Fraternal
Delegates to Synod on Family: we share same concerns, hopes
(Vatican Radio) Participants of the extraordinary Synod
for the Family took a pause at the end of their first week of work
Saturday. In speeches from seven fraternal Delegates from different
Christian confessions Friday afternoon, the synod fathers heard that all
Christian families share the same challenges and hopes. In a briefing for
journalists Saturday, the Holy See’s press spokesman, Jesuit Father Federico
Lombardi said that the eighth fraternal delegate, Metropolitan Hilarion,
representing the Patriarchate of Moscow is expected to deliver his address to
synod participants in the coming days.
Saturday is a day off for the synod fathers as the synod
relators and special secretary work on the Relatio Synodali to be published
Monday, and which will present the topics that will be under discussion in the
working groups next week.
Speaking
at Saturday’s briefing, Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin drew comparisons
between the last synod on the family which he attended in 1980, noting that it
was the first of Pope John Paul II’s pontificate, as it is of Pope Francis’.
“They
saw the centrality of the family for the development of the Church and the
stability of society and they also saw the challenges that the family as an
institution and families (themselves) had to face in the culture of that
moment.”
Friday
afternoon, the Fraternal Delegates told Synod fathers that as a
fundamental element of society, the family also lays the foundation for a
common, just society. But the challenges are many. As the Syrian
Orthodox Archbishop Mar Yostinos Boulos Safar noted, the current economic
crisis, a mass media that takes away time from family dialogue – sometimes even
leading to adultery – wars, migration, globalization, the drama of Aids and
Ebola, and Islamic fundamentalism in some countries, are all challenges eroding
the family.
Common
to all Christians is the need for adequate marriage preparation and reflection
on marriage between believers and non-believers. It was observed that
preparation for marriage shouldn’t start in adult life but with our children,
through offering them models of loving marriages.
Metropolitan
Athénagoras of Belgium, representing the Ecumenical Patriarchate of the
Orthodox Church, spoke of the need to be neither “too moralizing nor too rigid”
towards young people or risk losing the very audience our Church is speaking
to.
The
Church’s acceptance of divorced and remarried persons can promote a serene
family life and thus a richer society came up as one theme – all agree that it
is essential to listen with mercy and compassion to those who find themselves
in difficult family situations. For the Orthodox delegates, second marriages
constitute a deviation and while they are celebrated, it is after a period of
pastoral accompaniment to favor the reconciliation of married couples.
This
same listening is needed in relation to homosexual persons – who should not be
condemned. Though marriage, it was emphasized, remains a union between a
man and a woman.
Common
to all Christians too is the desire to care for children born in difficult
contexts, support victims of violence – particularly women and children – and
to defend the vulnerable and voiceless, whether they are Christian or not.
Also
central to the interventions by fraternal delegates: the proclamation of the
Gospel, with the family as the first school of the faith. It is essential
then that Christians share the joy of the Gospel or “evangelii gaudium” that
Pope Francis so frequently talks about.
The
fraternal Delegates from the Middle East thanked the Holy Father for the
September 7, 2013 prayer vigil he led for peace in Syria and throughout the
world. The delegates concluded Friday’s session by expressing the hope
that the extraordinary Synod on the family would prove successful, especially
in view of the ordinary Assembly scheduled for 2015.

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