WE need to realize and appreciate
more deeply that
marriage, not only as a natural institution but also and especially as
a sacrament, is a path to sanctity not only for the husband and wife
but also for the family, and from the family, for the society and the
Church in general.
We need to see the organic link among these key elements:
the marriage between man and woman, and the family they generate, as
well as the society of which the family is the basic cell and the
universal Church of which the family is considered the domestic
church.
Seeing that link, we would appreciate the crucial and
strategic role that marriage plays in the life of men and women in the
world. We would appreciate the tremendous potential good that marriage
can give to all of us.
That is why everything has to be done to make marriage
achieve its fullest dignity. And that means that we have to purify and
elevate the love that is the very germ of marriage to the supernatural
order.
That love has to develop from simply being natural and
body-emotion-world reliant to being more and more spiritual and
supernatural, driven by grace rather than by mere natural forces.
With the sacrament of marriage, the love between husband
and wife is already guaranteed to have all the graces needed to make
that marriage reach its fullness. What is needed is the faithful and
generous correspondence of the parties concerned to those graces.
Let us reiterate the importance of understanding the true
nature of marriage from the point of view of our Christian faith. We
should never pooh-pooh the role of our Christian faith in
understanding marriage. Short of that faith, we can only have at best
a partial grasp that can miss essential elements of the constitution
of marriage.
Marriage is definitely a path to sanctity. For the husband
and wife, marriage is a way to reach God. Their love can reflect the
very love God has for us, the very love Christ has for his Church. It
is a love that, as St. Paul once described, “bears all things,
believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” (1 Cor
13,7)
The couple should remember this basic truth about the
sacrament of marriage. They can always count on God’s graces that can
make possible what may appear to be humanly impossible for man.
Marriage will always be tested in life. This is something
that should not be a surprise to anyone. Marriage will expose the
parties concerned to all kinds of trials, challenges, difficulties. It
can have failures and enter into crises.
But it should never be forgotten that as a sacrament, with
the backing of no less than God himself, victory is always assured,
even if in human terms things may look like failures or irremediable
cases.
Those trials, difficulties and even failures and crises
are good occasions to deepen and enrich the spouses’ love for each
other. When God’s help is resorted to, the trials, difficulties and
failures are good opportunities to learn or to refine virtues like
fidelity, generosity, optimism, resourcefulness, generosity, etc.
They can actually point to certain deficiencies that often
are taken for granted and that need to be attended to. The couple may
have to improve their skills in dialogue, or in finding positive and
useful elements in some problematic situations, or in being creative
to derive something good from difficult situations.
The couple should realize that nothing is resolved if they
start questioning the intrinsic properties of unity and
indissolubility of marriage, or they start redefining marriage
according to their own terms, already detached from God’s plan for it.
In this regard, it is of primordial importance that the
preparation for marriage be thoroughly done and a network of marital
and family support be put in place as husbands and wives traverse the
sea of life.
What should not be forgotten is that difficulties in
married and family life are good occasions for the parties concerned
to grow in sanctity. Everyone needs to remember St. Paul’s words: “For
those who love God, everything will always work out for the good.”
The ideal marriage is not one where everything simply
clicks, where there are no problems at all, where everything would run
smoothly. That marriage is utopian.
The ideal marriage is rather one where it is game to all
the situations of human life and, while using all the human and
natural means to resolve things, always have recourse to God and his
providence. It’s where marriage becomes a path of sanctification. It’s
when sanctified that marriage sanctifies.
marriage, not only as a natural institution but also and especially as
a sacrament, is a path to sanctity not only for the husband and wife
but also for the family, and from the family, for the society and the
Church in general.
We need to see the organic link among these key elements:
the marriage between man and woman, and the family they generate, as
well as the society of which the family is the basic cell and the
universal Church of which the family is considered the domestic
church.
Seeing that link, we would appreciate the crucial and
strategic role that marriage plays in the life of men and women in the
world. We would appreciate the tremendous potential good that marriage
can give to all of us.
That is why everything has to be done to make marriage
achieve its fullest dignity. And that means that we have to purify and
elevate the love that is the very germ of marriage to the supernatural
order.
That love has to develop from simply being natural and
body-emotion-world reliant to being more and more spiritual and
supernatural, driven by grace rather than by mere natural forces.
With the sacrament of marriage, the love between husband
and wife is already guaranteed to have all the graces needed to make
that marriage reach its fullness. What is needed is the faithful and
generous correspondence of the parties concerned to those graces.
Let us reiterate the importance of understanding the true
nature of marriage from the point of view of our Christian faith. We
should never pooh-pooh the role of our Christian faith in
understanding marriage. Short of that faith, we can only have at best
a partial grasp that can miss essential elements of the constitution
of marriage.
Marriage is definitely a path to sanctity. For the husband
and wife, marriage is a way to reach God. Their love can reflect the
very love God has for us, the very love Christ has for his Church. It
is a love that, as St. Paul once described, “bears all things,
believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” (1 Cor
13,7)
The couple should remember this basic truth about the
sacrament of marriage. They can always count on God’s graces that can
make possible what may appear to be humanly impossible for man.
Marriage will always be tested in life. This is something
that should not be a surprise to anyone. Marriage will expose the
parties concerned to all kinds of trials, challenges, difficulties. It
can have failures and enter into crises.
But it should never be forgotten that as a sacrament, with
the backing of no less than God himself, victory is always assured,
even if in human terms things may look like failures or irremediable
cases.
Those trials, difficulties and even failures and crises
are good occasions to deepen and enrich the spouses’ love for each
other. When God’s help is resorted to, the trials, difficulties and
failures are good opportunities to learn or to refine virtues like
fidelity, generosity, optimism, resourcefulness, generosity, etc.
They can actually point to certain deficiencies that often
are taken for granted and that need to be attended to. The couple may
have to improve their skills in dialogue, or in finding positive and
useful elements in some problematic situations, or in being creative
to derive something good from difficult situations.
The couple should realize that nothing is resolved if they
start questioning the intrinsic properties of unity and
indissolubility of marriage, or they start redefining marriage
according to their own terms, already detached from God’s plan for it.
In this regard, it is of primordial importance that the
preparation for marriage be thoroughly done and a network of marital
and family support be put in place as husbands and wives traverse the
sea of life.
What should not be forgotten is that difficulties in
married and family life are good occasions for the parties concerned
to grow in sanctity. Everyone needs to remember St. Paul’s words: “For
those who love God, everything will always work out for the good.”
The ideal marriage is not one where everything simply
clicks, where there are no problems at all, where everything would run
smoothly. That marriage is utopian.
The ideal marriage is rather one where it is game to all
the situations of human life and, while using all the human and
natural means to resolve things, always have recourse to God and his
providence. It’s where marriage becomes a path of sanctification. It’s
when sanctified that marriage sanctifies.
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