Author Archives: LMFLY Intern

NFP Saved My Health—Naturally!

When only seventeen, I experienced my period every other week. My greatly concerned mother took me to see her gynecologist who promptly prescribed the birth control pill. This, the doctor did, though she performed no tests to discover why the frequent menses.

Uninformed about the dangers of hormonal contraception, and desperate for a relief, I happily accepted the medication. About a year later, however, I learned about the negative effects of hormonal contraception. I decided it was not good for me. Returning to the doctor, I asked for an alternative treatment. I was told that there was nothing that could be done for me.

Throughout my college years, I resigned myself to a fate of irregular and painful menstrual cycles. During this time, I had also suffered a number of ovarian cyst ruptures. Unfortunately, I did not dig into the causes of my reproductive health problems until later in marriage preparation when I first started tracking my menstrual cycles through Natural Family Planning (NFP). I worried that my condition would make NFP difficult to practice. And, in fact after I married, the first few months were difficult. My charts were confusing. My husband and I spent hours studying the charts trying to figure out what was going on. I became convinced that something was happening. The clear data empowered me. Not only did I know that there was something wrong, but I knew I could prove it!

After a few months of tracking my cycle, I went to see an NFP trained gynecologist. The doctor reviewed my charts, treated them as medical records, and ordered a number of tests to check my hormone levels. Many medical appointments, charts, and blood draws later, the causes were discovered.

I was diagnosed with both Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) and Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (an autoimmune condition). Though my irregular cycles and difficulty charting seemed like a confusing burden at first, they ended up being my saving grace. It was only through NFP that I was able to recognize the physical signs telling me that something was wrong. If I had not charted, I would not have had the necessary medical data to have my PCOS or Hashimoto’s diagnosed. These conditions would have remained unchecked and untreated—thereby doing further damage to my health and life.

While getting the right diagnosis was just the beginning of a lifelong journey with these conditions, I am grateful for the role NFP played. This journey led me to a compassionate and skilled Catholic NaturalProcreativeTechnology™ (NaPro) physician, who walked with me on a journey of infertility caused by my PCOS. When first diagnosed with PCOS I was told by an endocrinologist that conception would be unlikely. If I had not found a NaPro physician who took my NFP charts seriously, offering appropriate and individual treatment, I would not also be able to say that my husband and I conceived our first child—an amazing gift made possible by God’s grace and NFP charting, naturally!

About the Author
Brooke Paris Foley and her husband, Tim, live in Alexandria, Virginia. They are the proud and blessed parents of a baby due in September 2019, who they welcome as a gift from God. Brooke is a Bioethics teacher, a career through which she passionately tries to empower women in their reproductive health journey by teaching them about the medical and moral benefits of Natural Family Planning.

Brooke Paris Foley. This article is printed with the permission of the author. You have her permission to reproduce it in whole or in part, in print and/or electronically, with the following statement: Brooke Paris Foley, “NFP Saved My Health—Naturally!” Used with permission.

Real Couples Share What It’s Like Practicing NFP

You’ve probably heard that the Catholic Church supports Natural Family Planning (NFP) because it’s the only method of family planning that respects God’s design for married love. You may have also heard about the many benefits of NFP—especially the effectiveness for achieving and postponing pregnancy and the lack of side effects. But, sometimes it’s also helpful to hear from couples themselves.

Many couples can speak to how NFP has not only allowed them to achieve or avoid pregnancy, but how the NFP lifestyle has changed their marriages and families for the better. Below is a complete round up of all the stories couples have been generous enough to share with For Your Marriage and the USCCB’s NFP Office. We also link to several videos from across the country that interviewed NFP couples.

Do you have an inspiring NFP testimonial to share for NFP Week 2019? Email us at nfp@usccb.org, and we will review and pick stories to feature on our Twitter or Facebook during NFP Week!

Table of Contents:

Articles:

If I had not found a NaPro physician who took my NFP charts seriously, offering appropriate and individual treatment, I would not also be able to say that my husband and I conceived our first child—an amazing gift made possible by God’s grace and NFP charting, naturally!
Brooke Paris Foley – NFP Saved My Health—Naturally!

NFP asks us to always have before us the deepest questions of our shared life together: Are we open to welcoming new life to our family now? Should we be? What might God be inviting us to?
Josh and Stacey Noem – 5 Ways NFP Has Benefited our Marriage

My husband, Frank, and I have learned that our sexual union should be focused on giving rather than getting. NFP provided the environment to live this out.
Jennifer and Frank – Signs of Grace

Unlike contraception, which usually places full burden of family planning on the woman, NFP promotes shared responsibility of the fertility of both the husband and wife. It lends a spirit of togetherness to a marriage.
Jennifer and John Campbell – Connections: Living Natural Family Planning

Before having children, Misty had been an atheist and I had been an agnostic. With our first child, the miracle of life spurred a spiritual awakening in us… Even after our conversion, however, NFP grew our relationship with each other and with God in ways we never expected.
Tom and Misty Mealey – Be Her Joseph

I found that the chastity required to get through the periods of abstinence caused profound changes in me… I became grateful for all God had given me, most of all for my wife.
Fletcher Doyle – My Slogan: “Practice Saved Sex

Children do require lots of work, and pregnancy demands its own set of sacrifices, but NFP has helped me meet these challenges by leading me to the realization that children are God’s blessings.
Dawn Farias – How Natural Family Planning Changed My Life

When ill health strikes family members, it adds a dimension of life challenges that spouses never anticipate.
Andrew and Anna Martin – Hard Decisions and Life-Giving Missions

NFP is not moral birth control; rather, it is a complete way of life honoring one’s spouse’s sexuality and fertility. It is loving naturally – the way God designed it.
Michael and Alysha Chambers – NFP, the Theology of the Body, and Our Marriage

In living God’s plan for marriage we found that this “openness” led us also to adoption.
Jennifer and Mike Dress – The Many Dimensions of Openness to Life

Looking back, the most important thing in this whole experience remains our conviction that NFP is a way for us to cooperate with God’s plan. When our plan and God’s plan seemed different, we felt anxious but also hopeful because we knew that God is faithful.
Josh and Stacey Noem – The Week We Were Pregnant

Videos:

For Further Reading:

How to Learn NFP Online

Most NFP instructors will agree that the best way to learn NFP is to meet with an instructor. There’s nothing like meeting face to face for getting the best information and having your questions answered.

But if there’s some reason you can’t take a class in your local area (did you know our Find Support locator can help you find local NFP classes?), below are some resources that meet the USCCB’s Standards for Diocesan NFP Ministry that also offer online programs. Most have classes in both English and Spanish and include the option to talk with a qualified instructor(s) over video chat or phone.

To learn more about NFP check out our page – What is NFP?

Online NFP Resources
Billings Ovulation Method Association
Couple to Couple League
Marquette University College of Nursing Institute for NFP
SymptoPro Fertility Education

Distance Learning
Family of the Americas
Offers a client correspondence course via the US Postal system, with an interactive CD program as part of the curriculum.

For more detailed information on the above Online/Distance Learning options for learning NFP, please visit our NFP Page on USCCB.org.

NFP, the Theology of the Body, and Our Marriage

Many will tell you that the responsibility of being permanently faithful to one person is too great and that being open to life is too much of a burden. They say contraception brings with it freedom and life; however, we have found that it is in openness to God, to each other, and to new life that true freedom is obtained. This is what living Natural Family Planning (NFP) can help couples to experience.

Alysha was in college when she first heard NFP mentioned. All she knew then was that it existed and the Catholic Church considered it a good thing. Michael, a convert to Catholicism, grew up believing that contraception was good and that all couples should use it. Our first real understanding of what NFP is, and what the Church teaches came during our marriage preparation program. We learned that NFP at its core is simply knowledge of the physical changes one can observe in the woman’s fertility cycle. It gives couples a way to measure and chart their fertility signs. We also learned how responsible parenthood is the virtuous application of this fertility knowledge.

One unexpected aspect of NFP that impressed us was how it fosters communication between spouses. Couples practicing NFP discuss the future of their family with every cycle. Knowing how to discuss such important matters has proven a great blessing to many marriages. Michael decided that blessing, by itself, was enough of a reason to learn NFP.

Another theme we discussed in marriage preparation was the Theology of the Body. It helped us understand who we are and how God created us. It is through our bodies that we express who we are spiritually. Also, because we were made in the image and likeness of God, our bodies are supposed to reflect who God is which means we are to act as He acts. How does God act? He loves. God’s love is a total gift of self. God’s love is life-giving. As husband and wife one way we love like God is through our sexuality. If NFP is studied in this context, our appreciation of each other as man and woman increases because the uniqueness and dignity that God has imprinted in our bodies is revealed. It was at this point that Michael realized NFP was not moral birth control; rather, it is a complete way of life honoring one’s spouse’s sexuality and fertility. It is loving naturally – the way God designed it.

In studying NFP in the context of the Theology of the Body, both of us have become more open to each other, to God, and to children. We truly believe that “children are the crown of marriage” and we pray that God will bless us with children some day. Until then, we will “make our plans but hold them lightly.” For us, that means planning to use NFP both when we are attempting or delaying pregnancy, all the while striving to hear and do God’s will!

Michael and Alysha Chambers, Diocese of Arlington, Va., were married September 24, 2005. This article first appeared in the Couple to Couple League’s Family Foundations (Jan/Feb. 2006). It has been edited to fit this publication and is printed with permission.

The Many Dimensions of Openness to Life

Pro-life. Open to life. Welcoming life.These are all descriptions about my marriage with my husband Michael. Although Michael and I didn’t know it when we married in 1995, God would call us to be open to life in an unconventional way.

Michael and I married after taking a series of Natural Family Planning (NFP) classes offered by our diocese. Our NFP teachers were terrific. We appreciated how they took the time to thoroughly explain the method in our classes. Once married, we happily planned our first pregnancy which unfortunately ended in miscarriage. Our second child was born in 1997, and our next two children were spaced every two years, because I breastfed them into toddlerhood, as we had studied in our NFP classes.

Practicing NFP in our marriage so inspired us that we joined our parish’s Pre-Cana team. We have been happy to speak to the engaged couples about NFP. We also found great pleasure in rearing our babies in a life-giving way. We found that this pleasure spilled over to our toddlers as they enjoyed the addition of each new baby.

As our youngest turned five, the call to give birth again wasn’t as clear as it had been in the past. In fact, my husband and I sensed that we felt a different calling. We looked into international adoption. We prayed that if God wanted us to welcome children whose parents could no longer care for them, He would “open the doors”and show us the path. As we discerned, we saw that every step to take was laid in front of us. In just about a year after we began our paperwork, we left for Ethiopia to bring home a wonderful, spirited, creative, ambitious three year old boy. Since arriving in our family, our three older children have surrounded their baby brother, Ejigu, with unconditional love, patience and joy. Michael and I had greatly underestimated their capacity to love and accept a sibling that looks very little like them. Today, Ejigu tags along to all their activities, attends a preschool CCD class, sings in the parish youth choir that I direct, and helps with household chores like his siblings. In turn, his siblings would probably walk through fire for him!

Mike and had always thought we would have several children of our own. Practicing “openness to life ”as our parents did, was our intention. In living God’s plan for marriage however, we found that this “openness” led us also to adoption. After being so richly blessed with our children, we felt an amazing need to look beyond our means and welcome a child whose parents couldn’t provide for him. Our little Ejigu, now three and a half, bore the pain of losing both parents to death and leaving the early attachments of his first home. We feel an amazing honor to continue parenting him as his birth parents would have wanted. In our practice of NFP, we realized that welcoming life has many dimensions. Listening to God’s call is at its heart!

Jennifer and Michael Drees and their children (Emily, Elizabeth, Dominic and Ejigu) are from the Diocese of Camden.

How Natural Family Planning Changed My Life

As a child I was baptized Catholic, but essentially grew up with no religious practice. As a married adult, I reentered the Church, and soon after felt a tugging at my heart to stop practicing contraception. At that time, I did not know about Natural Family Planning (NFP). More basic, I did not know about Church teachings on the moral practice of family planning. What I would learn about God’s design for my married life and through the practice of NFP would change my life.

True Freedom and Openness to Life
When my husband, Ariel and I took an NFP class, I have to admit that I was scared. Giving up control was frightening! It was one thing to be committed to an ideal, but something quite different to follow through on it. It definitely involved a leap of faith! Over time and with some experience, I began to appreciate the gift and beauty of NFP.

In practicing NFP, my husband and I must decide if we, as a couple, are ready to embrace the possibility of a new life in each menstrual cycle. When we had used contraception, we ignored this reality. With NFP we could not ignore how God made us— as a man and a woman. NFP helped us understand the relationship that God designed between the marital act and procreation. It has made us “open to life.” It even brought our last two children into the family!

The Gift of Self
In using NFP over the years both my husband and I now see that we give ourselves to each other fully in the marital act. For us, the idea of contraception has become almost vulgar. It cheapens the marital act. Contraception seems to say: “I love you, honey, but I don’t love you THAT much.”

NFP also guards against the objectification of the woman in the relationship. Contraception often keeps the woman in a defensive position because it allows “intimacy on demand.” NFP does not allow this because of the practice of periodic abstinence when not seeking a pregnancy. A deeper equality between husband and wife can be nurtured with NFP. NFP begins the process of this awareness.

Growing Together in Holiness
The sacrifices that NFP entails have only served to make me a better person and more devoted to the Lord. Without knowing it, using contraception promotes the idea that children are a burden. Children do require lots of work, and pregnancy demands its own set of sacrifices, but NFP has helped me meet these challenges by leading me to the realization that children are God’s blessings. I am constantly forced to pray, change, make concessions and find solutions to the selfishness and laziness that come up often when meeting the needs of others.

Today, I am confident that had I not been open to life in the practice of NFP, I would not have needed to depend on God, and not have grown as a person. This growth benefits my family and the people I meet in everyday life. Jesus calls us to serve others. Marriage and parenthood are ways we can immediately apply this call in our lives. NFP has led me to be more open to life, more aware of God’s design for intimacy in marriage, more dependent on Him to fulfill these plans. It has strengthened my relationship with my husband, given me personal insight and it has given our children life!

Dawn and her husband, Ariel Farias have four children and live in the Archdiocese of San Antonio.

Hard Decisions and Life-Giving Missions

My wife, Anna, and I are not the typical NFP couple. Our current life is not the typical family life either. We have had the unexpected challenge of sickness change our family life and our mission as a married couple.

Anna and I are both Secular Franciscans. We are called as a couple to “to observe the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ by following the example of Saint Francis of Assisi” by simplifying our material needs, being a leaven in our society, and seeing Franciscan universal kinship with all of creation. Our family includes our three children Penelope, Seth and Rose and my ninety-three-year-old father-in-law. Rose, our youngest, has a rare genetic condition known as Velo-Cardio-Facial Syndrome (VCFS). My father-in-law has Alzheimer’s disease.

Rose’s VCFS can cause over two-hundred heath complications. From heart defects to schizophrenia, the complications are an ever present source of concern for Anna and myself. Usually a child does not have all two-hundred illnesses, but typically a cluster of a dozen or so health problems will result. For Rose,the first two years of her life found our family living at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. In that time, Rose received two open heart surgeries among the many conditions treated. Today we have more than your average number of doctor visits since we have to stay vigilant with regard to Rose’s health.

With the addition of my father-in-law to the family, the challenge of Alzheimer’s disease has had a great impact on our daily lives. Just as Francis’ great conversion occurred when he saw Christ in the leper, so our family is seeing the poor and crucified Christ in my father-in-law as he declines.

When ill health strikes family members, it adds a dimension of life challenges that spouses never anticipate! In fact, Anna and I believed that our mission as a married couple has expanded because of the needs of Rose and Grandpa. This understanding has impacted how we live the NFP lifestyle.

We have tried many NFP methods. After Rose’s birth, and due to the health care challenges that we now face, Anna and I discerned that God has given us a new mission—the caring for the special needs of Rose and Grandpa. Anna and I have discerned that we cannot have more children. This led us to search for an NFP method that could provide the most information about our combined fertility. We found that the Marquette Model satisfied this need.

The Marquette Method has been an answer to our prayers. After an email conversation with Dr. Fehring (director of the NFP Institute at Marquette University), we adopted a conservative version of the Marquette Method. The method helps us identify the post-ovulatory time in the woman’s cycle that is consistently infertile. For us, it is only about ten days which isn’t much in a busy family!

As Secular Franciscans our rule calls us to acquire purity of heart and for those who are married to live out the grace of matrimony bearing witness to the “love of Christ for his Church.” I am convinced that no NFP method will work correctly in a marriage unless purity of heart has a central place in the couple’s discernment process. For us,we needed an NFP method which would allow us to carry out our mission of caring for our daughter and father-in-law and still allow us to live the grace of matrimony in its fullest sense.It was a hard decision, but one made with trust and generosity!

Andrew Martin and his family live in the Archdiocese of Washington.

Adoption and Foster Care

“To adopt a child is a great work of love. When it is done, much is given, but much is also received. It is a true exchange of gifts.” – St. John Paul II, Address to Adoptive Families

Many families open their home to a child in need through fostering and adoption. This “great work of love” is a reflection of how the Father has adopted each one of us as beloved sons and daughters. The Catholic Church also admires the bravery of birth parents who entrust their children to others when they know they cannot provide the loving home their children need.

Adopting or fostering a child can be a difficult process for all involved. In the United States, there are many different ways to foster and adopt and the laws vary by state. If you are considering adoption or fostering, look into the adoption services provided by your state or city’s Catholic Charities Office or reach out to your diocese’s Marriage and Family Life Office for referrals to local adoption agencies.

As Pope Francis wrote in Amoris Laetitia: “The choice of adoption and foster care expresses a particular kind of fruitfulness in the marriage experience, and not only in cases of infertility…They make people aware that children, whether natural, adoptive or taken in foster care, are persons in their own right who need to be accepted, loved and cared for, and not just brought into this world.” (AL, 180)

Stories from Adoptive Families

Book Reviews

Marriage Today

From the Church

Other Resources

Retiro Matrimonial 2019 – El Matrimonio, Hecho por una Razón

Acompáñanos a celebrar la Semana Nacional del Matrimonio (del 7 al 14 de febrero de 2019), tomándote unos momentos cada día para reflexionar y orar con tu cónyuge.  El tema de este año es: El matrimonio, hecho por una razón. Este retiro te ayudará a reflexionar sobre lo que hace que el matrimonio sea algo único, tal como fue establecido por Dios, entre un hombre y una mujer, como la base de la familia y la sociedad.

Para más instrucciones o inspiración, visita el sitio web marriageuniqueforareason.org.

Día 1 – El matrimonio: hecho por Dios

Abriendo el tema
A pesar de las grandes diferencias entre las culturas, sociedades y religiones, el matrimonio siempre se ha considerado un vínculo sagrado que expresa una forma profunda y comprometida de amor mutuo. El matrimonio no es, sin embargo, una institución puramente humana: “el estado matrimonial fue establecido por el Creador y dotado por él con sus propias leyes… Dios mismo es el autor del matrimonio” (GS, 48).

¿De qué manera es Dios el autor del matrimonio?

Primero, “Dios creó al hombre a su imagen; a imagen de Dios lo creó; varón y hembra los creó” (Gén. 1:27). Dado que el hombre y la mujer son creados a imagen de Dios, quien es Amor, el amor es una vocación innata del hombre y de la mujer. El matrimonio responde a un deseo fundamental y a la necesidad de dar y recibir amor.

Segundo, como varón y hembra, Dios creó al hombre y a la mujer con una complementariedad anatómica única que posibilita la colaboración con Su trabajo de creación. La naturaleza misma del hombre y de la mujer está preparada para la posibilidad del matrimonio y del recibimiento de una nueva vida.

Tercero, la Sagrada Escritura afirma que es bueno que un hombre y una mujer se pertenezcan el uno al otro y formen un vínculo de comunión: “No es bueno que el hombre esté solo” (Gén. 2:18)…”Por tanto, dejará el hombre a su padre y a su madre, y se unirá a su mujer,  y los dos serán una sola carne (Gén.  2:24). En el Nuevo Testamento, Jesús invoca el plan original de Dios para la humanidad como una unión inquebrantable de dos vidas, recordando el plan inicial del Creador: “Así que ya no volverán a ser dos, sino una sola carne” (Mt. 19: 6)

En el plan divino, el matrimonio es la comunión exclusiva e indisoluble de vida y amor entre un hombre y una mujer. Entre dos cristianos bautizados, esta alianza es un sacramento.

Reflexión
Como católicos, la comprensión del plan de Dios para el matrimonio y la familia es una parte esencial de vivir el llamado a la santidad. Los esposos católicos han sido bendecidos con la certeza de que el sacramento del matrimonio proporciona las gracias necesarias para santificarse como esposo y esposa, padre y madre. Esta gracia otorga fuerza a la alianza  matrimonial y la fortalece en momentos de dificultad. También se traslada a la iglesia doméstica, el hogar, donde la familia crece y se convierte en un testigo del amor de Dios hacia los demás.

Sin embargo, el plan de Dios para el matrimonio no se limita a los católicos. Como se explicó anteriormente, está enraizado en la naturaleza e identidad del hombre y de la mujer, creados a imagen de Dios. La dignidad del matrimonio con su propósito y características específicas es un bien que debe sostenerse y defenderse para beneficio de todas las personas.

Para pensar
Para iniciar esta semana de reflexión, pregúntense individualmente y como pareja:

a) ¿Qué hace al matrimonio distinto de otras relaciones? ¿Por qué el amor y el compromiso matrimonial son únicos? ¿Qué significa cuando se dice que Dios creó el matrimonio en el mismo momento en que creó al ser humano?

b) Como pareja, ¿cómo nos complementamos en nuestras necesidades, deseos y atributos? ¿De qué manera nos otorga Dios los diferentes dones, como hombre y mujer, que contribuyen al matrimonio?

(c) ¿Cómo podemos, como pareja, dar testimonio de la belleza y la sabiduría del diseño del matrimonio hecho por Dios?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 2 – El matrimonio: hecho para el amor

Abriendo el tema
El matrimonio entre un hombre y una mujer responde al anhelo más profundo del corazón humano por el amor y la pertenencia. Anhelamos ser amados y recibir amor. Lo mismo puede decirse de la vida familiar: en una familia, los hijos son recibidos para ser amados y retornar ese amor.

A pesar de las limitaciones humanas, la pareja casada y la familia son reflejos de Dios, quien es tres personas divinas en una comunión de amor. En el matrimonio, el hombre y la mujer se convierten en “una sola carne” (Gén. 2: 24), una comunión de amor que genera nueva vida. De manera similar, la familia humana se convierte en una comunión de amor a través del intercambio de amor entre sus miembros.

El matrimonio y la vida familiar son escuelas de amor. Nos enseñan cómo alcanzar una comunión de amor en el contexto de la vida cotidiana: llena de alegrías, sacrificios, pruebas y esperanzas. En todo esto, el amor se purifica y se perfecciona, se hace auténtico y completo. Como el ejemplo del sacrificio de Cristo en la cruz, el amor es dar la vida del uno por el otro. Los cónyuges y los miembros de la familia están llamados a hacer lo mismo todos los días.

Reflexión
A pesar de nuestros mejores esfuerzos para amar fiel e incondicionalmente, el matrimonio y la vida familiar pueden ser difíciles y desafiar nuestra capacidad de amar continuamente. Sin embargo, el amor conyugal que es bendecido por el sacramento del matrimonio es fortalecido y sostenido por una gracia única que pretende “perfeccionar el amor de la pareja y fortalecer su unidad indisoluble” (CCC, 1641). En virtud de esta gracia, la pareja se ayuda mutuamente para alcanzar la santidad.

La fuente de esta gracia es Cristo. “Así como en la antigüedad Dios se encontró con su pueblo a través de una alianza de amor y fidelidad, así nuestro Salvador, el cónyuge de la Iglesia,  se encuentra ahora con esposos cristianos a través del sacramento del matrimonio” (GS, 48). Cristo vive con ellos, les da la fuerza para tomar sus cruces y puedan seguirlo, levantarse de nuevo después de haber caído, perdonarse el uno al otro, sobrellevar el uno la carga del otro, “someterse el uno al otro por respeto a Cristo, “y amarse el uno al otro con amor sobrenatural, tierno y fructífero” (CCC, 1642).

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿Qué hace que el amor entre el hombre y la mujer sea único, especialmente dentro de la relación matrimonial? ¿Qué hace que el amor de los miembros de una familia sea una comunión entre personas?

(b) ¿Cómo son nuestras escuelas de amor matrimonial y familiar? Como pareja y familia, ¿demostramos una comunión de amor que se nutre a sí misma, que es pura y sacrificada?

(c) Como pareja, ¿qué tanto confiamos en la gracia del sacramento del matrimonio para que nos ayude en los momentos de retos y dificultades?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 3 – El matrimonio: hechos el uno para el otro

Abriendo el tema
Dios creó al hombre y a la mujer juntos y quiso que fueran el uno para el otro. “No es bueno que el hombre esté solo. Voy a crear a alguien adecuado a sus necesidades para que lo ayude” (Gén. 2:18). La mujer que Dios ‘fabrica’ de la costilla del hombre, hace que él exclame maravillado, con amor y comunión: “Ésta, por fin, es hueso de mis huesos y carne de mi carne” (Gén. 2: 23). Este hermoso relato del libro de Génesis sobre la creación de Eva  del costado de Adán demuestra cómo la mujer fue creada específicamente como ayudante, compañera y pareja  adecuada para el hombre. A diferencia de cualquier otro ser creado, el hombre descubre a la mujer como su otro “yo”, como alguien que comparte su misma humanidad (ver CCC, 371).

“El hombre y la mujer fueron hechos ‘el uno para el otro’, no es que Dios los haya dejado a medias e incompletos: él los creó para que sean una comunión de personas, en donde cada uno puede ser ‘compañero’ del otro, ya que son iguales como personas (“hueso de mis huesos…”) y complementarios como  masculino y femenino” (CCC, 372).

Debido a que son personas iguales en cuanto a su humanidad, pero complementarios debido a  sus diferencias como  masculino y femenino, el hombre y la mujer contribuyen al matrimonio con dones únicos, especialmente a causa de las diferencias físicas de sus cuerpos que permiten la transmisión de la vida humana. Solo a través de la diferencia sexual, un esposo y una esposa pueden darse completamente a sí mismos.

Por lo tanto, la verdadera unión marital no es posible sin la diferencia sexual; la diferencia sexual es esencial para el matrimonio. La diferencia sexual es el punto de partida necesario para comprender por qué no es arbitrario ni  discriminatorio proteger y promover el matrimonio como  la unión entre un hombre y una mujer. Más bien, es una cuestión de justicia, verdad, amor y libertad real. Solo un hombre y una mujer, en todos los niveles de su identidad: biológicos, fisiológicos, emocionales, sociales y espirituales, son capaces de hablar auténticamente el lenguaje del amor conyugal, es decir, el lenguaje de la entrega de sí mismos, abiertos al don del otro y al regalo de la vida.

Reflexión
Nuestra masculinidad o femineidad es esencial para nuestra identidad como personas. Nuestro género no se añade a nosotros como algo posterior, ni tampoco es una parte incidental de quienes somos. El hombre y la mujer son dos tipos diferentes de seres humanos, en cuerpo y alma. Cuando negamos nuestra identidad como seres sexualmente diferenciados, reducimos nuestra humanidad.

Una unión conyugal o matrimonial se produce solo a través de la diferencia sexual. Solo un esposo y una esposa tienen el espacio o la capacidad para recibir verdaderamente el don  sexual distintivo del otro, y solo de esa manera un esposo y una esposa pueden regalarse el uno al otro el don de sí mismos. La belleza de la enseñanza de la Iglesia sobre el matrimonio, basada en esta base antropológica, arroja luz sobre la responsabilidad del hombre y la mujer de colaborar con Dios en Su plan para la raza humana.

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿Por qué la razón y la fe no entran en conflicto cuando se trata del matrimonio? En otras palabras, ¿de qué manera el sacramento del matrimonio, que se realiza entre un hombre bautizado y una mujer bautizada, reafirma y no le resta valor a las verdades básicas y razonables esenciales de todo matrimonio?

(b) ¿Piensas que la diferencia sexual de hombre a mujer y de mujer a hombre se entiende y aprecia hoy? ¿Por qué sí o por qué no?

(c) Como pareja, ¿cómo pueden ayudar a otros a reflexionar sobre la importancia de la diferencia sexual y la complementariedad?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 4 – El matrimonio: hecho para toda la vida

Abriendo el tema
“Creó al varón y a la hembra. Los bendijo y les dijo: “Sean fructíferos y multiplíquense” (Gén. 1: 27-28).

El matrimonio es el contexto humano natural para concebir y recibir correctamente un hijo como el “regalo supremo del matrimonio” (GS, 50). Y con esta actitud de apertura y aceptación, destinada a marcar todos los aspectos del amor conyugal, un esposo y una esposa se acercan más entre sí. Entregar el don de sí mismo al otro como cónyuge y estar abierto a los hijos es a la vez elección y acción. Como el Papa Juan Pablo II enseñó:  “Así,  mientras los esposos se dan el uno al otro, no solo se están dando a sí mismos sino también a la realidad de los hijos que son un reflejo vivo de su amor, un signo permanente de unidad conyugal y una síntesis viviente e inseparable del hecho de ser padre y madre”. (FC, 14).

En otras palabras, en el matrimonio, el amor y la vida son inseparables. Esto es lo que quiere decir la Iglesia cuando enseña que el sentido de unión y procreación del amor conyugal son inseparables. Al abrazarse el uno al otro, el esposo y la esposa abrazan su capacidad de concebir un hijo y son llamados a no hacer nada deliberado para cerrar parte de sí mismos al don del otro.

Esto no significa que con cada acto de intimidad sexual tenga que concebirse un hijo. El matrimonio no es una fábrica mecánica de  producción de niños en masa.  La Iglesia enseña a las parejas, en su sinceridad con la vida, a practicar la paternidad responsable, discerniendo si tienen o no razones serias, de acuerdo con el plan de Dios para el matrimonio, para posponer el ser padres y madres en un momento determinado.

“La tarea fundamental de la familia es servir a la vida, hacer realidad a lo largo de la historia la bendición original del Creador de transmitir a través de la procreación la imagen divina, de persona a persona (…) Sin embargo, la fecundidad del amor conyugal –  entendida incluso en su dimensión específicamente humana – no se limita únicamente a la procreación de los hijos, sino que se amplía y enriquece con todos aquellos frutos que el padre y la madre deben entregar a sus hijos y, a través de los hijos, a la Iglesia y al mundo”(FC, 28).

Reflexión
Cualquier consideración honesta del matrimonio debe incluir a los hijos, la esperanza de nuestro futuro. Durante milenios, personas de todas las generaciones y de todas las culturas han comprendido que el matrimonio de un hombre y una mujer es la principal institución social en pro de los hijos, y la roca de la familia natural. El matrimonio reúne a un hombre y a una mujer que se unen como marido y mujer para formar una relación única, dispuesta a recibir y cuidar de una nueva vida. Tratándose de la unión de marido y mujer, el matrimonio es una unión abierta desde dentro a la bendición de la fecundidad. Los hijos nacen “desde el mismo corazón” del matrimonio, a partir de la entrega mutua entre marido y mujer (CCC, no. 2366). Son el “regalo supremo” del matrimonio y su “máxima corona” (GS, n. 50, 48).

Así como las plantas necesitan los elementos adecuados no solo para comenzar a crecer sino también para florecer, los hijos  también necesitan los elementos adecuados. Se necesita un hombre y una mujer, con la ayuda de Dios, para traer un hijo a la existencia. Tiene sentido que si la diferencia sexual es esencial para el comienzo de la vida, también es vital para el cuidado de esa vida. Las madres y los padres son importantes para la vida de un hijo.

El matrimonio es la institución destinada a garantizar que un hijo sea recibido como un regalo que debe ser nutrido y criado con el amor singularmente diferente que solo una madre y un padre pueden dar. Así como una semilla necesita la presencia de tierra, luz solar y agua para crecer y florecer, también un hijo necesita los cimientos naturales de la vida y el amor que solo proporcionan el matrimonio amoroso de un hombre y una mujer abiertos al regalo de un hijo.

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿Cómo se relacionan la apertura a la vida y la diferencia sexual? ¿Por qué es esto tan importante para entender el significado del matrimonio?

(b) ¿Cómo entiendes y acoges la enseñanza de la Iglesia sobre la santidad de la vida humana, incluida la enseñanza de la Iglesia sobre el uso de la anticoncepción?

(c) ¿De qué manera puedes dar testimonio como pareja de la santidad y la dignidad de la vida humana, y de la importancia de las madres y los padres en la vida de sus hijos?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 5 – El matrimonio: hecho para la libertad

Abriendo el tema
“Jesús les respondió: ‘Amén, amén, les digo, todos los que cometen pecado son esclavos del pecado. Un esclavo no permanece en una casa para siempre, pero el hijo sí permanece.  Así que si un hijo te libera, entonces serás realmente libre” (Jn. 8: 34-36).

El teólogo moral dominicano, Servais Pinckaers (1925-2008), identificó dos conceptos de libertad que contrastan entre sí: la libertad de indiferencia y la libertad por excelencia.

La “libertad de indiferencia” significa ver la libertad de manera  abierta y neutral hacia todas las opciones disponibles. Toda elección, en la medida en que es una elección, es igualmente libre. Es la libertad de no ser forzado a hacer nada (“ausencia de coerción”). Si la libertad está realmente desconectada de cualquier otro aspecto de la persona o de la verdad objetiva, entonces elegir asesinar a otra persona es una decisión tan “libre” como comprarle una comida a una persona sin hogar. Por supuesto, cualquiera diría que la persona que ayuda a otra persona está “usando” su libertad mejor que el asesino, pero ¿es eso suficiente? ¿Es solo una cuestión de usar nuestra libertad bien o mal? La libertad de indiferencia dice que sí, esas dos personas son igualmente libres para elegir entre el bien y el mal.

En contraste, si entiendes la libertad como la “libertad por excelencia”, dirías que el asesino es en realidad menos libre que el donante caritativo. Al hacer algo que está mal, al actuar en contra del orden verdadero y objetivo de las cosas, la persona que elige el mal en realidad está disminuyendo o perdiendo su libertad. De hecho, es un abuso de la libertad. No le traerá la felicidad. Por lo tanto, no es una elección verdaderamente libre. La libertad por excelencia es la libertad de hacer el bien: la libertad de convertirse en lo que estás destinado a ser.

La verdadera libertad, entonces, es la capacidad de amar la verdad y de elegir el bien. Esto reafirma las palabras del Catecismo: “En la medida en que haces más el bien, más libre te haces”, y “la verdadera libertad” proviene “del servicio a lo que es bueno y justo” (CCC, 1733).

La libertad correctamente utilizada que sirve a la verdadera felicidad es el servicio a los demás. Esta libertad corresponde a lo que una persona está llamada a ser: una bendición para los demás.

Reflexión
El matrimonio entre un hombre y una mujer bautizados requiere del libre consentimiento de la voluntad. Los dos cónyuges consienten libremente en entregarse el don de sí mismos el uno al otro. El Catecismo aclara que para ser libre, el consentimiento  “debe ser un acto voluntario de cada una de las partes contrayentes, libre de coerción o de temor grave externo” (CCC, 1628). Por medio del consentimiento, los cónyuges se entregan mutuamente y se convierten en “una sola carne”. El consentimiento de los cónyuges es recibido por el sacerdote (o diácono) en nombre de la Iglesia, seguido de la bendición de la Iglesia.

En muchos sentidos, el consentimiento para casarse es uno de los actos más profundos de la libertad humana. Es un acto de libertad por excelencia que abre nuevas posibilidades a mayor excelencia y felicidad. Cuando lo ejercen juntos, marido y mujer demuestran un esfuerzo conjunto para convertirse más verdaderamente en lo que son llamados a ser a partir de la sincera entrega de sí mismos.

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿De qué manera la libertad por excelencia corresponde más a una visión cristiana del ser humano que la libertad de indiferencia?

(b) ¿De qué formas se ha abusado de la libertad en nombre de una libertad falsa y cómo ha afectado esto al matrimonio?

(c) El matrimonio en la Iglesia requiere el libre consentimiento voluntario de ambos cónyuges. ¿Fue tu matrimonio una elección libre por excelencia: con la libertad de convertirte en lo que estabas destinado  a  ser?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 6 – El matrimonio: hecho para el bien común

Abriendo el tema
“Amar a alguien es desear el bien a esa persona y tomar las medidas efectivas para asegurarlo. Además del bien del individuo, hay un bien vinculado a vivir en sociedad: el bien común. Es el bien de ‘todos nosotros’, compuesto por individuos, familias y grupos intermedios que juntos constituyen la sociedad (CV, 7).

El bien común es responsabilidad de todos. Los esfuerzos que hacemos diariamente para estar atentos a las necesidades de los demás son una contribución al bien común. La familia es un componente esencial del bien común, arraigado en el matrimonio entre un hombre y una mujer.

Los matrimonios saludables son modelo de muchas virtudes y buenos hábitos que son  vitales para la vida social. Por ejemplo, el amor gozoso y el amor sacrificial entre un hombre y una mujer en el matrimonio sirven de ejemplo a sus hijos de lo que significa amar a otras personas en general. El matrimonio promueve una “genuina ecología humana”, que incluye el respeto y la comprensión adecuada del cuerpo humano y la sexualidad. En un nivel fundamental y básico, un matrimonio intacto entre marido y mujer sigue siendo la fuente más fértil y el entorno mejor integrado para los nuevos miembros de la sociedad.

Los hijos que se crían en hogares con sus propios padres y madres casados disfrutan de la estabilidad que no ofrece ninguna otra estructura familiar. Si consideramos estos puntos, queda claro que el matrimonio es importante para el bien común de la sociedad: la alianza matrimonial, entendida correctamente como un hombre y una mujer unidos entre sí y con sus hijos, ayuda a que todos en la sociedad prosperen. Anima a los hombres y mujeres jóvenes a hacerse promesas el uno al otro si desean constituir “una pareja”; proporciona un reconocimiento social a tal promesa y la inversión de la comunidad para ayudar a la pareja a cumplirla, al tiempo que  les da a los hijos los hogares estables que merecen.

Reflexión
“La familia fundada en el matrimonio es una institución natural insustituible y un elemento fundamental del bien común de todas las sociedades” (Papa Juan Pablo II, Discurso a los  participantes en la asamblea plenaria del Consejo Pontificio de la Familia, 20 de noviembre de 2004).

El Catecismo enumera tres componentes esenciales del bien común: el respeto por la persona, el bienestar y desarrollo social, y la paz. (CCC, 1905-1917) En otras palabras, la sociedad debe ordenarse de tal manera que a las personas les resulte más fácil ser buenas, desarrollar sus dones y capacidades en paz, cumplir con sus deberes y responsabilidades sin tener que luchar contra la opresión o el miedo, y poder actuar según sus conciencias. El bien común está destinado a garantizar que las personas puedan vivir una “vida verdaderamente humana” (CCC, no. 1908).

Los matrimonios sólidos, aquellos matrimonios en los cuales un hombre y una mujer permanecen juntos durante toda su vida, son buenos tanto para la sociedad como para la pareja. Sirven como ejemplos para la comunidad de las virtudes del amor, la fidelidad y la perseverancia. Demuestran la capacidad del ser humano para cumplir sus promesas.

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿Cuáles son las tres características del matrimonio que lo hacen bueno  para toda la sociedad?

(b) ¿De qué manera contribuye tu matrimonio a tu propio potencial y crecimiento como persona? ¿Cómo contribuye esto a su vez al beneficio de tu familia y sociedad?

(c) ¿De qué manera reconoces el beneficio para el bien común de un matrimonio estable entre un hombre y una mujer?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Día 7 – El matrimonio: hecho para la eternidad

Abriendo el tema
El hombre ha sido creado para conocer, amar y servir a Dios en esta vida y disfrutar de Su presencia para la eternidad. La recompensa eterna es una bienaventuranza que supera toda comprensión humana. Es el don de la verdadera felicidad que proviene de buscar el amor de Dios por encima de todo lo demás. El camino hacia la santidad o la bienaventuranza está pavimentado con elecciones y consecuencias: rendir tributo a Dios o a la riqueza, servirse a sí mismo o al prójimo.

Todos los cristianos en toda situación o condición social están llamados a la santidad, o a la perfección de la caridad. “Para alcanzar esta perfección, los fieles deben usar la fuerza que les ha sido otorgada por el don de Cristo, de manera que. . . “haciendo la voluntad del Padre en todo, puedan dedicarse de todo corazón a la gloria de Dios y al servicio de su prójimo” (LG, 40). El camino de la perfección también pasa a través de la Cruz, que exige sacrificio, mortificación y la renuncia a  uno mismo.

Reflexión
El matrimonio es una oportunidad para lograr la santidad. El día de su boda, los cónyuges se convierten en los principales compañeros el uno del otro para el viaje de la vida, hasta la muerte. El viaje hacia el cielo debe ser sostenido mutuamente por los cónyuges.  Una vida sacramental y de oración compartida puede contribuir a que el uno ayude al otro a progresar en la santidad.

El camino de la vida matrimonial también es sostenido por las gracias proporcionadas en el sacramento del matrimonio que ayudan a los esposos en su vocación particular de amar y servir a los demás.

Para pensar
Elige una o más de las siguientes preguntas para reflexionar con tu cónyuge:

(a) ¿Cuáles son algunas de las maneras en las cuales experimentas cada día que las elecciones y consecuencias nos acercan o nos alejan de alcanzar la santidad?

(b) ¿De qué manera tu matrimonio te desafía para alcanzar la santidad?

(c) ¿Crees que estás llamado a la beatitud con Dios? ¿Cómo se sostienen el uno al otro en el camino hacia la santidad?

Oración de las parejas casadas
Dios todopoderoso y eterno,
bendijiste la unión de marido y mujer
para que podamos reflejar la unión de Cristo con su Iglesia:
míranos con bondad.
Renueva nuestra alianza matrimonial.
Incrementa tu amor hacia nosotros
y fortalece nuestro vínculo de paz
para que [con nuestros hijos]
podamos siempre regocijarnos en el regalo de tu bendición.
Te lo pedimos a través de Cristo nuestro Señor. Amén.

Documentos de la Iglesia
CCC – Catecismo de la Iglesia Católica, Librería Editrice Vaticana, 1993, Vaticano, http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTM#fonte.

GS – Concilio Vaticano II, Constitución Pastoral sobre la iglesia en el mundo moderno Gaudium et Spes, 7 de diciembre de 1965, Vaticano, http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_cons_19651207_gaudium-et- spes_en.html.

FC – Papa Juan Pablo II, Exhortación Apostólica Familiaris Consortio, 22 de noviembre de 1981, Vaticano, http://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul- ii/en/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_jp-ii_exh_19811122_familiaris-consortio.html

LG – Concilio Vaticano II, Constitución Dogmática sobre la Iglesia Lumen Gentium, 21 de noviembre de 1964, Vaticano, http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html.

CV – Papa Benedicto XVI, Carta Encíclica Caritas in Veritate, 29 de junio de 2009, Vaticano,

http://w2.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_ben-xvi_enc_20090629_caritas-in-veritate.html.

Marriage Retreat 2019 – Marriage: Made for a Reason

Also available as a printable PDF.

Day One – Marriage: Made by God

Breaking Open the Theme
Despite many variations throughout cultures, societies, and religions, marriage has always been regarded as a sacred bond that expresses a deep, committed form of mutual love. Marriage is not, however, purely a human institution: “the married state has been established by the Creator and endowed by him with its own proper laws … God himself is the author of marriage” (GS, 48).

How is God the author of marriage?

First, “God created mankind in his image; in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them ” (Gen. 1:27). Since man and woman are created in the image of God, who is Love, man and woman carry an innate calling to love. Marriage responds to a fundamental desire and need to give and receive love.

Second, as male and female, God created man and woman with a physical complementarity that is uniquely able to collaborate in His work of creation. The very nature of man and woman is prepared for the possibility of marriage and the welcoming of new life.

Third, Holy Scripture affirms that it is good for a man and woman to belong to one another and form a bond of communion: “It is not good for the man to be alone” (Gen. 2:18) …. ” That is why a man leaves his father and mother and clings to his wife, and the two of them become one body (Gen. 2:24). In the New Testament, Jesus invokes God’s original plan for mankind as an unbreakable union of two lives by recalling the plan of the Creator in the beginning: “So they are no longer two, but one flesh” (Mt. 19:6).

In the divine plan, marriage is the exclusive, indissoluble communion of life and love entered by one man and one woman. Between two baptized Christians, this covenant is a sacrament.

Reflection
As Catholics, an understanding of God’s plan for marriage and family is an essential part of living the call to holiness. Catholic spouses are blessed with the certainty that the sacrament of marriage provides the graces necessary to become sanctified as husband and wife, father and mother. This grace endows the marriage covenant with strength and fortifies it in moments of difficulty. It also carries over into the domestic church, the home, where the family grows and becomes a witness to God’s love for others.

God’s plan for marriage is not restricted to Catholics, however. As explained above, it is rooted in the nature and identity of man and woman created in God’s image. The dignity of marriage with its specific purpose and characteristics is a good to uphold and defend to the benefit of all people.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

  1. What makes marriage distinctive compared to other relationships? Why are love and commitment in marriage unique? What does it mean to say that God created marriage in the very same moment that he created the human person?
  2. As a couple, how are we complementary in our needs, desires, and attributes? How does God endow us with different gifts, as man and woman, that contribute to the marriage?
  3. How can we, as a couple, bear witness to the beauty and wisdom of God’s design for marriage?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Two – Marriage: Made for Love

Breaking Open the Theme
Marriage between one man and one woman responds to the deepest longing of the human heart for love and belonging. We yearn to be loved and to receive love. The same can be said of family life: in a family, children are received to be loved and to love in return.

Despite human shortcomings, the married couple and the family are reflections of God who is three divine persons in a communion of love. In marriage, the man and the woman become “one body” (Gen 2: 24), a communion of love that generates new life. In a similar way, the human family becomes a communion of love by the exchange of giving and receiving love between its members.

Marriage and family life are schools of love. They teach us how to reach a communion of love within the context of daily life: full of joys, sacrifices, trials, and hopes. In all of this, love is purified and perfected, made authentic and complete. As Christ’s sacrifice on the cross exemplified, love is laying down one’s life for another. Spouses and family members are called to do the same, each and every day.

Reflection
Despite our best efforts to love faithfully and unconditionally, marriage and family life can be difficult and challenge our ability to love continually. The marital love that is blessed by the sacrament of marriage is fortified and sustained, however, by a unique grace intended to “perfect the couple’s love and to strengthen their indissoluble unity” (CCC, 1641). By virtue of this grace, the couple helps one another to attain holiness.

The source of this grace is Christ. “Just as of old God encountered his people with a covenant of love and fidelity, so our Savior, the spouse of the Church, now encounters Christian spouses through the sacrament of Matrimony” (GS, 48). Christ dwells with them, gives them the strength to take up their crosses and so follow him, to rise again after they have fallen, to forgive one another, to bear one another’s burdens, to “be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ,” and to love one another with supernatural, tender, and fruitful love” (CCC, 1642).

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

  1. What makes the love of man and woman unique, especially within the marital relationship? What makes the love of family members a communion of persons?
  2. How are our marriage and family schools of love? As a couple and family, do we demonstrate a communion of love that is self-giving, pure, and sacrificial?
  3. As a couple, how do we rely on the grace of the sacrament of marriage to assist us in moments of challenge and difficulty?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Three – Marriage: Made for Each Other

Breaking Open the Theme
God created man and woman together and willed each for the other. “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suited to him” (Gen. 2:18). The woman that God ‘fashions’ from the man’s rib elicits from the man a cry of wonder, an exclamation of love and communion: “This one, at last, is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh” (Gen. 2:23). This beautiful account from the book of Genesis of the creation of Eve from Adam’s side demonstrates how woman was created specifically as a helper, companion, and suitable partner for man. Unlike any other created being, man discovers woman as another ‘I’, as sharing the same humanity (see CCC, 371).

“Man and woman were made ‘for each other’ – not that God left them half-made and incomplete: he created them to be a communion of persons, in which each can be ‘helpmate’ to the other, for they are equal as persons (“bone of my bones…”) and complementary as masculine and feminine” (CCC, 372).

Because they are equal as persons in their humanity, but complementary in their differences as masculine and feminine, man and woman contribute unique gifts to the marriage, especially the physical differences of their bodies which allow for the transmission of human life. Only through sexual difference can a husband and a wife give themselves completely to one another.

True marital union, therefore, is not possible without sexual difference; for this reason, sexual difference is essential to marriage. Sexual difference is the necessary starting point for understanding why protecting and promoting marriage as the union of one man and one woman isn’t arbitrary or discriminatory. Rather, it’s a matter of justice, truth, love, and real freedom. Only a man and a woman—at every level of their identity: biological, physiological, emotional, social, spiritual—are capable of authentically speaking the language of married love, that is, the language of total self-gift, open to the gift of the other and the gift of life.

Reflection
Our maleness or femaleness is essential to our identity as persons. Our gender is not something that is pasted onto us as an after-thought, or that is an incidental part of who we are. Male and female are two different ways of being a human person, body and soul. When we deny our identity as sexually differentiated beings, we diminish our humanity.

A conjugal or marital union comes about only through sexual difference. Only a husband and a wife have the space or capacity to truly receive each other’s distinctive sexual gift, and only a husband and a wife can make a gift of their selves to the other in that way. The beauty of the Church’s teaching on marriage, grounded in this anthropological foundation, sheds light on the responsibility of man and woman to collaborate with God in His plan for the human race.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

(1) How do reason and faith not conflict when it comes to marriage? In other words, how does the sacrament of marriage, which is between a baptized man and a baptized woman, build upon, and not detract from, the basic and reasonable truths at the heart of every marriage?
(2) Do you think sexual difference, man to woman and woman to man, is understood and appreciated today? Why or why not?
(3) As a couple, how can you help others reflect on the importance of sexual difference and complementarity?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Four – Marriage: Made for Life

Breaking Open the Theme
“Male and female he created them. God blessed and God said to them: ‘Be fertile and multiply’” (Gen. 1:27-28).

Marriage is the natural human context wherein a child is properly conceived and welcomed into life as the “supreme gift of marriage” (GS, 50). And in this stance of openness and welcoming, meant to mark every aspect of married love, a husband and a wife grow closer to each other. Making a gift of himself or herself to the other as spouses and being open to children is one and the same choice and act. As Pope John Paul II taught, “Thus the couple, while giving themselves to one another, give not just themselves but also the reality of children, who are a living reflection of their love, a permanent sign of conjugal unity and a living and inseparable synthesis of their being a father and a mother” (FC, 14).

In other words, in marriage, love and life are inseparable. This is what the Church means when she teaches that the unitive and procreative meanings of married love are inseparable. In embracing each other, husband and wife embrace their capacity to conceive a child and are called to do nothing deliberate to close part of themselves to the gift of the other.

This does not mean that a child will be conceived from every act of sexual intimacy. Marriage is not a mechanical factory for the mass production of children. The Church teaches couples in their openness to life to practice responsible parenthood by discerning whether or not they have serious reasons, in keeping with God’s plan for marriage, to postpone becoming a father and a mother here and now.

“The fundamental task of the family is to serve life, to actualize in history the original blessing of the Creator – that of transmitting by procreation the divine image from person to person. (…) However, the fruitfulness of conjugal love is not restricted solely to the procreation of children, even understood in its specifically human dimension: it is enlarged and enriched by all those fruits of moral, spiritual and supernatural life which the father and mother are called to hand on to their children, and through the children to the Church and to the world” (FC, 28).

Reflection
Any honest consideration of marriage must think about children, the hope of our future. For millennia, people of every generation and of every culture have understood that the marriage of a man and a woman is the central pro-child social institution and the rock of the natural family. Marriage brings together a man and a woman who unite as husband and wife to form a unique relationship open to welcoming and caring for new life. As the union of husband and wife, marriage is a union open from within to the blessing of fruitfulness. Children are born “from the very heart” of marriage, from the mutual self-giving between husband and wife (CCC, no. 2366). They are the “supreme gift” of marriage and its “ultimate crown” (GS, nos. 50, 48).

Just as plants need the proper elements not only to begin to grow but also to flourish, children need the proper elements as well. It takes a man and a woman, with God’s help, to bring a child into existence. It makes sense that if sexual difference is essential for the beginning of life, it is also vital for the caring of that life. Mothers and fathers matter for the duration of a child’s life.

Marriage is the institution meant to ensure that a child is welcomed as a gift to be nurtured and raised by the uniquely different love that only a mother and a father can give. Just as a seedling needs the presence of soil, sunlight, and water to grow and flourish, so too a child needs the natural foundation of life and love uniquely provided in the loving marriage of a man and a woman open to the gift of a child.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

(1) How are openness to life and sexual difference related? Why is this important for understanding the meaning of marriage?
(2) How do you understand and embrace the Church’s teaching on the sanctity of human life, including the Church’s teaching on the use of contraception?
(3) In what way can you witness as a couple to the sanctity and dignity of human life and the importance of mothers and fathers in the lives of their children?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Five – Marriage: Made for Freedom

Breaking Open the Theme
“Jesus answered them, ‘Amen, amen, I say to you, everyone who commits sin is a slave of sin. A slave does not remain in a household forever, but a son always remains. So if a son frees you, then you will truly be free’” (Jn. 8:34-36).The

Dominican moral theologian, Servais Pinckaers (1925-2008), identified two concepts of freedom that are in contrast to one another: freedom of indifference and freedom for excellence.

“Freedom of indifference” means seeing freedom as open and neutral toward all the available options. Every choice, in so far as it is a choice, is equally free. It is the freedom to not be forced to do anything (“freedom from coercion”). If freedom is really unconnected to any other aspect of the person or objective truth, then choosing to murder another person is just as “free” a decision as choosing to buy a meal for a homeless person. Of course, anyone would say that the person helping out another person is “using” their freedom better than the murderer, but is that saying enough? Is it just a question of using our freedom well or badly? Freedom of indifference says yes, those two people are equally free to choose good or evil.

In contrast, if you understand freedom as the “freedom for excellence”, you would say that the murderer is actually less free than the charitable giver. In doing something that is wrong, in acting against the true, objective order of things, the person choosing evil is actually diminishing or losing his (or her) freedom. It is in fact an abuse of freedom. It will not bring him (or her) happiness. Therefore, it is not a truly free choice. The freedom for excellence is the freedom to do good: the freedom to become who you are meant to be.

True freedom then is the capacity to love in truth and to choose the good. This echoes the words of the Catechism: “The more one does what is good, the freer one becomes,” and “true freedom” comes “in the service of what is good and just” (CCC, 1733).

Rightly ordered freedom, which serves true happiness, is service to others. This freedom corresponds to what a person is called to be: a gift for others.

Reflection
Marriage between a baptized man and woman requires the free consent of the will. The two spouses consent freely to make a gift of self to the other. The Catechism clarifies that to be free, the consent “must be an act of the will of each of the contracting parties, free of coercion or grave external fear” (CCC, 1628). By means of the consent, the spouses mutually give themselves to each other and become ‘one body’. The consent of the spouses is received by the priest (or deacon) in the name of the Church, followed by the blessing of the Church.

In many ways, the consent to marry is one of the most profound acts of human freedom. It is an act of freedom for excellence which opens new possibilities of greater excellence and happiness. When exercised together, husband and wife demonstrate a joint effort to become more truly who they are called to be by their sincere gifts of self.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

(1) How does freedom for excellence correspond better to a Christian vision of the human person than freedom of indifference?
(2) In what ways has freedom been abused in the name of a false freedom and how has this affected marriage?
(3) Marriage in the Church requires a free consent of the will by both spouses. How was your marriage a choice made freely for excellence: in the freedom to become who you are meant to be?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Six – Marriage: Made for the Common Good

Breaking Open the Theme
“To love someone is to desire that person’s good and to take effective steps to secure it. Besides the good of the individual, there is a good that is linked to living in society: the common good. It is the good of ‘all of us’, made up of individuals, families and intermediate groups who together constitute society (CV, 7).

The common good is everyone’s responsibility. The efforts we make on a daily basis to be attentive to the needs of others are a contribution to the common good. The family is an essential component of the common good, rooted in marriage between a man and woman.

Healthy marriages model many virtues and good habits that are vital for social life. For example, joyful and sacrificial love between a man and a woman in marriage serves as an example to their children of what it means to love other people in general. Marriage advances a “genuine human ecology,” which includes a respect for and proper understanding of the human body and sexuality. At a fundamental and basic level, an intact marriage between husband and wife remains the most fertile source and well-integrated environment for new members of society.

Children who are raised in homes with their own married mother and father enjoy stability that no other family structure offers. If we consider these points, it becomes clear that marriage is important to the common good of society – the institution of marriage, properly understood as a man and a woman, bound to one another and their children, helps everyone in the society to flourish. It encourages young men and women to make promises to one another if they want to be “a couple”; it gives a societal recognition of such a promise and the community’s investment in helping the couple to keep it; and it gives children the stable homes they deserve.

Reflection
“The family founded on marriage is an irreplaceable natural institution and a fundamental element of the common good of every society” (Pope John Paul II, Address to the participants in the plenary assembly of the Pontifical Council of the Family, November 20, 2004).

The Catechism lists three essential components of the common good: respect for the person, social well-being and development, and peace. (CCC, 1905-1917) In other words, society should be ordered in such a way that people will find it easier to be good, to develop their gifts and capacities in peace, carrying out their duties and responsibilities without having to struggle against oppression or fear, able to act according to their consciences. The common good is meant to ensure that people may live a “truly human life” (CCC, no. 1908).

Strong marriages – marriages in which a man and a woman stay together for their entire lives – are good for society as well as for the couple themselves. They serve as examples to the community of the virtues of love, fidelity, and perseverance. They demonstrate the capacity of the human being to live up to his or her promises.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

(1) What are the three ways marriage is good for the entire society?
(2) How does your marriage contribute to your own capacity and growth as a person? How does this in turn contribute to the benefit of your family and society?
(3) In what ways do you recognize the benefit to the common good of a stable marriage between man and woman?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Day Seven – Marriage: Made for Eternity

Breaking Open the Theme
Man is created to know, to love, and to serve Him in this life and enjoy His presence for eternity. The eternal reward is a beatitude which surpasses all human understanding. It is the gift of true happiness that comes from seeking the love of God above all else. The path to holiness or beatitude is paved with choices and consequences; homage to God or wealth; service to self or neighbor.

All Christians in every state or walk of life are called to holiness, or the perfection of charity. “In order to reach this perfection, the faithful should use the strength dealt out to them by Christ’s gift, so that . . . doing the will of the Father in everything, they may wholeheartedly devote themselves to the glory of God and to the service of their neighbor” (LG, 40). The way of perfection also passes by way of the Cross which calls for sacrifice, mortification, and dying to self.

Reflection
Marriage is an opportunity to become holy. On their wedding day, the spouses become each other’s primary companion for life’s journey until death. The journey towards heaven should be sustained by one’s spouse. A sacramental and prayerful life shared together can contribute to helping one another progress in holiness.

The journey of married life is also sustained by the graces provided in the sacrament of marriage which assist the spouses in their particular vocation to love and serve one another.

To Think About
(Choose one or more of the following questions to reflect on by yourself and/or with your spouse)

(1) What are some ways in which you experience daily the choices and consequences that bring us closer or farther from reaching holiness?
(2) In what ways does your marriage challenge you to become holy?
(3) Do you believe that you are each called to beatitude with God? How do you sustain one another in the walk towards holiness?

Prayer of Married Couples
Almighty and eternal God,
You blessed the union of husband and wife
so that we might reflect
the union of Christ with His Church:
look with kindness on us.
Renew our marriage covenant.
Increase your love in us,
and strengthen our bond of peace
so that, [with our children],
we may always rejoice in the gift of your blessing.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Church Documents
CCC – Catechism of the Catholic Church, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1993, Vatican, http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTM#fonte.

GS – Vatican Council II, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, December 7,1965, Vatican, http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_cons_19651207_gaudium-et-spes_en.html.

FC – Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, November 22, 1981, Vatican, http://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_jp-ii_exh_19811122_familiaris-consortio.html.

LG – Vatican Council II, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, November 21,1964, Vatican, http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html.

CV – Pope Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter Caritas in Veritate, June 29, 2009, Vatican,
http://w2.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_ben-xvi_enc_20090629_caritas-in-veritate.html.

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