Synod
explores main challenges facing the contemporary family
(Vatican Radio) One of the main challenges for the Church in
promoting the family stems from an evolution of how the family itself has come
to be understood by society.
This
is according to Metropolitan Archbishop William Skurla of the Archeparchy of
Pittsburgh, one of the participants in the Extraordinary Synod on the Pastoral
Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization which is currently
underway in the Vatican.
In an interview with Vatican Radio’s Andrew Summerson,
Archbishop Skurla said the biggest challenge pertains to how the definition of
family has changed in recent years. “During that time, the Church’s
understanding of man and woman, married together… to bring a family into the
world is no longer a universal definition that everyone agrees to.”
Because
of this, he said, “it is more difficult to speak to the world, because always
we have to explain our position as almost a minority understanding of the place
of the family in society today.”
Another
challenge he cited is that which results a lack of permanence, with families
frequently moving from place to place. “It creates an atmosphere where there is
not the same kind of support that we had, say, thirty, or forty, or fifty years
ago from the family in the community that people are trying to raise their
children in.”
The
archbishop also highlighted a third challenge which pertains to stability
caused by the economic status of the family. “A change during the last twenty
years,” he said, “is that the more stable families are actually the more
successful [financially] families,” while those that “have to struggle
economically have more difficulty in staying together.”
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