A Context for the Family Synod
Discussion
Elizabeth Dias wrote in Time Magazine
on 10/13/14: “The style that Pope Francis lives is one
that starts with a spirit of embrace,
of mercy, and not with sin. It begins with figuring out at what
points embrace is possible before determining the points at which it
is not.”
Jesus in St. John 8:3-11 puts mercy
first. He does not go along with the religious crowd and condemn the
woman caught in adultery. He begins by rescuing her from the mob. But
he remains Just: “Go thy way, and from now on
sin no more.” He does not judge the person and condemn but loves
and gives moral correction.
But what of a
more modern complicated family situation? Jesus in St. John 4:16-18
gives the Samaritan woman no excuses about her relationship: “Jesus
said to her, 'Thou hast said well, 'I have no husband,' for thou hast
had five husbands and he whom thou now hast is not thy husband. In
this thou hast spoken truly.”
The wonderful
context that Jesus gives us for thinking about family is St. Matthew
19:4-6. The ending of man-made divorce passes away with a merciful
renewal of Creation: “Have you not read that the Creator, from the
beginning, made them male and female, and said, For this cause a
man shall leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife, and
the two shall become one flesh?
Therefore now they are no longer two, but one flesh. What therefore
God has joined together, let no man put asunder.”
When I was in St. Joseph's Seminary we received a thorough course in
the Sacrament of Matrimony from the late Monsignor Daniel J. Flynn.
Perhaps most instructive was his personal story concerning himself,
the birth control pill and Humanae Vitae. Before the encyclical was
published in July, 1968 he admitted that he was in favor of the new
hormonal pill seeing its contraceptive aspect as part of a regulation
of a woman's menstrual cycle. But Blessed Pope Paul VI saw through
the moral problem and courageously and prophetically declared the
chemical pill taken for contraception to be just that – artificial
contraception: something always forbidden by the Church's moral
instruction. Did Msgr. Flynn complain and dissent? No, he studied the
pronouncement as a faithful member of the Church, accepted it and
taught it. But the Church had gone through a dangerous time. Between
the close of the Second Vatican Council in 1965 and Humanae Vitae in
1968 there were those who wanted to remake the Church according to
anything they desired. They could not accept this reaffirmation and
explanation of constant Church teaching but with the connivance of
too many bishops publicly justified their dissent. The local churches
throughout the world have never fully recovered from this pastoral
disaster.
Our hope is based on the Word of God. The teaching of Christ in His
Church consoles us and strengthens us to follow Him. The light of
Casti Connubii, the doctrinal reaffirmation of Vatican II, the works
of Pope John Paul II and the Catholic Catechism will in Divine
Providence not be extinguished. Yet from now to October 2015 or
whenever there is clear moral guidance from the Papacy, we are again
in a time of great danger. We have faith in God – the boat of Peter
will not sink.