The Broader Communion
of the Family
21.
Conjugal communion constitutes the foundation on which is built the broader
communion of the family, of parents and children, of brothers and sisters with
each other, of relatives and other members of the household.
This
communion is rooted in the natural bonds of flesh and blood, and grows to its
specifically human perfection with the establishment and maturing of the still
deeper and richer bonds of the spirit: the love that animates the interpersonal
relationships of the different members of the family constitutes the interior
strength that shapes and animates the family communion and community.
The
Christian family is also called to experience a new and original communion which
confirms and perfects natural and human communion. In fact the grace of Jesus
Christ, "the first-born among many brethren "(56) is by its nature
and interior dynamism "a grace of brotherhood," as St. Thomas Aquinas
calls it.(57) The Holy Spirit, who is poured forth in
the celebration of the sacraments, is the living source and inexhaustible
sustenance of the supernatural communion that gathers believers and links them
with Christ and with each other in the unity of the Church of God. The
Christian family constitutes a specific revelation and realization of ecclesial
communion, and for this reason too it can and should be called "the
domestic Church."(58)
All
members of the family, each according to his or her own gift, have the grace
and responsibility of building, day by day, the communion of persons, making
the family "a school of deeper humanity"(59): this happens where
there is care and love for the little ones, the sick, the aged; where there is
mutual service every day; when there is a sharing of goods, of joys and of
sorrows.
A
fundamental opportunity for building such a communion is constituted by the
educational exchange between parents and children,(60)
in which each gives and receives. By means of love, respect and obedience
towards their parents, children offer their specific and irreplaceable
contribution to the construction of an authentically human and Christian
family.(61) They will be aided in this if parents exercise their unrenounceable authority as a true and proper
"ministry," that is, as a service to the human and Christian
well-being of their children, and in particular as a service aimed at helping
them acquire a truly responsible freedom, and if parents maintain a living
awareness of the "gift" they continually receive from their children.
Family
communion can only be preserved and perfected through a great spirit of
sacrifice. It requires, in fact, a ready and generous openness of each and all
to understanding, to forbearance, to pardon, to reconciliation. There is no
family that does not know how selfishness, discord, tension and conflict
violently attack and at times mortally wound its own communion: hence there
arise the many and varied forms of division in family life. But, at the same
time, every family is called by the God of peace to have the joyous and
renewing experience of "reconciliation," that is, communion
reestablished, unity restored. In particular, participation in the sacrament of
Reconciliation and in the banquet of the one Body of Christ offers to the Christian
family the grace and the responsibility of overcoming every division and of
moving towards the fullness of communion willed by God, responding in this way
to the ardent desire of the Lord: "that they may be one."(62)
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