freedom and
greater attention to the quality of interpersonal relationships in marriage, to
promoting the dignity of women, to responsible procreation, to the education of
children. There is also an awareness of the need for the development of
interfamily relationships, for reciprocal spiritual and material assistance,
the rediscovery of the ecclesial mission proper to the family and its
responsibility for the building of a more just society. On the other hand,
however, signs are not lacking of a disturbing degradation of some fundamental
values: a mistaken theoretical and practical concept of the independence of the
spouses in relation to each other; serious misconceptions regarding the
relationship of authority between parents and children; the concrete
difficulties that the family itself experiences in the transmission of values;
the growing number of divorces; the scourge of abortion; the ever more frequent
recourse to sterilization; the appearance of a truly contraceptive mentality.
At the
root of these negative phenomena there frequently lies a corruption of the idea
and the experience of freedom, conceived not as a capacity for realizing the
truth of God's plan for marriage and the family, but as an autonomous power of
self-affirmation, often against others, for one's own selfish well-being.
Worthy of
our attention also is the fact that, in the countries of the so-called Third World, families often lack both the means necessary
for survival, such as food, work, housing and medicine, and the most elementary
freedoms. In the richer countries, on the contrary, excessive prosperity and
the consumer mentality, paradoxically joined to a certain anguish and
uncertainty about the future, deprive married couples of the generosity and
courage needed for raising up new human life: thus
life is often perceived not as a blessing, but as a danger from which to defend
oneself.
The
historical situation in which the family lives therefore appears as an interplay of light and darkness.
This
shows that history is not simply a fixed progression towards what is better,
but rather an event of freedom, and even a struggle between freedoms that are
in mutual conflict, that is, according to the well-known expression of St.
Augustine, a conflict between two loves: the love of God to the point of
disregarding self, and the love of self to the point of disregarding God.(16)
It
follows that only an education for love rooted in faith can lead to the
capacity of interpreting "the signs of the times," which are the
historical expression of this twofold love.
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