Pope Francis: Marriage prep should be more than a few parish meetings

Vatican City, Oct 24, 2018 / 03:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his general audience Wednesday, Pope Francis said that engaged couples require “careful preparation” for the lifelong fidelity that marriage requires.

“One cannot say marriage preparation is three or four conferences given in the parish. This is not preparation,” Pope Francis said in St. Peter’s Square Oct. 24, in a departure from his prepared remarks.

“The preparation must be mature and it takes time. It is not a formal act; it is a sacrament,” Francis said. This responsibility falls on the priest and the bishop, he added.

“To enter the Sacrament of Marriage, the engaged couple must mature the certainty that within their bond is the hand of God, who precedes them and accompanies them, and will allow them to say: ‘With the grace of Christ I promise to always be faithful to you,’” the pope continued.

Pope Francis spoke about marriage prep as a part of a catechesis on the sixth commandment, “Thou shall not commit adultery.” In recent weeks, the pope has dedicated his weekly general audiences to a series of lesson and reflections on the Ten Commandments recorded in the scriptural books of Exodus and Deuteronomy.

“This Sixth Commandment calls us to turn our gaze to Christ, who with his fidelity can take from us an adulterous heart and give us a faithful heart,” the pope said.

The Catholic Church teaches that married love is an indissoluble lifelong bond that is faithful and fruitful.

“Fidelity is the characteristic of a free, mature, responsible human relationship,” Pope Francis said. “One can not love only as long as ‘it is convenient;’ love manifests itself just beyond the threshold of one’s own advantage, when everything is given without reserve.”

This fidelity comes from Christ’s “death and resurrection, from His unconditional love comes constancy in relationships,” the Holy Father explained. “Christ reveals true love …  He is the faithful Friend who welcomes us even when we make mistakes and always wants our good, even when we do not deserve it.”

Pope Francis quoted St. John Paul II’s catechesis, that every human being “must with perseverance and consistency learn what the meaning of the body is.”

“The call to married life requires, therefore, a careful discernment on the quality of the relationship and an engagement time to verify it,” Francis added.

An engaged couple “cannot promise fidelity ‘in joy and pain, in health and in sickness,’ and to love and honor each other every day of their lives, only on the basis of good will or hope that ‘this thing works,’” he said. “The human being needs to be loved without conditions.”

 


If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.


3 Comments

  1. Wow. Whatever the problems with this Pope, this is a pretty lucid, straight forward, uh….assertion? request? suggestion? How about a “novitiate” for marriage preparation, with stages and formation in prayer and spirituality, ToB, interpersonal skills, discernment of maturity and readiness viz the criteria for valid consent, the Christian vision of the domestic church, covenant love, marriage as an office, i.e. a vocation and sacrament in service to communion (its profound importance to church and society), true intimacy, the blessings of parenthood (and adoption), and the like.

  2. Marriage can be beautiful and fruitful if the right “engaged” couple are compatible. The subtleties of the human mind make some unsuitable for a lifetime relationship. No one appears to vet the couple for a mental psychosis. We attended a pre-Cana session that focused mainly on what one can’t do regarding sex. Not a single question from a psychologist on the subject of mental state which is possibly the single most reason for divorce.

    Then there are people who should not marry. A bully, recluse or someone with bipolar disorder.

Leave a Reply to morganB Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

All comments posted at Catholic World Report are moderated. While vigorous debate is welcome and encouraged, please note that in the interest of maintaining a civilized and helpful level of discussion, comments containing obscene language or personal attacks—or those that are deemed by the editors to be needlessly combative or inflammatory—will not be published. Thank you.


*