SYNOD  OF  BISHOPS 
________________________________________________ 
   
XIV  ORDINARY  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY 
THE VOCATION AND MISSION OF THE FAMILY 
 IN THE CHURCH AND IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD 
  
THE FINAL REPORT OF THE SYNOD OF BISHOPS 
 TO THE HOLY FATHER, POPE FRANCIS 
  
Vatican City 
24 October 2015 
  
 
 
Table of Contents 
Introduction  
PART I 
 The Church Listening to the Family
Chapter I 
 The Family and the Anthropological-cultural context
The Socio-Cultural Context 
The Religious Context  
Anthropological Change  
Cultural Contradictions  
Conflicts and Social Tensions  
Fragility and Strength of the Family  
Chapter II 
 The Family in the Socio-Economic context 
The Family as the Irreplaceable Resource of Society  
Policies Favouring the Family  
Loneliness and Insecurity  
The Economy and Growth  
Poverty and Exclusion  
Ecology and the Family 
Chapter III 
 Family, Inclusion and Society 
The Elderly  
Widowhood 
The Last Stages of Life and Loss in the Family  
Persons with Special Needs  
Persons Who Are Unmarried 
Migrants, Refugees and Those Suffering Persecution  
Some Unique Challenges  
Children 
Women 
Men  
Young People 
Chapter IV 
 Family, Affectivity and Life 
The Importance of an Affective Life  
Formation in 
Self-Giving  
Weakness and 
Immaturity  
Technologies in Human 
Procreation  
A Pastoral Challenge  
PART II 
 The Family in God’s Plan
Chapter I 
 The Family in Salvation History
The Divine Pedagogy  
The Icon of the Trinity in the Family  
The Family in Sacred Scripture  
Jesus and the Family  
Chapter II 
 The Family in the Magisterium of the Church 
The Teaching of the Second Vatican Council 
Blessed Pope Paul 
VI  
Pope Saint John Paul 
II  
Pope Benedict 
XVI  
Pope Francis 
Chapter III 
 The Christian Teaching on the Family 
Marriage in the Order of Creation and the Fullness of the 
Sacrament  
The Indissolubility and Fruitfulness of the Conjugal 
Union  
The Goods of the 
Family  
The Truth and Beauty of the Family 
Chapter IV 
 Towards the Ecclesial Fullness of the Family
The Intimate Bond Between the Church and the Family  
The Grace of Conversion and 
Fulfilment 
Mercy: The Core of 
Revelation  
Part III 
 The Mission of the Family
Chapter I 
 The Formation of the Family 
Marriage 
Preparation  
The Celebration of 
Marriage  
The Initial Years of Family Life  
The Formation of Priests and Other Pastoral 
Workers  
Chapter II 
 Family, Generativity, Upbringing 
The Transmission of Life  
Generative 
Responsibility 
The Value of Life in All Its 
Stages  
Adoption and Foster 
Parenting  
The Upbringing of 
Children 
Chapter III 
 The Family and Pastoral Accompaniment 
Complex 
Situations  
Accompaniment in Different 
Situations  
Discernment and 
Integration  
Chapter IV 
 The Family and Evangelization 
A Family 
Spirituality 
The Family: Object of Pastoral Care  
The Relationship with Cultures and 
Institutions  
Openness to 
Mission 
Conclusion 
Prayer to the Holy Family 
Abbreviations 
 
  | AA | 
     | 
  Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree 
  Apostolicam Actuositatem (18 
November 1965) | 
  
  | AG | 
   | 
  Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree 
  Ad Gentes (7 December 1965) | 
  
  | CCC | 
   | 
       Catechism of the Catholic Church, (15 August 1997) | 
  
  | CV | 
   | 
  Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter 
  Caritas in Veritate (29 June 
  2009) | 
  
  | DCE | 
   | 
  Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter 
  Deus Caritas Est (25 December 2005) | 
  
  | GS | 
   | 
  Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution 
  Gaudium et Spes 
(7 December 1965) | 
  
  | EG | 
   | 
  Francis, Apostolic Exhortation 
  Evangelii Gaudium (24 November 2013) | 
  
  | EN | 
   | 
  Blessed Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation 
  Evangelii Nuntiandi (8 December 
1975) | 
  
  | FC | 
   | 
  Saint John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation 
  Familiaris Consortio (22 
November 1981)  | 
  
  | IL | 
   | 
  III Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, 
   The Pastoral Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization, 
 Instrumentum Laboris, (24 June 2014) | 
  
  | LF | 
   | 
  Francis, Encyclical Letter 
  Lumen Fidei
   (29 June 2013) | 
  
  | LG | 
   | 
  Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution 
  Lumen Gentium 
(21 November 1964) | 
  
  | MI | 
   | 
  Francis, Letter motu proprio
  Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus 
(15 August 2015) | 
  
  | MV | 
   | 
  Francis, Bull 
  Misericordiae Vultus (11 April 2015) | 
  
  | NA | 
   | 
  Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree 
  Nostra Aetate (28 October 1965) | 
  
  | RM | 
   | 
  Saint John Paul II, Encyclical Letter 
  Redemptoris Missio (7 December 
1990) | 
  
 
 
 
 
1. We, the synod fathers, gathered in synod around Pope Francis, wish to thank him 
for calling us to reflect with him, under his guidance, on the vocation and 
mission of the family today. In humility, we offer him the fruit of our work, 
aware of its limitations. Nonetheless, we are able to say that we have 
constantly taken into consideration the families of the world, their joys and 
hopes, their sorrows and anxieties. As Christ’s disciples, we know that “nothing 
genuinely human fails to raise an echo in their hearts. For theirs is a 
community composed of human persons. United in Christ, they are led by the Holy 
Spirit in their journey to the Kingdom of their Father and they have welcomed 
the news of salvation which is meant for everyone. That is why this community 
realizes that it is truly linked with humankind and its history by the deepest 
of bonds”( GS, 1). We thank the Lord for the great number of Christian 
families who generously and faithfully respond to their vocation and mission, 
despite the many obstacles, misunderstandings and trials. These families need 
the encouragement of the entire Church, who, together with her Lord and 
supported by the action of the Spirit, knows that she has a word of truth and 
hope to address to all humankind. Pope Francis recalled this in opening the 
final phase of this synodal journey dedicated to the family: “God did not create 
us to live in sorrow or to be alone. He made men and women for happiness, to 
share their journey with someone who complements them,[...]. It is the same plan 
which Jesus presents [...] summarized with these words: ‘From the beginning of 
creation [God] made them male and female; for this reason a man will leave his 
father and his mother and cleaves to his wife and they become one flesh. So they 
are no longer two but one flesh’ ( Mk 10:6-8; cf.  Gen 1:27; 2:24).” 
God “joins the hearts of two people who love one another, he who joins them in unity 
and indissolubility. This shows us that the goal of conjugal life is not simply 
to live together for life, but to love one another for life! In this way Jesus 
re-establishes the order which was present from the beginning. [...] only in the 
light of the folly of the gratuitousness of Jesus’ paschal love will the folly 
of the gratuitousness of an exclusive and life-long conjugal love make sense” ( Homily 
at the Opening Mass of the Synod, 4 October 2015).
 
2.   Even amidst joys and trials, the family is the primary and fundamental 
“school of humanity” (cf.  GS 52). Despite signs of a crisis, in various 
contexts, in the institution of the family, the desire to form a family remains 
vibrant among the younger generations. The Church, expert in humanity and true 
to her mission, announces with deep conviction the “Gospel of the Family,” which 
she received as revealed by Jesus Christ and constantly taught by the Fathers, 
the masters in spirituality and the Church's Magisterium. In the course of the 
Church’s life, the family has assumed special significance: “So great was his 
love that he [God] began to walk with mankind, he began to walk alongside his 
people, until the right time came and then he gave the greatest demonstration of 
love: his Son. And where did he send his Son? To a palace, to a city, to an 
office building? He sent him to a family. God came into the world in a family. 
And he could do this because that family was a family with a heart open to love, 
a family whose doors were open.” (Francis,  Address at the Feast of Families, 
Philadelphia, 27 September 2015). In these times, families are sent as 
“missionary disciples” (cf.  EG, 120). With this in mind, the family ought 
to rediscover that it is an essential agent in evangelization.
 
3.   The Holy Father called the Synod of Bishops to reflect on the reality of 
the family. “The  convenire in unum around the Bishop of Rome is indeed an 
event of grace, in which episcopal collegiality is made manifest in a path of 
spiritual and pastoral discernment.” (Francis,  Address at the Prayer Vigil in 
preparation for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family, 3 October 2014). In 
the span of two years, the Extraordinary General Assembly (2014) and the 
Ordinary General Assembly (2015) have undertaken the task of reading the signs 
of God and human history, in faithfulness to the Gospel. The first synod, to 
which the People of God made an important contribution, resulted in the  
Relatio Synodi. A tri-fold approach characterized our dialogue and 
reflections, namely, assessing the complex reality of the family today from the 
vantage point of faith, indicating both its lights and shadows; looking to 
Christ so as to contemplate once more, with renewed freshness and enthusiasm, 
what Christ has revealed and is handed down in the faith of the Church; and 
seeking the guidance of the Holy Spirit so as to discern ways in which the 
Church and society can renew their commitment to the family, founded on marriage 
between a man and a woman. The Christian proclamation on the family is good news 
indeed. The family, beyond being called upon to respond to today's challenges, 
is primarily called by God to a greater awareness of its missionary character. 
The synodal assembly was enriched by the presence of couples and families in a 
discussion which directly concerned them. Preserving the invaluable work of the 
preceding assembly, dedicated to the challenges of the family, we now turn our 
attention to its vocation and mission in the Church and the contemporary world.
 
 
4.   The mystery of life’s creation on earth fills us with wonder and 
delight. The family, founded on the marriage of a man and a woman, is splendid 
to behold and irreplaceable in an interpersonal loving relationship which 
transmits life. Love cannot be reduced to the illusion of a passing moment; love 
is not an end in itself; love seeks the trustworthiness of a “thou” in another 
person. In promising mutual love, in both good times and bad, love wants itself 
to continue until death. At the Synod, the fundamental desire of forming loving 
relationships, which are sound and inter-generational in the family, was 
significantly discussed, even beyond cultural and religious lines and the 
changes in society. In the free act of a man and a woman saying “yes” to each 
other for their entire life, God’s love is made present and is experienced. In 
the Catholic faith, marriage is a sacred sign in which God’s love becomes 
effective in his Church. The Christian family is, therefore, a part of the life 
of the Church: a “domestic church.” 
The couple and conjugal life are not abstract realities; they remain 
imperfect and vulnerable. Consequently, an act of will is always necessary in 
changing oneself, forgiving and starting over. In our responsibility as pastors, 
we are concerned about the lives of families. We want to heed their real-life 
situations and challenges, and accompany and illuminate them with the love of 
the Gospel. We want to give them strength and help them grasp their mission 
today. We wish to accompany them lovingly, even in their concerns, giving them 
courage and hope which come from the mercy of God.
 
 
The Socio-Cultural Context
5.   Docile to what the Holy Spirit asks us, we draw near to today's families 
in their diversity, knowing that “Christ, the new Adam [...] fully reveals a 
person to him/herself” ( GS, 22) We turn our attention to the contemporary 
challenges which affect the multiple aspects of life. We are aware of the 
principal tendencies in anthropological-cultural changes in which individuals, 
in their emotional life and life as a family, receive increasingly less support 
from social structures than in the past. On the other hand, we must also take 
into consideration the development of an exaggerated individualism which 
distorts family ties, giving precedence to the idea that one can make onself 
according to one’s own wishes, and thus weakens every family tie. We are 
thinking of mothers and fathers, grandparents, brothers and sisters, immediate 
and distant relatives and the bonding of two families at every wedding. We must 
not forget the lived reality: everywhere, strong family ties continue to give 
life to the world. People are strongly dedicated in caring for the dignity of 
every person — man, woman and child — and for ethnic groups and minorities, as 
well as in defence of the rights of every human being to grow up in a family. 
Their faithfulness would not be honoured, if we did not make a clear 
reaffirmation of the value of family life, especially in relying on the light of 
the Gospel, even in different cultures. We are aware of the major 
anthropological cultural changes today which have an impact on all aspects of 
life. We remain firmly convinced that the family is a gift of God, the place 
where he reveals the power of his saving grace. Even in our day, the Lord calls 
a man and a woman to marry, abides with them in their life as a family and 
offers himself to them as an ineffable gift. The Church is called to scrutinize 
the signs of the times, interpreting “them in the light of the Gospel. Thus, in 
language intelligible to each generation, she can respond to the perennial 
questions which people ask about this present life and the life to come, and 
about the relationship of the one to the other. We must therefore recognize and 
understand the world in which we live, its explanations, its longings, and its 
often dramatic characteristics” ( GS, 4).
 The Religious Context
6.   The Christian faith is strong and alive. Some regions of the world are 
witnessing a significant drop in religion in society, which, consequently, has 
its effect on family life. This approach tends to make religion a private matter 
and to relegate it to family life only, thus running the risk of reducing the 
witness and mission of the Christian family in the modern world. In places of 
advanced social well-being, people are likely to set all their hope in a frantic 
quest for social success and economic prosperity. In other regions of the world, 
the adverse effects of an unjust world economic order leads to forms of religion 
exposed to sectarian and radical extremism. We should also mention movements 
based on political and religious fanaticism, often openly hostile to 
Christianity. In creating instability and spreading chaos and violence, they are 
the cause of much misery and suffering in family life. The Church is called to 
provide guidance to families in their practice of religion so as to give it a 
Gospel orientation.
 Anthropological Change
7.   In various cultures, relationships and a sense of belonging are 
important values which shape an individual’s identity. The family provides the 
opportunity for personal fulfilment and contributes to the growth of other 
persons in society-at-large. The Christian and ecclesial identity received at 
Baptism comes to fruition in the beauty of family life. In today's society, we 
observe a multiplicity of challenges which manifest themselves to a greater or 
lesser degree in various parts of the world. In different cultures, many young 
people demonstrate a resistance in making definitive commitments in 
relationships, and often choose to live together or simply to engage in casual 
relationships. The declining birth rate is a result of various factors, 
including industrialization, the sexual revolution, the fear of overpopulation, 
economic problems, the growth of a contraceptive mentality and abortion. 
Consumerism may also deter people from having children, simply so they can 
maintain a certain freedom and life-style. Some Catholics have difficulty in 
leading a life in keeping with the Catholic Church's teaching on marriage and 
the family, and in seeing, in such teaching, the goodness of God's creative 
design for them. The number of marriages taking place in some parts of the world 
is declining, while separations and divorces are not uncommon.
 Cultural Contradictions
8.   In great areas across the planet, cultural situations affecting the 
family display a conflicting character, even under the extensive influence of 
mass media. On the one hand, marriage and the family are held in high esteem and 
the idea still prevails that the family represents a safe haven for the most 
profound and gratifying sentiments. On the other hand, the concept of the family 
is marred by excessive expectations and, consequently, exaggerated claims on 
each other. The tensions caused by an overly individualistic culture, which 
concentrates on possessing and gratification, leads to intolerance and 
aggression in families. Mention can also be made of a certain feminism which 
looks on motherhood as exploiting women and as an obstacle to her full 
realization. Furthermore, we are witnessing an ever-increasing tendency among 
people of conceiving a child simply as a means of self-affirmation and, at 
times, by any means possible. 
Today, a very important cultural challenge is posed by “gender” 
ideology which denies the difference and reciprocity in nature of a man and a 
woman and envisages a society without gender differences, thereby removing the 
anthropological foundation of the family. This ideology leads to educational 
programmes and legislative guidelines which promote a personal identity and 
emotional intimacy radically separated from the biological difference between 
male and female. Consequently, human identity becomes the choice of the 
individual, which can also change over time. According to our faith, the 
difference between the sexes bears in itself the image and likeness of God ( Gen 
1:26-27). “This tells us that it is not man alone who is the image of God or 
woman alone who is the image of God, but man and woman as a couple who are the 
image of God. [...] We can say that without the mutual enrichment of this 
relationship — in thought and in action, in affection and in work, as well as in 
faith — the two cannot even understand the depth of what it means to be man and 
woman. Modern contemporary culture has opened new spaces, new forms of freedom 
and new depths in order to enrich the understanding of this difference. But it 
has also introduced many doubts and much skepticism. [...] The removal of the 
difference [...] is the problem, not the solution” (Francis,  General Audience, 
15 April 2015).
 Conflicts and Social Tensions
9.   The affective and spiritual quality of family life is seriously 
threatened by the proliferation of conflicts, impoverishment and the migration 
process. Violent religious persecution, particularly the persecution of 
Christian families, is ravaging entire areas of our planet, creating an exodus 
of persons and masses of refugees which exert great pressure on the capabilities 
of the host-country. Families enduring these trials are very often forcibly 
uprooted and, in practice, completely shattered. The loyality of Christians to 
their faith, their patience and their attachment to their countries of origin 
are admirable in every respect. The efforts of all political and religious 
leaders to spread and protect the culture of human rights remains inadequate. 
While respecting freedom of conscience, living in harmony with each other must 
be fostered among everyone, based on citizenship, equality and justice. The 
burden of economic policies and social inequity, even in affluent areas, has a 
severe impact in providing for children and caring for the sick and the elderly. 
Dependence on alcohol, drugs or gambling sometimes results from these social 
contradictions and from the disadvantages caused by these contradictions in 
family life. The accumulation of wealth in the hands of a few and the misuse of 
resources allocated for family programmes increase the impoverishment of 
families in many regions of the world.
 Fragility and Strength of the Family
10.  In today’s socio-cultural crisis, the family, the basic human community, 
is painfully being weakened and is exhibiting signs of its fragile nature. 
Nonetheless, the family is also demonstrating its ability to find in itself the 
courage to confront the inadequacy and failure of institutions in the formation 
of the person, the quality of social ties and the care of the most vulnerable. 
Therefore, a proper appreciation of the resilience of the family is particularly 
necessary in order to be able to strengthen its fragile character. Such strength 
lies in the family’s capacity to love and to teach how to love. As wounded as 
the family may be, it can always grow beginning with love.
 
 
The Family as the Irreplaceable Resource of Society
11.  “The family is a school for human enrichment [...] and the foundation of 
society” ( GS, 52) All the relations among relatives in a family, beyond 
the small family unit itself, offer valuable assistance in the raising of 
children, the transmission of values, the safeguarding of inter-generational 
ties and the enrichment of the spiritual life. While in some regions of the 
world this is deeply a part of culture, in other places, it appears to be 
waning. Surely, in a period of a dramatic break-up in life-situations, the 
multiple levels and facets of relations between family members and relatives are 
often the only points of connection with a person’s origins and family ties. The 
support rendered by family relationships is even more necessary where 
work-mobility, migration, disasters and fleeing one’s native land compromise 
the stability of every family relationship.
 Policies Favouring the Family
12.  The authorities responsible for the common good must be seriously 
committed to the primary good of society, namely, the family. The concern 
guiding the administration of civil society must provide for and promote family 
policies which support and encourage families, primarily those of modest means. 
More concrete measures of compensation are necessarily done by the family in the 
context of modern “welfare systems” which redistribute resources and perform 
tasks essential to the common good and help counterbalance the negative effects 
of social inequity. “The family merits special attention on the part of those 
responsible for the common good, since it is the basic cell of society. Families 
foster the solid bonds of unity on which human coexistence is based, and, 
through the bearing and education of children, they ensure the future and the 
renewal of society.” (Francis,  Address at the Airport of El Alto, Bolivia, 
8 July 2015).
 Loneliness and Insecurity
13.  In cultures where relationships are weakened by an egotistical manner of 
living, loeliness is increasingly becoming more common. More often than not, 
only a sense of the presence of God sustains persons in this emptiness. A 
general feeling of powerlessness in the face of oppressive socio-economic 
situations, increasing poverty and a lack of employment require people 
increasingly to seek work far from the family in order to provide for its needs, 
thereby causing prolonged separation which weakens relations and isolates family 
members from each other. The State has the responsibility to create conditions 
and legislation to guarantee the future of younger generations and to assist 
them in fulfilling their desire to form a family. Corruption, which sometimes 
undermines these public institutions, deeply affects the trust and the hope of 
future generations and others as well. The negative consequences of this 
mistrust are evident, from dramatic demographic change to difficulties in 
raising children, from reluctance to welcome newborn life to looking upon the 
elderly as a burden, until emotional distress is so prevalent that it sometimes 
results in aggression and violence.
 The Economy and Growth
14.  Material resources and economic conditions affect the family in two ways, 
by either contributing to its growth and solidity or by impeding its strength, 
unity and cohesion. Economic constraints prohibit a family’s access to 
education, cultural activities and involvement in the social life. In many ways, 
the present-day economic situation is keeping people from participating in 
society. Families, in particular, suffer from problems related to work, where 
young people have few possibilities and job offerings are very selective and 
insecure. Workdays are long and oftentimes made more burdensome by extended 
periods away from home. This situation does not help family members to gather 
together or parents to be with their children in such a way as to nurture their 
relationships each day. “A growth in justice” requires “decisions, programmes, 
mechanisms and processes specifically geared to a better distribution of income” 
( EG, 204) and an integral promotion of the poor becomes effective. 
Adequate policies on behalf of the family are needed, if, in the future, the 
family is to live in a harmonious and dignified fashion.
 Poverty and Exclusion 
15.  Everywhere, certain religious and social groups of persons can be found 
on the margins of society: immigrants, gypsies, the homeless, displaced persons, 
refugees, the untouchables in the caste system and those who are suffering from 
diseases which carry a social stigma. The Holy Family of Nazareth also 
experienced the bitter experience of marginalization and rejection (cf. Lk 
2:7; Mt 2:13-15). In this regard, Jesus’ words concerning the last 
judgment, are clear: “As you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, 
you did it to me” (Mt 25:40). The present-day economic system causes 
various kinds of social exclusion, which often make the poor invisible to 
society. The prevailing culture and the media contribute to making this 
invisibility even worse. This results because “in this system, man, the human 
person, has been removed from the centre and replaced by something else. Because 
idolatrous worship is devoted to money. Because indifference has been 
globalized” (Francis, Address to the World Meeting of Popular Movements, 
28 October 2014). As such, a major concern is the plight of children, who are 
innocent victims of exclusion which makes them true “social orphans” and 
tragically affects them for their entire life. Despite the enormous difficulties 
they face, many poor and marginalized families strive to live their daily lives 
with dignity, relying on God who does not disappoint and does not abandon 
anyone. 
 
Ecology and the Family 
 
16.  The Church, in response to papal teaching, wants people to thoroughly 
re-examine the overall orientation of the global system. From this vantage 
point, she collaborates in the development of a a new ecological culture which 
includes a new mentality, new policies, new educational programmes, a new manner 
of living and a new spirituality. Since everything is deeply inter-related, as 
Pope Francis states in his Encyclical Laudato si’, exploring aspects of 
an “integral ecology” must include not only the environment, but also human, 
social and economic conditions for a sustainable development and the stewardship 
of all creation. The family, which is part of a significant human ecology, 
should be adequately protected (cf. John Paul II, Centesimus Annus, 38). 
Through our family, we belong to the whole of creation; we contribute in a 
specific manner to promoting ecology; we learn the meaning of the body and the 
language of love from the difference between a man and a woman and we 
collaborate in the divine plan of God, the Creator (cf. LS, 5, 155). To 
be aware of all this requires that a real conversion takes place within the 
family. “In the family we first learn how to show love and respect for life; we 
are taught the proper use of things, order and cleanliness, respect for the 
local ecosystem and care for all creatures. In the family we receive an integral 
education, which enables us to grow harmoniously in personal maturity”(LS, 
213). 
 
 
 
The Elderly 
 
17.  One of the most serious and urgent tasks of the Christian family is to preserve 
the link between generations to ensure the transmission of the faith and the 
basic values of life. Most families have great respect for the elderly, 
surrounding them with affection and considering them a blessing. We extend a 
special word of appreciation to persons in associations and family movements who 
are engaged in work on behalf of the elderly — spiritually and socially — 
especially those who work in conjunction with priests in the care of souls. In 
some places, the elderly are considered essential in ensuring stability, 
continuity and the historic memory in families and society. In highly 
industrialized societies, where their number is increasing as a result of a 
decreasing birth-rate, they risk being seen as a burden. On the other hand, the 
care that they require often puts a strain on their loved ones. “The elderly are 
men and women, fathers and mothers who were before us on our own street, in our 
own home, in our daily battle for a dignified life. They are men and women from 
whom we have received much. The elder is not alien. We are that elder: in the 
near or far future, but inevitably, even if we don’t think. And if we don’t 
learn how to treat the elder better, that is how we will be treated.” (Francis, 
General Audience, March 4, 2015). 
 
18.  Grandparents in a family deserve special attention. They are the link 
between generations, and ensure a psycho-affective balance through the 
transmission of traditions and customs, values and virtues, where younger 
persons can recognize their roots. Moreover, grandparents frequently collaborate 
with their sons and daughters in economic matters, the upbringing of their 
children and the transmission of the faith to their grandchildren. Many people 
can testify that they owe their initiation into the Christian life to their 
grandparents. As the Book of Ecclesiastes states: “Do not dismiss what the old 
people have to say; [...] from them you will learn how to think, and the art of 
the timely answer” (Eccl 8:9). We hope that in the family, in succeeding generations, the 
faith might be communicated and preserved as a precious heritage for new 
families. 
 
Widowhood 
 
19.  Widowhood is particularly difficult for those who have chosen to live 
marriage and family life as a gift. However, from the vantage point of faith, 
various aspects can be appreciated. From the moment of enduring a loss, some 
display an ability to concentrate their energies in a greater dedication to 
their children and grandchildren, finding in this expression of love a renewed 
mission in raising their children. The feeling of emptiness resulting from the 
death of a spouse is filled, in a certain sense, with the love of family members 
who show the importance in the family of the person who has lost a spouse, and 
in this manner permits him/her to maintain the precious memories of the 
marriage. Those who do not have relatives to whom to dedicate their care and 
from whom to receive affection, should be aided by the Christian community with 
a particular attention and availability, especially if they are poor. Those who 
have lost a spouse can celebrate a new sacramental union without detracting from 
the value of their previous marriage (cf. 1 Cor 7:39). From the beginning 
and in the course of time, the Church has paid special attention to widows (cf.
1 Tim 5:3-16), even establishing the ordo viduarum which might 
even be reinstated in the present-day. 
 
The Last Stages of Life and Loss in the Family 
 
20.  Illness, injury or old age which result in death greatly affect family 
life. Mourning is especially heartbreaking at the death of children and young 
people. This painful experience requires special pastoral attention and the 
involvement of the Christian community. The importance of the final stages of 
life is all the more necessary today, when many make the attempt to remove every 
trace of death and dying. The elderly who are weak and dependent are sometimes 
unfairly exploited simply for economic advantage. Many families show that it is 
possible to approach the last stages of life by emphasizing the importance of a 
person’s sense of fulfilment and by integrating one’s life in the Lord’s Paschal 
Mystery. A great number of elderly people are received into church institutions, 
where, materially and spiritually, they are able to live in a peaceful, family 
atmosphere. Euthanasia and assisted suicide are serious threats to families 
worldwide, practices which are legal in many countries. The Church, while firmly 
opposing these practices, feels obliged to assist families who take care of 
their elderly and sick members, and to promote in every way the dignity and 
worth of each person until the natural end of life. 
 
Persons with Special Needs 
 
21.  Particular attention needs to be given to families whose members have 
special needs. In these cases, the sudden entrance of a person with a disability 
into a family creates profound and unexpected challenges and upsets a family’s 
equilibrium, desires and expectations. This situation gives rise to mixed 
emotions and difficult decisions in coping and planning, while imposing duties, 
urgencies and new responsibilities. The reality of the family and every aspect 
of its life are profoundly disturbed. Families which lovingly accept the 
difficult trial of a child with special needs are to be greatly admired. They 
render the Church and society an invaluable witness of their faithfulness to the 
gift of life. In these situations, the family has the opportunity to discover, 
together with the Christian community, new approaches, new ways of acting, a 
different manner in understanding and identifying the family and in welcoming 
and caring for the mystery of the fragility of human life. People with 
disabilities are a gift for the family and an opportunity to grow in love, 
mutual aid and unity. The Church, God's family, wants to be a welcoming home to 
families with persons with special needs (cf. John Paul II, Homily for the 
Jubilee of the Disabled, 3 December 2000). She collaborates in strengthening 
the family’s relationships and training and offers ways for participating in the 
liturgical life of the community. For many persons with special needs, who are 
abandoned or alone, the Church‘s institutions, who welcome them, are often their 
only families. The Synod expresses profound gratitude and deep appreciation to 
these institutions. The process of integrating people with special needs into 
society is more difficult because of an enduring stigma and prejudice — even 
to the point of a theorization based on eugenics. On the contrary, many 
families, communities and ecclesial movements become aware of and celebrate the 
gifts of God in these people with special needs, particularly their unique 
communication skills and ability to bring people together. Special attention 
needs to be given to disabled persons who outlive their parents and others in 
their family who assisted them in life. The death of those who loved them and 
whom they loved makes these persons even more vulnerable. If the family, in the 
light of the faith, accepts the presence of people with special needs, they will 
be able to recognize and guarantee the quality and value of every human life, 
with its proper needs, rights and opportunities. This approach will encourage 
care and services on behalf of these disadvantaged persons and will encourage 
people to draw near to them and provide affection at every stage of their life. 
 
Persons Who Are Unmarried 
 
22.  Many people who are unmarried in life are not only devoted to their own 
family but often render great service in their group of friends, in the Church 
community and in their professional lives. Sometimes, their presence and 
contributions are overlooked, however, causing in them a sense of isolation. 
More often than not, many exhibit noble motives in their full engagement in art, 
science and the good of humanity. Many put their talents at the service of the 
Christian community in the name of charity and volunteer work. Others remain 
unmarried, because they have consecrated their lives for love of Christ and 
neighbour. Their dedication greatly enriches the family, the Church and society. 
 
 
 
Migrants, Refugees and Those Suffering Persecution 
 
23.  Special pastoral attention needs to be given to the effects of migration on 
the family. In various ways, migration has its effects on entire populations in 
different parts of the world. The Church has exercised a major role in this 
area. Maintaining and developing this witness to the Gospel (cf. Mt 
25:35) is more urgently needed today than ever. The truth of the history of 
humanity and the history of migrants is inscribed in the life of families and 
entire peoples. Even our faith makes this clear: we are all pilgrims. This 
conviction ought to lead to understanding, openness and responsibility in the 
challenges created by migration; those challenges from experiences of suffering 
as much as those looked upon as an opportunity for a better life. Human 
mobility, which corresponds to the natural historical movement of peoples, can 
prove to be a genuine enrichment for both the family that migrates and the 
country that welcomes these people. Furthermore, forced migration of families, 
resulting from situations of war, persecution, poverty and injustice and marked 
by the vicissitudes of a journey that often puts lives at risk, traumatizes 
people and destabilizes families. In accompanying migrants, the Church needs a 
specific pastoral programme addressed to not only families in migration but also 
members of the families who remain behind. This pastoral activity must be 
implemented with due respect for their cultures, for the human and religious 
formation from which they come and for the spiritual richness of their rites and 
traditions, even by means of a specific pastoral care. “It is important to view 
migrants not only on the basis of their status as regular or irregular, but 
above all as people whose dignity is to be protected and who are capable of 
contributing to progress and the general welfare. This is especially the case 
when they responsibly assume their obligations towards those who receive them, 
gratefully respecting the material and spiritual heritage of the host country, 
obeying its laws and helping with its needs” (Francis, Message for the World 
Day of Migrants and Refugees 2016, 12 September 2015). Migration is 
particularly dramatic and devastating to families and individuals, when it takes 
place illegally and is supported by international networks of human trafficking. 
This is equally true when it involves women or unaccompanied children who are 
forced to endure long periods of time in temporary facilities and refugee camps, 
where it is impossible to start a process of integration. Extreme poverty and 
other situations in the break-up of families sometimes even lead families to 
sell their children for prostitution or for organ trafficking. 
 
24.  A new country’s encounter with a new culture is made all the more difficult 
when genuine warmth and acceptance is lacking with respect to the rights of all 
and a sound, harmonious living together. The Christian community is directly 
concerned in such a task. “The responsibility to offer refugees hospitality, 
solidarity and assistance lies first of all with the local Church. She is called 
on to incarnate the demands of the Gospel, reaching out without distinction 
towards these people in their moment of need and solitude” (Pontifical Council
Cor Unum and Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and 
Itinerant People, Refugees: A Challenge to Solidarity, 26). A sense of 
being uprooted from one’s country, a nostalgia at being deprived of one’s roots 
and difficulties in being integrated into society, evident today in many places, 
still endure. They bring to light new suffering in second and third generation 
migrant families, fuelling fundamentalism and a violent rejection by the host 
culture. A valuable resource in overcoming these difficulties can precisely be 
found in families coming together, in which a key role in this process of 
integration is often played by women in their sharing their experience in 
bringing up their children. In fact, even in the insecurity of their situation, 
they bear witness to a culture of family love that encourages other families to 
welcome and protect life by practicing solidarity. Women can pass on to future 
generations the living faith in Christ that has sustained them in the difficult 
experience of migration and has been strengthened as a result. The persecution 
of Christians, as well as those of ethnic and religious minorities in many parts 
of the world, especially in the Middle East, are a great trial for not only the 
Church but also the entire international community. Every effort should be made 
to encourage, even in a practical way, families and Christian communities to 
remain in their native lands. Benedict XVI said: “A Middle East without 
Christians, or with only a few Christians, would no longer be the Middle East, 
since Christians, together with other believers, are part of the distinctive 
identity of the region” (Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Medio Oriente, 
31). 
 
Some Unique Challenges 
 
25.  Some societies still maintain the practice of polygamy; in other places, 
arranged marriages are an enduring practice. In countries where the presence of 
the Catholic Church is in the minority many mixed marriages and marriages of 
disparity of cult exist, with all the difficulties they entail with regard to 
the form required by canon law, Baptism, bringing up the children and mutual 
respect from the vantage point of the differences of belief. Where relativism or 
indifference may pose a threat to such marriages, there may also be a chance to 
promote the spirit of ecumenical and interreligious dialogue in a harmonious 
co-existence of communities, living in the same place. In many places, not only 
in the West, the practice of living together before marriage is widely spreading 
as well as a type of cohabitation which totally excludes any intention to marry. 
In addition, civil legislation often undermines marriage and the family. 
Secularization in many parts of the world is greatly diminishing any reference 
to God and inhibiting any sharing of the faith socially. 
 
Children 
 
26.  Children are a blessing from God (Gen 4:1); they ought to be of 
primary concern in the family and society and are a priority in the Church’s 
pastoral activity. “In fact, from the way children are treated society can be 
judged, not only morally but also sociologically, whether it is a liberal 
society or a society enslaved by international interests. [...] Children remind 
us [...] that are all sons and daughters. [...] And this always brings us back 
to the fact that we did not give ourselves life but that we have received it.” 
(Francis, General Audience, 18 March 2015). Children, however, often 
become the point of contention between parents and real victims in families with 
grave problems. In many ways, children's rights are neglected. In some areas of 
the world, children are considered a real commodity and seen as cheap workers to 
be used in fighting wars and as victims of all kinds of physical and 
psychological violence. Migrant children are exposed to various types of 
suffering. Sexual exploitation of children is one of the most scandalous and 
perverse practices in present-day society. In societies marked by violence due 
to war, terrorism or the presence of organized crime, children are forced to be 
raised in degrading family situations. In large cities and their peripheral 
areas the so-called phenomenon of street children is a dramatically worsening 
situation. 
 
Women 
 
27.  Women have a crucial role in the life of the individual, family and society. 
“Every human person owes his or her life to a mother, and almost always owes 
much of what follows in life, both human and spiritual formation, to her” 
(Francis, General Audience, 7 January 2015). A mother conserves the 
memory and meaning of birth for a lifetime: “But Mary kept all these things 
pondering on them in her heart” (Lk 2:19). Truly, however, the status of 
women in the world varies considerably, primarily because of socio-cultural 
factors. The dignity of women needs to be defended and promoted. The problem is 
not simply a result of economic resources, but one of different cultural 
outlooks, as highlighted by the plight of women in many recently developed 
countries. In many places, discrimination results simply because one is a woman: 
the gift of motherhood is penalized rather than valued. Likewise, in some 
cultures, sterility in a woman is the cause of social discrimination. Not to be 
overlooked is the growing phenomena of violence in which women are victims 
within the family. The exploitation of women and violence to their bodies are 
often linked to abortion and forced sterilization. In addition, practices 
related to procreation also have negative consequences, such as, a “womb for 
hire” or the marketing of gametes and embryos. The emancipation of women 
requires a rethinking of the duties of the spouses in their reciprocity and 
shared responsibility for family life. The desire for a child at any cost has 
not resulted in happier and more sound relations within families, but, in many 
cases, has actually worsened the inequality between women and men. A 
contributing factor in the social recognition of the role of women is a greater 
appreciation of their responsibilities in the Church: their involvement in 
decision-making, their participation in the administration of some institutions 
and their involvement in the formation of ordained ministers. 
 
Men 
 
28.  Man plays an equally decisive role in family life, particularly in 
reference to the protection and support of his wife and children. A model for a 
man in a family is St. Joseph, the just man, who in the hour of danger, “took 
the child and his mother by night” (Mt 2:14) and brought them to safety. 
Many men are aware of the importance of their role in the family and live 
according to their masculine role. The absence of a father gravely affects 
family life and the upbringing of children and their integration into society. 
This absence, which may be physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual, 
deprives children of an appropriate model of paternal behaviour. The increasing 
duties of women working outside the home has not been suitably compensated by a 
greater commitment by the man in the home. Today, a man is increasingly losing 
sight of his role in protecting his wife and children from all forms of violence 
and degradation. “Husbands — Paul says — must love their wives ‘as their own 
body’ (Eph 5:28); to love them as Christ ‘loved the Church and gave 
himself up for her’ (v. 25). You husbands [...] do you understand this? Do you 
love your wives as Christ loves the Church? [...] The effect of this radical 
devotion asked of man, for the love and dignity of woman, following the example 
of Christ, must have been tremendous in the Christian community itself. This 
seed of evangelical novelty, which reestablishes the original reciprocity of 
devotion and respect, matured throughout history slowly but ultimately it 
prevailed.” (Francis, General Audience, 6 May 2015). 
 
 
Young People 
 
29.  Many young people continue to see marriage as the great desire of their 
life and the idea of forming their own family as a fulfilment of their 
aspirations. Nevertheless, young people, in practice, have varying attitudes 
with regard to marriage. Often they are led to postpone a wedding for economic 
reasons, work or study. Some do so for other reasons, such as: the influence of 
ideologies which devalue marriage and family; the desire to avoid the failures 
of other couples; the fear of something they consider too important and sacred; 
the social opportunities and economic benefits associated with simply living 
together; a purely emotional and romantic conception of love; the fear of losing 
their freedom and independence; and the rejection of something conceived as 
purely institutional and bureaucratic. The Church is concerned at the distrust 
of many young people towards marriage and is troubled at the haste with which 
many of the faithful decide to put an end to one marital commitment and 
establish another. In their plans of love, young people who are baptized are to 
be encouraged to have no doubts in viewing the riches available in the Sacrament 
of Matrimony, to be aware of the strong support they can receive from the grace 
of Christ and to seize the opportunity of participating fully in the life of the 
Church. The reasons for the young’s renouncing marriage and their 
discouragement in marrying need to be more carefully discerned. Young people can 
gain greater confidence in the choice of marriage thanks to those families who, 
in the Christian community, provide a trustworthy example of enduring witness 
over time. 
 
 
 
The Importance of an Affective Life 
 
30.  “Anyone who wishes to give love must also receive love as a gift. 
Certainly, as the Lord tells us, one can become a source from which rivers of 
living water flow (cf. Jn 7:37-38). Yet to become such a source, one must 
constantly drink anew from the original source, which is Jesus Christ, from 
whose pierced heart flows the love of God (cf. Jn 19:34)” (DCE, 7) 
. To take care of one’s self, to know one’s self interiorly, to live better in 
line with one’s emotions and feelings and to seek quality in emotional 
relationships requires opening oneself to the gift of loving others and the 
desire to build a creative, empowering and sound reciprocity as that in 
families. The Church’s challenge is to assist couples in the maturation of the 
emotional aspect of their relationship and in their affective development 
through fostering dialogue, the life of virtue and trust in the merciful love of 
God. The commitment to full dedication required in Christian marriage is a 
strong antidote to the temptation of a person’s living an existence exclusively 
turned in upon itself. 
 
Formation in Self-Giving 
 
31.  The dynamic of family relations has a primary impact on the formation of 
younger generations. The speed of changes occurring in present-day society makes 
the work of accompanying a person’s affective formation in sound growth and 
development more difficult. This process requires appropriate pastoral action 
which is abundantly equipped with a knowledge imbued with Scripture and Catholic 
doctrine and provided with suitable educational tools. A proper knowledge of the 
psychology of the family will serve as an assistance in ensuring that the 
Christian vision might be effectively transmitted. Such an effort might already 
begin with the catechesis of Christian Initiation. This formation is also to 
highlight the admirable character of the virtue of chastity, since the virtue of 
chastity is understood to mean the integration of affections which fosters 
self-giving. 
 
Weakness and Immaturity 
 
32.  Many cultural tendencies exist in today's world whose goal is to impose a 
sexuality without any limits and where all affective aspects are explored, even 
the more complex ones. The idea of emotional weakness is very timely; a 
narcissistic, unstable and changing affectivity does not help a person to 
achieve greater maturity. The following cultural tendencies need to be firmly 
denounced: the prevalence of pornography and the commercialization of the body 
which is promoted by a distorted use of the internet, forced prostitution and 
exploitation. In this regard, couples are sometimes uncertain, hesitant and 
struggling to find ways to grow, many of whom tend to remain in the primary 
stages of their emotional and sexual life. A crisis of the couple destabilizes 
the family and can reach the point, through separation and divorce, to have 
serious consequences on adults, children and society, thereby weakening 
individual and social ties. The decline in population, due to an anti-birth 
mentality and promoted by global policies of “reproductive health,” threatens 
the link between generations. This situation also gives rise to a generalized 
economic impoverishment and loss of hope. 
 
Technologies in Human Procreation 
 
33.  The technological revolution in the field of human procreation has 
introduced the ability to manipulate the reproductive act, making it independent 
of the sexual relationship between a man and a woman. In this way, human life 
and parenthood have become a modular and separable reality, subject mainly to 
the wishes of individuals or couples, who are not necessarily heterosexual and 
properly married. This phenomenon has occurred recently as an absolute novelty 
on the stage of humanity and is increasingly becoming more common. This 
situation has profound implications in the dynamics of relationships, in the 
structuring of social life and in legal systems which intervene to attempt to 
regulate practices already in place and various situations. In this regard, the 
Church feels required to speak a word of truth and hope, necessarily beginning 
with the belief that each human being comes from God and lives constantly in his 
presence: “Human life is sacred because from its beginning it involves ‘the 
creative action of God’ and it remains forever in a special relationship with 
the Creator, who is its sole end. God alone is the Lord of life from its 
beginning until its end: no one can, in any circumstance, claim for himself the 
right to destroy directly an innocent human being” (Congregation for the 
Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction Donum vitae, Introd., 5, 22 February 
1987; cf. John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, 53). 
 
 
 
A Pastoral Challenge 
 
34.  A reflection able to pose the important questions on being human is 
productive in articulating the most profound aspirations of humanity. The great 
values of marriage and the Christian family are a response to the search 
inherent in human existence, even at a time characterized by individualism and 
hedonism. People ought to be received with understanding and sensitivity to 
their real-life situations and to learn how to continue their search for meaning 
in life. Faith inspires a desire for God and to feel fully part of the Church, 
even in those who are experiencing failure or are in very difficult situations. 
The Christian message always contains the reality and dynamics of mercy and 
truth, which converge in Christ: “The Church’s first truth is the love of 
Christ. The Church makes herself a servant of this love and mediates it to all 
people: a love that forgives and expresses itself in the gift of oneself. 
Consequently, wherever the Church is present, the mercy of the Father must be 
evident” (MV, 12). In formation for conjugal and family life, pastoral 
care is to take into account the diversity of real-life situations. If, on the 
one hand, we must promote pathways to ensure the formation of young people for 
marriage; on the other, we must accompany those who live alone or, without 
forming a new family, frequently remain connected to their family of origin. 
Even couples who cannot have children should be given special pastoral attention 
by the Church to help them discover God’s plan in their situation which is in 
service to the whole community. Everyone needs to be understood, bearing in mind 
that situations far from the life of the Church are not always desired; 
oftentimes, they are created, and, at times, simply endured. From the vantage 
point of faith, no one is excluded: all are loved by God and are important in 
the Church’s pastoral activity. 
 
 
 
35.  Discerning the vocation of the family in the variety of situations 
treated in the first part of this document requires a sure orientation in 
formation and guidance. The necessary direction to follow comes from the Word of 
God in human history, culminating in Jesus Christ who is “the Way, the Truth and 
the Life” for every man and woman who make up a family. Consequently, we heed 
what the Church teaches about the family in the light of Sacred Scripture and 
Tradition. We are convinced that God’s Word responds to the deepest expectations 
of human love, truth and mercy, and awakens the potential of giving and 
receiving, even in broken and humbled hearts. In light of the Word, we believe 
that the Gospel of the Family begins with the creation of humanity in the image 
of God who is love and calls man and woman to love according to his likeness 
(cf. Gen 1:26, 27). The vocation of the married couple and the family to 
a communion of love and life continues in all stages of God’s plan, despite the 
limitations and sins of the people. From the beginning, this vocation is founded 
in Christ the Redeemer (cf. Eph 1:3-7). He restores the marriage covenant 
as it was in the beginning (Mk 10:6), heals the human heart (cf. Jn 
4:10) and gives it the ability to love as Christ loves the Church in offering 
himself for her (Eph 5:32). 
 
36.  This vocation receives its ecclesial and missionary form from the 
sacramental bond which consecrates the indissoluble, conjugal relationship 
between a husband and a wife. The exchange of consent establishing this bond, 
implies the couple’s commitment to mutual self-giving and receiving, which is 
total and definitive and, biblically speaking, in “one flesh” (Gen 2:24). 
The grace of the Holy Spirit makes the married couple’s union a living sign of 
the bond between Christ and the Church. In this way, their union becomes, in the 
course of their lives, a source of many graces: fruitfulness, witness, healing 
and forgiveness. The wedding takes place in the community of life and love and 
the family participates in the work of evangelization. The bride and groom, thus 
becoming Christ’s disciples, are accompanied by him on the way to Emmaus; they 
recognize him in the breaking of bread; and they return to Jerusalem enlightened 
by his resurrection (cf. Lk 24:13-43). The Church proclaims the family’s 
union with Jesus, by virtue of the Incarnation through which he is a member of 
the Holy Family of Nazareth. Faith acknowledges the indissoluble bond between 
the spouses as a reflection of the love of the Divine Trinity, which reveals 
itself in the unity of truth and mercy proclaimed by Jesus. The Synod makes 
itself the interpreter of the Church who witnesses and proclaims to the People 
of God the clear teaching on the truth of the family, according to the Gospel. 
No matter how distant, every family can attain mercy and be sustained by this 
truth. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chapter I 
 
 
The Divine Pedagogy 
 
37.  Since the order of creation is determined by its orientation to Christ, 
we must make distinctions in the grace of the covenant, without separating the 
different degrees by which God communicates to humanity. Because of the divine 
pedagogy, according to which the plan of creation is fulfilled through 
successive stages in the order of redemption, we need to understand the novelty 
of the Sacrament of Matrimony in continuity with natural marriage as it was in 
the beginning, based on the order of creation. From this perspective, we 
understand the salvific action of God, even in the Christian life. Because 
everything was done through Christ and for him (cf. Col 1:16), Christians 
“gladly and reverently lay bare the seeds of the Word which lie hidden among 
their fellows. At the same time, however, they need to look to the profound 
changes which are taking place among nations” (AG, 11). The incorporation 
of the believer into the Church through Baptism is completed in the other 
Sacraments of Christian Initiation. In the domestic Church, which is his family, 
the believer starts that “dynamic process, one which advances gradually with the 
progressive integration of the gifts of God” (FC, 9), by an ongoing 
conversion to the love that saves us from sin and gives fullness of life. Amidst 
the challenges of contemporary society and culture, faith looks to Jesus Christ 
and seeks to contemplate and adore his face. He looked with love and tenderness 
on the women and men whom he encountered and accompanied their steps with truth, 
patience and mercy in announcing the requirements of the Kingdom of God. “Every 
time we return to the source of the Christian experience, new paths and 
undreamed-of possibilities open up” (Francis, Address at the Prayer Vigil in 
Preparation for the Synod on the Family, 4 October, 2014). 
 
The Icon of the Trinity in the Family 
 
38.  Scripture and Tradition give us access to a knowledge of the Trinity which 
is revealed in the features of a family. The family is the image of God who “in 
his deepest mystery is not all by himself, but a family, since he has in himself 
fatherhood, sonship and the essence of the family, which is love” (John Paul II, Homily at Parafox Major Seminary, Puebla de Los Angeles 
(Mexico), 28 January 1979). God is a communion of persons. At Christ’s Baptism, 
the voice of the Father called Jesus his beloved Son, and, in this love, we come 
to recognize the Holy Spirit (cf. Mk 1:10-11). Jesus, who has reconciled 
all things in himself and has redeemed us from sin, not only returned marriage 
and the family to their original form, but has also raised marriage to the 
sacramental sign of his love for the Church (cf. Mt 19:1-12; Mk 10:1-12; Eph 5:21-32). In the human family, 
gathered by Christ, the “image and likeness” of the Holy Trinity (cf. Gen 
1:26) is now visible, a mystery from which flows all true love. Through the 
Church, marriage and the family receive the grace of the Holy Spirit from Christ 
so as to bear witness to the Gospel of God's love until the fulfilment of the 
Covenant on the Last Day, at the Wedding Feast of the Lamb (cf. Rev 19:9; 
John Paul II, Catechesis on Human Love). The covenant of love and 
fidelity, lived by the Holy Family of Nazareth, illuminates the principle which 
gives form to every household, and enables it better to face the vicissitudes of 
life and history. On this basis, every family, despite its weaknesses, can 
become a light in the darkness of the world. “Here each of us understands the 
meaning of family life, its harmony of love, its simplicity and austere beauty, 
its sacred and inviolable character; may it teach us how sweet and irreplaceable 
is its training, how fundamental and incomparable its role in the social order” 
(Paul VI, Discourse at Nazareth, 5 January 1964). 
 
The Family in Sacred Scripture 
 
39.  Through the fruitfulness of their love, man and woman continue the work of 
creation and collaborate with the Creator in salvation history through 
successive geneologies (Gen 1:28; 2: 4; 9:1,7; 10; 17:2,16; 25:11; 28:3; 
35:9,11; 47:27; 48:3,4). The reality of marriage in its exemplary form is 
outlined in the book of Genesis, to which Jesus also refers in his idea of 
married love. Man feels incomplete, because he lacks “a helper fit for him”, who 
“stands before him” (Gen 2:18-20) in an equal dialogue. The woman 
participates, therefore, in the same reality of the man, represented 
symbolically by the rib, or by the same flesh, as proclaimed in the song of the 
man’s love: “This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh” (Gen 
2:23). They thus become “one flesh” (Gen 2:24). This foundational reality 
of the marital experience is exalted in the expression of one belonging to the 
other in the profession of love, pronounced by the woman in the Song of Songs. 
The formula is similar to that of the covenant between God and his People (cf.
Lev 26:12): “My beloved is mine and I am his,... I am my beloved's and my 
beloved is mine” (Cant 2:16; 6:3). Equally meaningful in this Canticle is the constant 
intertwining of sexuality, eros and love, as well as the physical embrace 
with tenderness, feeling, passion, spirituality and total self-giving. Fully 
aware that death might interrupt the dialogue between him and her (cf. Cant 
3 and 5), each one is certain that the power of love remains in overcoming all 
obstacles: “love is strong as death” (Cant 8:6). To celebrate the 
covenant of love between God and his people, biblical prophecy will utilize not 
only nuptial symbolism (cf. Is 54; Jer 2:2; Ez 16), but the 
entire family experience, as attested in a particularly intense manner by the 
prophet Hosea. The ordeal he endured in marriage and the family (cf. Hos 1-3) becomes 
a sign of the relationship between the Lord and Israel. The infidelity of the 
people cannot surmount the enduring love of God which the prophet portrays as a 
father who guides and draws his son to himself with the “bands of love” (cf. 
Hos 11:1-4). 
 
40.  The words of eternal life, given by Jesus to his disciples, include his 
teaching on marriage and the family. In them, we can recognize three basic 
stages in God's plan. Firstly, there is the family of origin, when God, the 
Creator, instituted the primordial marriage between Adam and Eve, as the solid 
foundation of the family. God not only created human beings as male and female 
(cf. Gen 1:27), but he also blessed them so that they might be fruitful 
and multiply (cf. Gen 1:28). For this, “a man leaves his father and his mother 
and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh” (Gen 2:24). 
Subsequently, in its historical form in the tradition of Israel, this union, 
wounded by sin, underwent several variations: between monogamy and polygamy, 
between stability and divorce and between reciprocity and subordination of woman 
to man. Moses’ granting the possibility of divorce (cf. Deut 24:1ff), 
which lasted to the time of Jesus, is to be understood within this framework. 
Lastly, the reconciliation of the world took place with the coming of the 
Saviour, not only restoring the original divine plan but leading the history of 
God's People to a new fulfilment. Above all, the indissolubility of marriage (Mk 
10:2-9) is not meant to be a burden but a gift to those who are united in 
marriage. 
 
Jesus and the Family 
 
41.  The example of Jesus is a paradigm for the Church. The Son of God came 
into the world in a family. In his thirty years of hidden life in Nazareth — the 
social, religious and cultural periphery of the Empire (cf. Jn 1:46) — 
Jesus saw in Mary and Joseph a faithfulness lived in love. He began his public 
life with the sign at Cana, done at a wedding feast (Jn 2:1-11). He 
announced the Gospel of marriage as the fullness of revelation which restores 
God’s original plan (cf. Mt 19:4-6). He shared in everyday moments of 
friendship in the family of Lazarus and his sisters (cf. Lk 10:38) and in 
the family of Peter (cf. Mt 8:14). He heard the cries of parents for 
their children and raising them to life (cf. Mk 5:41; Lk 7:14,15), 
thereby showing the true meaning of mercy, which implies the restoration of the 
Covenant (cf. John Paul II, Dives in Misericordia, 4). This clearly 
appears in the meetings with the Samaritan woman (cf. Jn 4:1-30) and the 
adulteress (cf. Jn 8:1-11), in which the perception of sin is awakened by 
the Jesus’ gratuitous act of love. Conversion “is an ongoing task for the whole 
Church who, embracing sinners, (is) at once holy and always in need of 
purification, (and) follows constantly the path of penance and renewal. This 
endeavour of conversion is not just a human work. It is the movement of a 
‘contrite heart,’ drawn and moved by grace to respond to the merciful love of 
God, who loved us first”(CCC, 1428). God gratuitously forgives those who 
are open to the action of his grace, which takes place through repentance, 
combined with the intention of living life according to God's will, the effect 
of his mercy by which he reconciles us to himself. God puts in our hearts the 
ability to follow Christ by imitating him. The words and attitude of Jesus 
clearly show that the Kingdom of God is the criterion on which every 
relationship is defined (cf. Mt 6:33). Family ties, though fundamental, “are not 
absolute” (CCC, 2232). In a manner which caused consternation in his listeners, 
Jesus made family relations relative in the context of the Kingdom of God (Mk 
3:33-35; Lk 14:26; Mt 10:34-37; 19:29; 23:9). This revolution in 
affection, which Jesus introduced into the human family, is a radical call to 
universal brotherhood. No one is excluded from this new community gathered in 
Jesus' name, because all are called to be part of God's family. Jesus shows how 
the divine condescendence may accompany the human journey with his grace, 
transform the hardened heart with his mercy (cf. Ez 36:26) and guide its 
fulfilment through the Paschal Mystery. 
 
Chapter II 
 
 
The Teaching of the Second Vatican Council 
 
42.  Based on what she has received from Christ, the Church has developed over the 
centuries a rich teaching on marriage and family. One of the greatest examples 
of this Magisterium was proposed by the Second Vatican Council in the Pastoral 
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, which devotes an entire chapter to the 
dignity of marriage and the family (cf. GS, 47-52). This document defines 
marriage and the family in the following manner: “The intimate partnership of 
married life and love has been established by the Creator and qualified by His 
laws, and is rooted in the conjugal covenant of irrevocable personal consent. 
Hence by that human act whereby spouses mutually bestow and accept each other a 
relationship arises which by divine will and in the eyes of society too is a 
lasting one.”(GS, 48). The “true love between husband and wife” (GS, 49) 
involves a mutual gift of self, which is to include and integrate the sexual 
dimension and affectivity according to the divine plan (cf. GS, 48-49). This 
clearly shows that marriage and the conjugal love that gives it life, “are by 
their nature ordained toward the begetting and educating of children” (GS, 
50). Furthermore, the grounding of the couple in Christ is emphasized: Christ 
the Lord “comes into the lives of married Christians through the Sacrament of 
Matrimony” (GS, 48) and remains with them (sacramentum permanens). 
He assumes human love, purifies it, brings it to fulfilment and gives the 
married couple, with his Spirit, the ability to live it by permeating every 
aspect of their life of faith, hope and charity. In this way, the couple, like 
consecrated persons through a grace proper to them, builds up the Body of Christ 
and is a domestic Church (cf. LG, 11), so that the Church, through fully 
understanding her mystery, looks to the Christian family, which manifests that 
mystery in an authentic way. 
 
Blessed Pope Paul VI 
 
43.  Blessed Pope Paul VI, in the wake of the Second Vatican Council, greatly 
developed the doctrine on marriage and the family. In a particular way, with the 
Encyclical Humanae Vitae, he highlighted the intrinsic link 
between 
conjugal love and the generation of life: “Married love, therefore, 
requires of 
husband and wife the full awareness of their obligations in the matter 
of 
responsible parenthood, which today, rightly enough, is much insisted 
upon, but 
which at the same time should be rightly understood. [...] the exercise 
of responsible parenthood requires that husband and wife, 
keeping a right order of priorities, recognize their own duties toward 
God, 
themselves, their families and human society” (HV, 10). In the Apostolic 
Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi, Paul VI highlighted the relationship 
between the family and the Church: “One cannot fail to stress the evangelizing 
action of the family in the evangelizing apostolate of the laity. At different 
moments in the Church's history and also in the Second Vatican Council, the 
family has well deserved the beautiful name of ‘domestic Church.’ This means 
that there should be found in every Christian family the various aspects of the 
entire Church. Furthermore, the family, like the Church, ought to be a place 
where the Gospel is transmitted and from which the Gospel radiates” (EN, 
71). 
 
Pope Saint John Paul II 
 
44.  Pope Saint John Paul II devoted special attention to the family in his 
catechesis on human love and the theology of the body. In them, he has given the 
Church a wealth of reflections on the nuptial meaning of the human body and 
God’s plan for marriage and the family from the beginning of creation. In 
particular, by treating conjugal love, he described how spouses, in their mutual 
love, receive the gift of the Spirit of Christ and live their call to holiness. 
In the Letter to Families Gratissimam Sane and particularly in the 
Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, Pope John Paul II pointed to 
the family as the “way of the Church.” He also offered a general vision of man 
and woman’s vocation to love and proposed basic guidelines for the pastoral care 
of the family and the presence of the family in society. “In matrimony and in 
the family a complex of interpersonal relationships is set up — married life, 
fatherhood and motherhood, filiation and fraternity — through which each human 
person is introduced into the ‘human family’ and into the ‘family of God,’ which 
is the Church” (FC, 15). 
 
Pope Benedict XVI 
 
45.  Benedict XVI, in his Encyclical Deus Caritas Est, returned to the 
topic of the truth of the love between man and woman, that is fully illuminated 
only in light of the love of the Crucified Christ (cf. DCE, 2). He 
stresses that “marriage based on exclusive and definitive love becomes the icon 
of the relationship between God and his people and vice versa. God's way of 
loving becomes the measure of human love” (DCE, 11). Moreover, in the 
Encyclical Caritas in Veritate, he highlights the importance of family 
love as a principle of life in society, a place where we learn the experience of 
the common good. “It is thus becoming a social and even economic necessity once 
more to hold up to future generations the beauty of marriage and the family, and 
the fact that these institutions correspond to the deepest needs and dignity of 
the person. In view of this, States are called to enact policies promoting the 
centrality and the integrity of the family, founded on marriage between a man 
and a woman, the primary vital cell of society, and to assume responsibility for 
its economic and fiscal needs, while respecting its essentially relational 
character” (CiV, 44). 
 
Pope Francis 
 
46.  Pope Francis, in the encyclical Lumen Fidei, treats the connection 
between the family and faith: “The first setting in which faith enlightens the 
human city is the family. I think first and foremost of the stable union of man 
and woman in marriage [...] Promising love for ever is possible when we perceive 
a plan bigger than our own ideas and undertakings” (LF, 52). In the 
Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, the Pope recalls the centrality 
of the family among the cultural challenges of today: “The family is 
experiencing a profound cultural crisis, as are all communities and social 
bonds. In the case of the family, the weakening of these bonds is particularly 
serious because the family is the fundamental cell of society, where we learn to 
live with others despite our differences and to belong to one another; it is 
also the place where parents pass on the faith to their children. Marriage now 
tends to be viewed as a form of mere emotional satisfaction that can be 
constructed in any way or modified at will. But the indispensable contribution 
of marriage to society transcends the feelings and momentary needs of the 
couple” (EG, 66). Pope Francis, in further treating issues relating to 
the family, has dedicated an organic cycle of catechesis which thoroughly 
examines the various persons in the family, their different experiences and the 
stages of life. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chapter III 
 
 
Marriage in the Order of Creation and the Fullness of the Sacrament 
 
47. The order of redemption illuminates and fulfils that of 
creation. Natural 
marriage, therefore, is fully understood according to its realization in
 the 
Sacrament of Matrimony: only in contemplating Christ does a person have 
an 
in-depth knowledge of the truth about human relationships. “Only in the 
mystery 
of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light. [...] 
Christ, the final Adam, by the revelation of the mystery of the Father 
and 
his love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes his supreme calling
 clear” (GS, 22). Quite appropriately, we can use a Christocentric 
hermeneutic to understand the natural properties of marriage, which make up the 
goods of the spouses (bonum coniugum), namely, union, openness to life, 
fidelity and indissolubility. In light of the New Testament, according to which 
all things were created through Christ and for him (cf. Col 1:16; Jn 
1:1ff), the Second Vatican Council wanted to express appreciation for natural 
marriage and the positive elements in other religions (cf. LG, 16; NA, 
2) and different cultures, despite their limitations and shortcomings (cf. 
RM, 55). Discernment of the presence of the “seeds of the Word” in other 
cultures (cf. AG, 11) can also be applied to the reality of marriage and 
the family. In addition to true natural marriage, positive elements are present 
in the forms of marriage in other religious traditions. We maintain that these 
forms — still based on the true and stable relationship of a man and a woman — 
are ordered to the Sacrament of Matrimony. While considering the human wisdom of 
the people, the Church recognizes that this family is also the basic cell which 
is necessary and fruitful in human coexistence.  
 
The Indissolubility and Fruitfulness of the Conjugal Union 
 
48.  The faithfulness of God to the covenant, which cannot be revoked, is the 
basis for the indissolubility of marriage. The all-inclusive, profound love 
between husband and wife is not only based on human capacity: God supports this 
covenant with the power of his Spirit. The choice that God made in our regard is 
reflected, in some way, in the choice of a spouse: just as God keeps his promise 
even when we fail, so love and conjugal fidelity maintain their value “in good 
times and in bad.” Marriage is a gift and a promise of God, who hears the 
prayers of those who ask for his help. The hardness of the human heart, its 
limitations and its weakness in the face of temptation is a great challenge in 
living a life in common. The witness of couples who faithfully live their 
marriage highlights the value of this indissoluble union and awakens the desire 
to constantly renew their commitment to fidelity. Indissolubility corresponds to 
the profound desire of mutual and enduring love which the Creator has placed in 
the human heart, a gift which he himself gives to each couple: “What God has 
joined together, let not man put asunder” (Mt 19:6; Mk 10:9). The man and woman accept this gift and 
care for it so that their love might be able to endure forever. Faced with the 
sensibility of our times and the actual difficulty in maintaining life-long 
commitments, the Church is called to propose the demands and a plan of life 
according to the Gospel of the Family and Christian marriage. “St Paul, speaking 
of new life in Christ, says that Christians — each one of them — are called to 
love one another as Christ has loved them, that is to ‘be subject to one 
another’ (Eph 5:21), which means to be at the service of one another. And here 
he introduces an analogy between the husband and wife and Christ and his Church. 
It is clear that this is an imperfect analogy, but we must take it in the 
spiritual sense which is very lofty and revolutionary, and, at the same time, 
simple, available to every man and woman who entrusts himself and herself to the 
grace of God” (Francis, General Audience, 6 May 2015). Once again, this 
proclamation gives hope! 
 
The Goods of the Family 
 
49.  Marriage is “a partnership of the whole of life and which is ordered by 
its nature to the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of 
offspring” (CIC, can. 1055 - §1). In mutual acceptance, those who are 
engaged promise each other a total gift of self, fidelity and openness to life. 
In faith and with the grace of Christ, they recognize the gifts which God offers 
them and commit themselves, in his name, in the presence of the Church. God 
consecrates the love of a husband and a wife and confirms the indissoluble 
character of their love, offering them the grace to live in faithfulness, mutual 
integration and openness to life. Let us thank God for marriage because, through 
the community of life and love, Christian spouses know happiness and experience 
that God loves them personally, with feelings of warmth and tenderness. The man 
and the woman, individually and as a couple, — recalls Pope Francis — “are the 
image of God.” Their difference “is not meant to stand in opposition, or to 
subordinate, but is for the sake of communion and generation, always in the 
image and likeness of God” (General Audience, 15 April 2015). The unitive 
end of marriage is a constant reminder that this love grows and deepens. Through 
their union in love, the couple experiences the beauty of fatherhood and 
motherhood and shares their plans, trials, expectations and concerns; they learn 
care for each other and mutual forgiveness. In this love, they celebrate their 
happy moments and support each other in the difficult passages of their life 
together. 
 
50.  The fruitfulness of the couple, in a full sense, is spiritual. They are 
living signs of the Sacrament of Matrimony and a source of life for the 
Christian community and the world. The act of generation, showing the 
“inseparable connection” between the unitive and procreative aspects — as 
highlighted by Blessed Paul VI (cf. HV, 12) — must be understood in 
light of the parents’ responsibility and commitment to the care and Christian 
upbringing of their children, who are the most precious fruit of conjugal love. 
From the very first moment of conception the child is a person, who transcends 
those who have procreated them. “According to God’s plan, being a son and 
daughter means to carry within oneself the memory and hope of a love which was 
fulfilled in the very kindling of the life of another, original and new, human 
being. And for parents each child is original, different, diverse” (Francis, General Audience, 11 February 2015). The beauty of this 
mutual, gratuitous gift, the joy which comes from a life that is born and the 
loving care of all family members — from toddlers to seniors — are just a few 
of the fruits which make the response to the vocation of the family unique and 
irreplaceable. Family relations contribute decisively to the sound building of 
human society in fellowship, which cannot be reduced to simply the inhabitants 
of a territory or citizens of a State who live together. 
 
 
 
The Truth and Beauty of the Family 
 
51.  With heartfelt joy and profound consolation, the Church looks to families 
who faithfully follow the teachings of the Gospel. The Church thanks them for 
their witness and encourages them to continue. Because of these families, the 
beauty of an indissoluble, ever-faithful marriage is made credible. The first 
experience of ecclesial communion between persons grows and develops in the 
family, in which, through grace, the mystery of Trinitarian love is reflected. 
“Here one learns endurance and the joy of work, fraternal love, generous — even 
repeated — forgiveness, and above all divine worship in prayer and the offering 
of one's life.” (CCC, 1657). The Gospel of the Family nourishes those seeds still 
awaiting maturity and must also treat those trees which have withered and 
require attention (cf. Lk 13:6-9). The Church as a sure teacher 
and 
caring mother acknowledges that, for those who are baptized, a 
sacramental 
marriage is the only marriage bond which exists and any rupture of that 
bond is 
against the will of God. At the same time, she is also aware of the 
fragility of 
many of her children who struggle along the path of faith. “Without 
detracting 
from the evangelical ideal, they [the lay faithful] need to accompany 
with mercy 
and patience the eventual stages of personal growth as these 
progressively occur [...] A small step, in the midst of great human 
limitations, can be more 
pleasing to God than a life which appears outwardly in order but moves 
through 
the day without confronting great difficulties. Everyone needs to be 
touched by 
the comfort and attraction of God’s saving love, which is mysteriously 
at work 
in each person, above and beyond their faults and failings” (EG, 44). 
This truth and beauty is to be safeguarded. When faced with difficult situations 
and wounded families, people need to recall this general principle: “Pastors 
must know that, for the sake of truth, they are obliged to exercise careful 
discernment of situations” (FC, 84). The degree of responsibility is not 
equal in all cases and factors may exist which limit the ability to make a 
decision. Therefore, while clearly expressing doctrine, pastors are to avoid 
judgments which do not take into account the complexity of various situations 
and they are to be attentive, by necessity, to how people live and endure 
distress because of their condition. 
 
Chapter IV 
 
 
The Intimate Bond Between the Church and the Family 
 
52.  The blessing and responsibility of a new family, sealed in the Sacrament 
of Matrimony, involve the couple’s willingness to be advocates and promoters, 
within the Christian community, of the basic covenant between a man and a woman. 
In society, the willingness to beget children, to protect the weak and to live a 
life in common, involves a responsibility that should be supported, acknowledged 
and appreciated. In virtue of the Sacrament of Matrimony, every family becomes, 
in effect, a good for the Church. From this vantage point, considering the 
interplay between the family and the Church will be a precious gift for the 
Church at the present time: the Church is good for the family, the family is 
good for the Church. The safeguarding of the Lord’s gift in the Sacrament of 
Matrimony is a matter not only for the individual family but the Christian 
community itself, in a manner for which it is responsible. To preserve the union 
of marriage, when difficulties — even serious ones — arise, a discernment of 
each’s obligations and failures should be thoroughly examined by the couple with 
the assistance of the pastors and community. 
 
The Grace of Conversion and Fulfilment 
 
53..  The Church remains close to couples whose marital relationship has 
degenerated to the point of separation. In cases where a relationship painfully 
ends, the Church feels the duty to accompany the spouses in their period of 
suffering so their relationship does not lead to a serious conflict. First of 
all, particular attention needs to be given to the children, who are the first 
affected by the separation, so that they suffer as little as possible, because 
“when a dad and mom hurt one another, the souls of their children suffer 
terribly” (Francis, General Audience, 24 June 2015). The light of Christ 
enlightens every person (cf. Jn 1:9; GS, 22), seeing things as 
Christ would see them inspires the Church's pastoral care for the faithful who 
are living together or who are only married civilly or who are divorced and 
remarried. From the vantage point of divine pedagogy, the Church turns with 
love to those who participate in her life in an imperfect manner: she seeks the 
grace of conversion for them, she encourages them to do good, to lovingly take 
care of each other and to serve the community in which they live and work. 
Hopefully, dioceses will promote various means of discernment for these people 
and to involve them in the community to help and encourage them to grow and 
eventually make a conscious, coherent choice. Couples need to be told about the 
possibility of having recourse to a process of a declaration of nullity 
regarding their marriage. 
 
54.  When a couple in an irregular union reaches a noteworthy stability through a 
public bond — and is characterized by deep affection, responsibility towards the 
children and the ability to overcome trials — this can be seen as an 
opportunity, where possible, to lead the couple to celebrating the Sacrament of 
Matrimony. A different case occurs, however, when persons live together without 
a desire for a future marriage, but instead have the decided intention not to 
establish any institutionally recognized relationship. Civil marriages between a 
man and a woman, traditional marriage and, taking into account the difference 
due, even cohabitation are emerging phenomena in many countries. The situation 
of the faithful who have established a new union requires special pastoral 
attention: “In these decades [...] the awareness has truly grown that it is 
necessary to have a fraternal and attentive welcome, in love and in truth, of 
the baptized who have established a new relationship of cohabitation after the 
failure of the marital sacrament; in fact, these persons are by no means 
excommunicated” (Francis, General Audience, 5 August 2015). 
 
Mercy: The Core of Revelation 
 
55.  The Church starts from the real-life situations of today's families, all 
in need of mercy, beginning with those who suffer most. With the Merciful Heart 
of Jesus, the Church must draw near and guide the weakest of her members, who 
are experiencing a wounded or lost love, by restoring confidence and hope, as 
the beacon light of a port or a torch carried in the crowd, to illuminate those 
who have lost their way or find themselves in the midst of a storm. Mercy is 
“the core of the revelation of Jesus Christ” (MV, 25). God’s sovereignty 
shines forth in his mercy; a mercy always faithful to his very being, which is 
love (cf. 1 Jn 4:8), and to his covenant. “It is precisely in his mercy 
that God manifests his omnipotence” (St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, 
II-II, q. 30, art. 4; cf. The Roman Missal, the Opening Prayer for the 
Twenty-Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time). Proclaiming the truth in love is itself 
an act of mercy. In the Bull Misericordiae Vultus, Pope Francis said: 
“Mercy is not contrary to justice but is the behaviour of God toward the 
sinner.” He continues: “God does not deny justice. He rather envelops it and 
surpasses it with an even greater event in which we experience love as the 
foundation of true justice” (MV, 21). Jesus is the face of the mercy of God the Father: “God so loved 
the world [...] [that] the world might be saved through him [the Son]” (Jn 
3:16, 17). 
 
PART III 
 
56.  From the beginning of history, God has been generous with his love 
towards his children (cf. LG, 2), so that they could attain fullness of 
life in Jesus Christ (cf. Jn 10:10). Through the Sacraments of Christian 
Initiation, God invites families to enter into this life, to proclaim it and to 
communicate it to others (cf. LG, 41). As Pope Francis forcefully reminds 
us, the mission of the family always extends outside itself in service to our 
brothers and sisters. Each family is asked to participate in the Church’s 
mission in a unique and privileged manner. “In virtue of their Baptism, all 
members of the People of God have become missionary disciples” (EG, 120). 
All over the world, in the real-life situation of families, we can see much 
happiness and joy, but also much suffering and anguish. We want to look at this 
reality with the same eyes with which Christ looked at it, as he walked among 
the people of his time. We want our attitude to be one of humility and 
understanding. Our desire is to accompany each and every family so that each 
family might discover the best way to overcome the obstacles it encounters. The 
Gospel is always a sign of contradiction. The Church never forgets that the 
Paschal Mystery is central to the Good News that we announce. She wants to help 
families recognize and welcome the cross, when it is placed before them, so that 
they can carry it, along with Christ, on the path which leads to the joy of the 
resurrection. This task requires “a pastoral and missionary conversion which 
cannot leave things as they presently are” (EG, 25). Conversion, then, 
profoundly affects a style of communication and language. The language to be 
adopted must be meaningful. Proclamation has to make people experience the 
Gospel of the Family as a response to the deepest longings of the human person, 
a response to his/her dignity and a response to complete personal fulfilment in 
reciprocity, communion and fruitfulness. It is not only a question of norms, but 
announcing the grace which provides the ability to live the goods of the family. 
Today more than ever, transmitting the faith requires a language which is able 
to reach everyone, especially young people, so as to communicate the beauty of 
love in the family and make people understand the meaning of terms such as 
self-giving, conjugal love, fidelity, fruitfulness and procreation. This need 
for a new and more appropriate language initially enters in introducing children 
and adolescents to the topic of sexuality. Many parents and people who are 
involved in pastoral work have difficulty finding an appropriate yet respectful 
language to bring together the biological and complementary natures of sexuality 
which enrich each other through friendship, love and the self-giving of a man 
and a woman. 
 
Chapter I 
 
 
Marriage Preparation 
 
57.  Christian marriage cannot be reduced to a cultural tradition or to a simple 
legal agreement. Christian marriage is a genuine call from God which demands 
careful discernment, constant prayer and adequate growth and development. In 
this regard, a programme of formation is needed which might accompany persons 
and couples so that communicating the faith might be united with an actual 
living experience provided by the entire ecclesial community. The effectiveness 
of this assistance also requires improved premarital catechesis — sometimes poor 
in content, today — which is an integral part of routine pastoral care. The 
ministry on behalf of engaged couples also ought to be included in the general 
commitment of the Christian community to present, in a proper and convincing 
fashion, the Gospel message about the dignity of the person, his/her freedom and 
respect for his/her rights. In this regard, the three stages indicated in 
Familiaris Consortio (cf. 66) need to be borne in mind: remote preparation, 
which treats the transmission of the faith and Christian values within the 
family; proximate preparation, which coincides with the various programmes of 
catechesis and the formative experiences lived within the ecclesial community; 
and immediate preparation for marriage, which is part of a broader programme, 
characterized by the vocation to marriage itself. 
 
58.  In the cultural change taking place in the present-day, models are often 
presented which conflict with the Christian vision of the family. Sexuality is 
often separated from a plan of authentic love. In some countries, formation 
programmes are even imposed by civil authorities whose content is in conflict 
with the human and Christian vision of man. As to these programmes, the Church 
strongly affirms her freedom to set forth her teaching and the right of 
conscientious objection on the part of educators. Moreover, the family, while 
remaining the primary place for formation (cf. Gravissimum Educationis, 
3), cannot be the only place for formation in matters of sexuality. In this 
regard, true and proper pastoral programmes of support need to be devised, 
targeting both individuals and couples, with particular attention given to young 
people at the age of puberty and adolescence, so as to help them discover the 
beauty of sexuality in love. Christianity proclaims that God created humanity as 
male and female, and blessed them to form one flesh and transmit life (cf. 
Gen 1: 27-28; 2, 24). Their difference, in equal personal dignity, is God’s 
seal of goodness on creation. According to the Christian principle, soul and 
body, as well as biological sex (sex) and socio-cultural role of sex (gender), 
can be distinguished but not separated.  
Pre-matrimonial programmes seem to require additional topics to better 
form people in faith and love in the general process of Christian initiation. In 
this regard, the importance of the virtues needs to be recalled, especially 
chastity, which is invaluable in the genuine growth of love between persons. The 
formation programme should assume the structure of a journey towards vocational 
discernment for both the individual person and the couple, ensuring a better 
synergy between the various pastoral areas. The pre-marital programme might also 
be given by married couples who are capable of accompanying engaged couples 
before their marriage and in the initial years of marriage, thereby showing the 
value of the ministry of married couples. Giving value to interpersonal 
relationships in the Church’s pastoral activity will encourage the gradual 
opening of minds and hearts to the fullness of God's plan. 
 
The Celebration of Marriage 
 
59.  The marriage liturgy is a unique event, which is a familial and social 
celebration. The first signs of Jesus were done at the wedding feast of Cana. 
The good wine, resulting from the Lord’s miracle which brought joy at the 
formation of a new family, is the new wine of Christ’s covenant with the men and 
women of every age. An engaged couple devotes a great deal of time preparing for 
the wedding ceremony. These cherished moments ought to be for them, their 
families and friends a truly spiritual and ecclesial celebration. The wedding 
celebration is an auspicious opportunity to invite many people to the 
celebration of the Sacraments of Reconciliation and the Eucharist. The Christian 
community, through its heartfelt and joyous participation, is to welcome the new 
family in its midst so that the new family as a domestic Church might feel a 
part of the larger ecclesial family. The wedding liturgy ought to be prepared 
through a mystagogical catechesis which may make a couple understand that the 
celebration of their covenant takes place “in the Lord.” Frequently, the 
celebrant has the opportunity to address an assembly made up of people who 
seldom participate in the life of the Church or belong to other Christian 
denominations or religious communities. The occasion provides a valuable 
opportunity to proclaim the Gospel of Christ, which can lead the families who 
attend to a rediscovery of faith and love which come from God. 
 
The Initial Years of Family Life 
 
60.  The initial years of marriage are a vital yet delicate period, during 
which couples grow in an awareness of their vocation and mission. Consequently, 
this period calls for pastoral guidance which continues after the celebration of 
the Sacrament. The parish is the place where experienced couples may be made 
available to the younger ones, possibly in conjunction with associations, 
ecclesial movements and new communities. In this way, newly married couples 
ought to be encouraged to remain open to a basic attitude of welcoming the great 
gift of children. At the same time, the importance of a family spirituality, 
prayer and participation in Sunday Mass can also be stressed and couples can be 
encouraged to meet regularly to promote growth in their spiritual life and 
solidarity in the practical needs of life. A personal encounter with Christ 
through the reading of the Word of God, in the community and in homes, 
especially in the form of lectio divina, is a source of inspiration in 
the family’s daily activities. Liturgies, devotional practices and Eucharistic 
celebrations for families, especially on the anniversary of marriage, sustain 
the family’s spiritual life and its missionary witness. Not infrequently, in the 
initial years of married life, couples have a tendency to isolate themselves 
and, consequently, from the community. Strengthening the network of 
relationships between couples and creating meaningful connections among people 
are necessary for the maturation of the family’s Christian life. Movements and 
Church groups often provide these moments of growth and formation. The local 
Church, by integrating the contributions of various persons and groups, assumes 
the work of coordinating the pastoral care of young families. In the initial 
phase of married life, some experience a particular discouragement which comes 
from the frustration of the desire to have children. Not infrequently, this 
situation gives rise to a crisis which can quickly lead to separation. For 
reasons like these, the nearness of the community through the love and care of 
responsible families is particularly important for young married couples. 
 
The Formation of Priests and Other Pastoral Workers 
 
61.  Pastoral care needs to be renewed by taking into consideration the Gospel 
of the Family and the Church’s Magisterium. Consequently, a more adequate 
formation is required of priests, deacons, men and women religious, catechists 
and other pastoral workers, who ought to promote the integration of families 
into the parish community, especially in Christian formation programmes for the 
sacraments. In particular, seminars and programmes of human, spiritual, 
intellectual and pastoral formation ought to prepare future priests to become 
apostles of the family. Formation for the ordained ministry cannot overlook 
affective and psychological development, with direct involvement in appropriate 
programmes. Courses and programmes, planned specifically for pastoral workers, 
can be of assistance in their integrating the pre-marital preparation programme 
in the broader dynamic of ecclesial life. During the formation period, 
candidates for the priesthood appropriately live for periods of time with their 
families and may be guided in acquiring experiences in family ministry so as to 
develop an adequate knowledge of the current situation of families. The presence 
of lay people, families and especially the presence of women in priestly 
formation, promotes the appreciation of the diversity and complementarity of the 
different vocations in the Church. Dedication to this invaluable ministry can 
receive vitality and practicality from a renewed alignment between the two main 
forms of the vocation to love, namely, marriage, which flourishes in the 
Christian family, based on a love of choice, and the consecrated life, the image 
of the communion of the Kingdom, which starts from the unconditional acceptance 
of another as a a gift of God. In the communion of vocations, a fruitful 
exchange of gifts is accomplished, one which enlivens and enriches the Church 
community (Acts 18:2). Family spiritual direction can be considered one 
of the parish ministries. We suggest that the diocesan office for family and 
other pastoral offices intensify their cooperation in this field. In the ongoing 
formation of priests and pastoral workers, we hope that programmes will continue 
to treat with appropriate tools the growth and development of the psychological 
and affective aspects which are needed in the pastoral care of families, 
especially in light of particular emergency situations arising from cases of 
domestic violence and sexual abuse. 
 
Chapter II 
 
 
The Transmission of Life 
 
62.  The presence of large families in the Church is a blessing for the 
Christian community and society, because openness to life is an intrinsic 
requirement of conjugal love. In this regard, the Church expresses her deep 
gratitude to families who welcome children — especially those who are most weak 
and vulnerable — raise them, surround them with affection and transmit the faith 
to them. These children, born with special needs, draw the love of Christ; they 
ask the Church to safeguard them as a blessing. Unfortunately, a widespread 
mentality exists which reduces the generation of life to individual 
gratification only or that of the couple. Economic, cultural and educational 
factors are sometimes determinant, contributing to a sharp decline in the 
birth-rate which weakens the social fabric, compromises the relationship between 
generations and renders more uncertain an outlook towards the future. Even in 
this area, we must begin by listening to persons and verify the beauty and truth 
of an unconditional openness to life which human love needs to be lived to the 
full. This situation calls for an ever-increasing diffusion of the documents of 
the Church’s Magisterium which promote the culture of life. Family ministry 
should involve more Catholic specialists from the biomedical field in marriage 
preparation programmes and guidance of married couples. 
 
Generative Responsibility 
 
63.  According to the order of creation, conjugal love between a man and a 
woman and the transmission of life are ordered to each other (cf. Gen 
1:27-28). In this way, the Creator made man and woman share in the work of his 
creation and, at the same time, made them instruments of his love, entrusting to 
them the responsibility for the future of humankind, through the transmission of 
human life. Spouses are to be open to life and formed in “a right judgment: let 
them thoughtfully take into account both their own welfare and that of their 
children, those already born and those which the future may bring. For this 
accounting, they need to reckon with both the material and the spiritual 
conditions of the times as well as of their state in life. Finally, they should 
consult the interests of the family group, of temporal society, and of the 
Church herself” (GS, 50; cf. VS, 54-66). In conformity with a 
conjugal love based on the nature of the person and a humanly completed act, the 
just way for family planning is that of a consensual dialogue between the 
spouses, respect for the times of fertility and consideration of the dignity of 
the partner. In this sense, the Encyclical Humanae Vitae (cf. 10-14) and 
the Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio (cf. 14; 28-35) ought to 
be taken up anew so as to awaken in people an openness to life in contrast to a 
mentality which is often hostile to life. We repeatedly urge young couples to be 
open to life. Doing so, can increase the openness to life in the family, the 
Church and society. Through its many institutions for children, the Church can 
help create not only society but also the community of faith, which might be 
more childlike. The courage to transmit life is notably strengthened when a 
suitable atmosphere is created for the little ones, an atmosphere which offers 
help and guidance in bringing up one’s children (cooperation among parishes, 
parents and families).  
The choice of responsible parenthood presupposes the formation of 
conscience, which is “the most secret core and sanctuary of a person. There each 
one is alone with God, whose voice echoes in the depths of the heart” (GS, 
16). The more the couple tries to listen in their conscience to God and his 
commandments (cf. Rom 2:15), and are accompanied spiritually, the more 
their decision will be intimately free from a subjective arbitrariness and the 
adaptation to people’s conduct where they live. For the sake of this dignity of 
conscience, the Church strongly rejects the forced State intervention in favour 
of contraception, sterilization and even abortion. The use of methods based on 
the “laws of nature and the incidence of fertility” (HV, 11) are to be 
encouraged, because “these methods respect the bodies of the spouses, encourage 
tenderness between them and favour the education of an authentic freedom” (CCC, 
2370). Emphasis needs to be placed more and more on the fact that children are a 
wonderful gift from God and a joy for parents and the Church. Through them, the 
Lord renews the world. 
 
The Value of Life in All Its Stages 
 
64.  Life is a gift from God and a mystery that transcends us. For this 
reason, life should in no way be discarded, either in its beginning or at its 
end. On the contrary, special attention to all phases of life needs to be 
guaranteed. People today, too easily “consider the human being in himself as a 
commodity, which you can use and then throw away. We have given rise to a ‘throw 
away’ culture which is now spreading” (EG, 53). In this regard, the 
family, supported by every level of society, needs to accept unborn life and to 
care for life in its final stages. With regard to the tragedy of abortion, the 
Church, above all, affirms the sacred and inviolable character of human life and 
is committed in a practical way in favour of it (cf. EV, 58). Through her 
institutions, she counsels pregnant women, supports single mothers, assists 
abandoned children and is near to those who endured an abortion. Those who work 
in healthcare facilities are reminded of the moral obligation of conscientious 
objection. Similarly, the Church not only feels the urgency to assert the right 
to a natural death, without aggressive treatment and euthanasia, but also takes 
care of the elderly, protects people with special needs, assists the terminally 
ill, comforts the dying and firmly rejects the death penalty (cf. CCC, 
2258). 
 
Adoption and Foster Parenting 
 
65.  The adoption of orphaned and abandoned children, accepting them as one’s 
own, in the spirit of faith, becomes a form of an authentic family apostolate 
(cf. AA, 11), which is repeatedly mentioned and encouraged by the 
Magisterium (cf. FC, 41; EV, 93). The choice of adoption and 
foster care expresses a particular kind of fruitfulness in the marriage 
experience, beyond cases where infertility is painfully present. This decision 
is an eloquent sign of welcoming life, a witness of faith and fulfilment of 
love, and restores a mutual dignity to a bond which has been interrupted: 
spouses without children and children without parents. Consequently, all 
initiatives aimed at facilitating adoption services need to be supported. The 
trafficking of children between countries and continents is to be prevented by 
appropriate legislative action and State control. Continuity in the 
relationships of parenting and upbringing, by necessity, is based, as in 
procreation, on the sexual difference of a man and a woman. In light of 
situations where parents want a child at any cost or as a right to 
self-fulfilment, adoption and foster care, rightly understood, manifest an 
important aspect of parenting and the raising of children, since 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 care for and 
not just brought into this world. The best interests of the child should always 
underlie any decision in adoption and foster care. As noted by Pope Francis, 
“children have the right to grow up in a family with a father and a mother” (Address 
to Participants in the International Colloquium on the Complementarity Between 
Man and Woman, organized by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 
17 November 2014). The Church, however, must state that, where possible, 
children are entitled to grow up in their birth family, with as much support as 
possible. 
 
The Upbringing of Children 
 
66.  Undoubtedly, one of the key challenges posed in families today is that of 
the upbringing of children, made all-the-more challenging and complex by the 
today’s culture and the great influence of the media. Due account needs to be 
given to the needs and expectations of families who in everyday life are places 
of growth and places for the practical and essential transmission of faith, 
spirituality and virtues which shape human existence. One’s own family is often 
the place where a vocation to the priesthood or the consecrated life is born. 
Therefore, parents are urged to ask the Lord for the priceless gift of a 
vocation for one of their children. In bringing up children, protection needs to 
be afforded to the right of parents to freely choose the type of education to be 
given to their children, according to their convictions, its accessibility and 
the calibre of education. People need assistance in living affectivity as a 
process of maturation — even in the marital relationship — in an ever-deepening 
acceptance of the other and an ever-fuller giving of self. This requires 
offering formation programmes that nourish conjugal life and the importance of 
the laity who provide guidance through a life of witness. In this regard, great 
assistance comes from the example of a couple’s profound and faithful love which 
is based on tenderness, respect and the ability to grow over time. In a 
practical way, opening oneself to the the generation of life makes a person 
experience a mystery which transcends us. 
 
67.  In different cultures, the adults of the family retain an irreplaceable 
role in the upbringing of children. However, in many areas, we are witnessing a 
progressive weakening of the role of parents in raising their children, because 
of an invasive presence of the media within the family, as well as a tendency to 
delegate or outright relinquish their role to third parties. On the other hand, 
the media (especially the social media) unite members of a family, even at a 
distance. The use of e-mail and other social media can keep family members 
together over time. Furthermore, the media can provide an opportunity to 
evangelize young people. This requires the Church to encourage and support 
families in their efforts vigilantly and responsibly to participate in the 
educational programmes affecting their children and in their formation. The 
Synod unanimously restated that the primary school of formation is the family 
and that the Christian community is engaged in the support and integration of 
this irreplaceable formative role. Places and times for families to meet need to 
be determined to encourage the training of parents and the sharing of 
experiences among families. Parents, as the first teachers and witnesses of 
faith for their children, need to be actively involved in their preparation for 
the Sacraments of Christian Initiation. 
 
68.  Catholic schools play a vital role in assisting parents in their duty to 
raise their children. Catholic education promotes the role of the family, 
ensures good preparation and provides education in the virtues and values as 
well as instruction in Church teaching. Catholic schools should be encouraged in 
their mission to help pupils grow into mature adults, who can view the world 
with the love of Jesus and who can understand life as a call to serve God. In 
this way, Catholic schools are important in the Church's evangelizing mission. 
In many parts of the world, Catholic schools are the only schools to provide 
genuine opportunities for the children of poor families, especially for young 
people, offering them an alternative to poverty and a way to make a real 
contribution to society. Catholic schools should be encouraged to pursue their 
activity in the poorest communities by serving the less fortunate and most 
vulnerable members of our society. 
 
Chapter III 
 
 
Complex Situations 
 
69.  The Sacrament of Matrimony as a faithful and indissoluble union between a 
man and a woman, called to accept one another and to welcome life, is a great 
grace for the human family. The Church has the duty and joy to announce this 
grace to every person and in every situation. Today, the Church more urgently 
senses the responsibility of making the baptized rediscover how the grace of God 
at work in their lives — even in the most difficult of situations — can lead 
them to the fullness of the Sacrament. While the synod acknowledges and 
encourages families who honour the beauty of Christian marriage, it wishes, at 
the same time, to promote a pastoral discernment of situations where people 
have a difficulty appreciating and receiving the Sacrament as a gift, or in 
various ways, compromise this gift. To maintain a pastoral dialogue with these 
Church members to enable them to achieve a consistent openness to the fullness 
of the Gospel of Marriage and the Family, is a serious responsibility. Pastors 
should identify elements which can promote evangelization and the human and 
spiritual growth of those who are entrusted by the Lord to their care. 
 
70.  Pastoral ministry on behalf of the family clearly proposes the Gospel 
message and gathers the positive elements present in those situations, which do 
not yet or no longer correspond to this message. In many countries, a growing 
number of couples live together without benefit of either a canonical or civil 
marriage. In some countries, a traditional wedding is arranged between families 
and is often celebrated in different stages. In still others, an increasing 
number of those who have lived together for a long period of time ask for the 
celebration of marriage in Church. Oftentimes, the choice of simply living 
together results from not only a general aversion towards institutions and 
making firm commitments but also an expectation of a sense of security in life 
(awaiting a job and a steady salary). And finally, in other countries, de 
facto unions are becoming more numerous, because of not only the rejection 
of the values of family and marriage but also, for some, marriage is seen as a 
luxury due to their state in society. Consequently, in the latter case, the lack 
of material resources forces couples to live in de facto unions. All 
these situations must be addressed in a constructive manner, attempting to turn 
them into opportunities leading to conversion and the fullness of marriage and 
the family in the light of the Gospel. 
 
71.  The choice of a civil marriage or, in many cases, simply living together, 
is often not motivated by prejudice or resistance against a sacramental union, 
but from situations or cultural contingencies. In many circumstances, the 
decision to live together is a sign of a relationship which wants, in reality, 
to lead to a stable union in the future. This intention, which translates into a 
lasting, reliable bond, open to life, can be considered a commitment on which to 
base a path to the Sacrament of Marriage, discovered as God's plan in one’s 
life. The path of growth, which can lead to a sacramental marriage, is to be 
encouraged by recognizing the traces of a generous and enduring love, namely, 
the desire of a couple to seek the good of others before their own; the 
experience of forgiveness requested and given; and the aspiration to form a 
family not for itself but open to the good of the ecclesial community and all of 
society. While pursuing these goals, value can also be given to those signs of 
love which properly correspond to the reflection of God’s love in an authentic 
conjugal plan. 
 
72.  Issues related to mixed marriages require specific attention. Marriages 
between Catholics and other baptized persons “have their own particular nature, 
but they contain numerous elements that could well be made good use of and 
developed, both for their intrinsic value and for the contribution that they can 
make to the ecumenical movement.” For this purpose, “an effort should be made to establish cordial cooperation 
between the Catholic and the non-Catholic ministers from the time that 
preparations begin for the marriage and the wedding ceremony” (FC, 78). 
Concerning sharing the Eucharist, one needs to remember that “the decision as to 
whether the non-Catholic party of the marriage may be admitted to Eucharistic 
communion is to be made in keeping with the general norms existing in the 
matter, both for Eastern Christians and for other Christians, taking into 
account the particular situation of the reception of the Sacrament of Matrimony 
by two baptized Christians. Although the spouses in a mixed marriage share the 
Sacraments of Baptism and Matrimony, Eucharistic sharing can only be exceptional 
and in each case according to the stated norms [...]” (Pontifical Council for 
Promoting Christian Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles and 
Norms on Ecumenism, 25 March 1993, 159-160). 
 
73.  Marriages of disparity of cult represent a privileged place for 
inter-religious dialogue in everyday life, and can be a sign of hope for 
religious communities, especially where there are situations of tension. Each 
one shares his/her spiritual experiences or the journey of seeking a religion, 
if one is not a believer (1 Cor 7:14). At the same time, marriages of 
disparity of cult involve special difficulties regarding both the Christian 
identity of the family and the religious upbringing of the children. The spouses 
are called to transform more and more their initial feeling of attraction in a 
sincere desire for the good of the other. This opening also transforms belonging 
to various religious persuasions into an opportunity to enrich the quality of 
the relationship. The number of households with married couples of disparity of 
cult, on the rise in mission territories and even in countries of long Christian 
tradition, urgently requires providing a differentiated pastoral care according 
to various social and cultural contexts. In some countries where freedom of 
religion does not exist, the Christian spouses are obliged to convert to another 
religion in order to marry, and, therefore, cannot celebrate a canonical 
marriage of disparity of cult or baptize their children. We must therefore 
reiterate the necessity to respect the religious freedom of everyone. 
 
74.  While mixed marriages and marriages of disparity of cult can be 
potentially fruitful, they can also lead to critical situations which are not 
easily resolved, more on the pastoral rather than the normative level, namely, 
the religious upbringing of the children, participation in the liturgical life 
of the spouse and the sharing of a spiritual experience. To deal constructively 
with differences in the order of faith, attention needs to be given to the 
persons who make up the marriage, not only in the period before the wedding. 
Unique challenges face couples and families in which one partner is Catholic and 
the other is a non-believer. In such cases, witnessing the ability of the Gospel 
to immerse itself in these situations will make possible the upbringing of their 
children in the Christian faith. 
 
75.  Particular problems arise when persons in a complex marital situation wish 
to be baptized. These people contracted a stable marriage in a time when at 
least one of them did not know the Christian faith. In such cases, bishops are 
called to exercise a pastoral discernment which is commensurate with their 
spiritual good. 
 
76.  The Church’s attitude is like that of her Master, who offers his 
boundless love to every person without exception (cf. MV, 12). To 
families with homosexual members, the Church reiterates that every person, 
regardless of sexual orientation, ought to be respected in his/her dignity and 
received with respect, while carefully avoiding “every sign of unjust 
discrimination” (Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Considerations 
Regarding Proposals To Give Legal Recognition To Unions Between Homosexual 
Persons, 4). Specific attention is given to guiding families with 
homosexual members. Regarding proposals to place unions of homosexual persons on 
the same level as marriage, “there are absolutely no grounds for considering 
homosexual unions to be in any way similar or even remotely analogous to God's 
plan for marriage and family” (ibid). In every way, the Synod maintains 
as completely unacceptable that local Churches be subjected to pressure in this 
matter and that international bodies link financial aid to poor countries to the 
introduction of laws to establish “marriage” between people of the same sex. 
 
Accompaniment in Different Situations 
 
77.  The Church lovingly shares the joys and hopes and the sorrows and anxieties 
of every family. For the Church, staying close to the family as a companion on 
the journey means to assume an attitude which is wisely nuanced. Sometimes, 
staying close and listening in silence is needed; at other times, moving ahead 
and pointing the way; and at still other times, the appropriate action is to 
follow, support and encourage. “The Church will have to initiate everyone — 
priests, religious and laity — into this ‘art of accompaniment’ which teaches us 
to remove our sandals before the sacred ground of the other (cf. Ex 3:5). 
The pace of this accompaniment must be steady and reassuring, reflecting our 
closeness and our compassionate gaze which also heals, liberates and encourages 
growth in the Christian life” (EG, 169). The main contribution to the pastoral care of families 
is offered by the parish, which is the family of families, where small 
communities, ecclesial movements and associations live in harmony. Accompaniment 
requires specifically trained priests and the establishment of specialized 
centres where priests, religious and lay people might learn how to take care of 
each family, with particular attention to those in difficulty. 
 
78.  What is urgently needed today is a ministry to care for those whose 
marital relationship has broken down. Though separation often leads to the end 
of many, long years of conflict between the spouses, it causes still greater 
suffering in the children of the marriage. The loneliness of the spouse who is 
abandoned or who has been forced to cease living in a situation characterized by 
continuous, severe ill-treatment, calls for particular care on the part of the 
Christian community. Prevention and treatment in cases of domestic violence 
require close cooperation with law enforcement to move against the perpetrators 
and adequately protect the victims. Promoting the protection of children from 
sexual abuse is also important. In addition to accompanying these families, the 
Church exercises “zero tolerance” in these cases. Consideration seems 
appropriate for families in which some members carry out activities which 
require the Church’s special attention, like soldiers, who are physically 
separated from their families for long periods of time, with all the 
consequences that this entails. When returning from war, these men and women are 
often suffering from post-traumatic syndrome and are troubled in conscience, 
which poses serious moral questions for them, all of which requires special 
pastoral attention. 
 
79.  Failure in a marriage is a painful experience for everyone. On the other 
hand, this marriage failure can become an opportunity for reflection, conversion 
and trust in God. In each’s becoming aware of his/her responsibility, everyone 
can find confidence and hope in him. “From the heart of the Trinity, from the 
depths of the mystery of God, the great river of mercy wells up and overflows 
unceasingly. It is a spring that will never run dry, no matter how many people 
draw from it. Every time someone is in need, he or she can approach it, because 
the mercy of God never ends” (MV, 25). To pardon an injustice is not 
easy, but it is a journey that grace makes possible, thus, the need for pastoral 
conversion and reconciliation also through specialized counselling and mediation 
centres which are to be establish in dioceses. Justice, however, is to be 
promoted for everyone involved in a failed marriage (spouses and children). The 
Christian community and its Pastors have the duty to ask the spouses, who are 
separated and divorced, to treat each other with respect and mercy, especially 
for the good of the children, who ought not endure further suffering. Children 
cannot be an object of contention between the parents; instead, ways must be 
sought so that the children might overcome the trauma of a broken home and grow 
in as serene an atmosphere as possible. In every case, the Church is always to 
highlight the injustice which often comes from a situation of divorce. 
 
80.  Single parenthood results from a variety of situations: biological 
mothers or fathers who have never wanted to form a family; situations of 
violence, where a parent is forced to flee with the children; the death of one 
parent; one parent’s abandonment of the family; and other situations. Whatever 
the cause, the parent who lives with the child(ren) must find support and 
comfort from the other families that form the Christian community and, thus, 
from the pastoral programmes provided by the parish. Oftentimes, these families 
suffer further from severe economic problems, uncertainty in employment, 
difficulties in child support and the lack of a stable residence. The same 
pastoral concern ought to be manifested with regards to widowed persons and 
single mothers and their children. 
 
81.  When a husband and wife are having trouble in their relationship, they 
must be able to count on the help and guidance of the Church. Experience shows 
that with proper help and reconciliation through the grace of the Holy Spirit, a 
large percentage of marriage crises are satisfactorily overcome. Knowing how to 
forgive and to feel forgiven is a fundamental experience in family life. 
Forgiveness between spouses allows them to rediscover the truth of a love that 
lasts forever and never passes away (1 Cor 13:8). Reconciliation is 
needed almost everyday in family relations. Misunderstandings due to relations 
with the families of origin, conflicts because of different religious and 
cultural customs, various opinions on the upbringing of children, anxiety over 
economic difficulties and tensions that arise as a result of addictions and job 
loss are just a few of the widely-held reasons for tension and conflict. The 
arduous art of reconciliation, which requires the support of grace, needs the 
generous cooperation of relatives and friends, and sometimes even outside help 
and professional assistance. In the most painful situation, like marital 
infidelity, a true and proper work of repair is necessary on each’s part. A 
broken promise can be made whole; the spouses must learn hope in this regard, 
even from the time of marriage preparation. The action of the Holy Spirit is 
crucial in the care of persons and broken families, in the reception of the 
Sacrament of Reconciliation and in the necessity of spiritual guidance by 
specialized pastoral workers. 
 
82.  For many of the faithful who have had an unhappy marital experience, 
investigating and verifying the invalidity of the marriage represents a possible 
course of action. The recent motu proprio Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus and 
Mitis et Misericors Iesus led to a simplification of the procedures in the 
declaration of nullity of a marriage. With these documents, the Holy Father also 
wanted to “make clear that the bishop himself in his particular Church, of which 
he is pastor and head, is the one who renders judgment for the faithful 
entrusted to him” (MI, preamble, III). The implementation of these 
documents is therefore a great responsibility for Ordinaries in dioceses, who 
are called upon to judge some cases themselves and, in every case, to ensure the 
faithful an easier access to justice. This involves preparing a sufficient 
staff, composed of clerical and lay persons, who dedicate themselves a priore
to this ecclesial service. Consequently, information, counselling and 
mediation services, associated with the family apostolate, need to be provided 
to persons who are separated or couples in crisis. These persons from the family 
apostolate are also able to receive persons in the preliminary inquiry of the 
marriage process (cf. MI, Art. 2-3). 
 
83.  The witness of those who, despite difficult conditions, have not embarked 
on forming another union and remain faithful to the sacramental bond, deserves 
the acknowledgment and support of the Church. She wants to show them the face of 
a God who is faithful to his love and always able to restore strength and hope. 
Persons who are separated or divorced but not remarried and who are often 
witnesses of marital fidelity, are encouraged to find in the Eucharist the food 
that sustains them in their present state. 
 
Discernment and Integration 
 
84.  The baptized who are divorced and civilly remarried need to be more 
integrated into Christian communities in a variety of possible ways, while 
avoiding any chance of scandal. The logic of integration is the key to their 
pastoral care, a care which might allow them not only to realize that they 
belong to the Church as the Body of Christ, but also to know that they can have 
a joyful and fruitful experience in it. They are baptized; they are brothers and 
sisters; the Holy Spirit pours into their hearts gifts and talents for the good 
of all. Their participation can be expressed in different ecclesial services 
which necessarily requires discerning which of the various forms of exclusion, 
currently practiced in the liturgical, pastoral, educational and institutional 
framework, can be surpassed. Such persons need to feel not as excommunicated 
members of the Church, but instead as living members, able to live and grow in 
the Church and experience her as a mother, who welcomes them always, who takes 
care of them with affection and encourages them along the path of life and the 
Gospel. This integration is also needed in the care and Christian upbringing of 
their children, who ought to be considered most important. That the Christian 
community cares for these people is not a weakening of her faith and witness in 
the indissolubility of marriage: to the contrary, in this very way, the Church 
expresses her charity. 
 
85.  Pope Saint John Paul II offered a comprehensive policy, which remains the 
basis for the evaluation of these situations: “Pastors must know that, for the 
sake of truth, they are obliged to exercise careful discernment of situations. 
There is in fact a difference between those who have sincerely tried to save 
their first marriage and have been unjustly abandoned, and those who through 
their own grave fault have destroyed a canonically valid marriage” (FC, 
84). It is therefore the duty of priests to accompany such people in helping 
them understand their situation according to the teaching of the Church and the 
guidelines of the Bishop. Useful in the process is an examination of conscience 
through moments of reflection and penance. The divorced and remarried should ask 
themselves: how they have acted towards their children, when the conjugal union 
entered into crisis; if they made attempts at reconciliation; what is the 
situation of the abandoned party; what effect does the new relationship have on 
the rest of the family and the community of the faithful; and what example is 
being set for young people, who are preparing for marriage. A sincere reflection 
can strengthen trust in the mercy of God which is not denied anyone. 
Moreover, one cannot deny that in some circumstances “imputability and 
responsibility for an action can be diminished or even nullified” (CCC, 
1735) due to several constraints. Accordingly, the judgment of an objective 
situation should not lead to a judgment on “subjective imputability” 
(Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Declaration of 24 June 2000, 
2a). Under certain circumstances people find it very difficult to act 
differently. Therefore, while supporting a general rule, it is necessary to 
recognize that responsibility with respect to certain actions or decisions is 
not the same in all cases. Pastoral discernment, while taking into account a 
person’s properly formed conscience, must take responsibility for these 
situations. Even the consequences of actions taken are not necessarily the same 
in all cases. 
 
86.  The path of accompaniment and discernment guides the faithful to an 
awareness of their situation before God. Conversation with the priest, in the 
internal forum, contributes to the formation of a correct judgment on what 
hinders the possibility of a fuller participation in the life of Church and 
Church practice which can foster it and make it grow. Given that gradualness is 
not in the law itself (cf. FC 34), this discernment can never prescind 
from the Gospel demands of truth and charity as proposed by the Church. This 
occurs when the following conditions are present: humility, discretion and love 
for the Church and her teaching, in a sincere search for God's will and a desire 
to make a more perfect response to it. 
 
Chapter IV 
 
 
A Family Spirituality 
 
87.  The family, in its vocation and mission, is truly a treasure of the 
Church. However, as St Paul says in relation to the Gospel, “we have this 
treasure in earthen vessels” (2 Cor 4:7). Above the doorway of family 
life, says Pope Francis, are “three expressions I’ve already mentioned here in 
St Peter’s Square several times before. The expressions are: ‘may I?’, ‘thank 
you’, and ‘pardon me’. Indeed, these expressions open up the way to living well 
in your family, to living in peace. They are simple expressions, but not so 
simple to put into practice! They hold much power: the power to keep home life 
intact even when tested with a thousand problems. But if they are absent, little 
holes can start to crack open and the whole thing may even collapse” (Francis,
General Audience, 13 May 2015). Papal teaching is an invitation to deepen 
the spiritual dimension of family life, beginning from the rediscovery of family 
prayer and listening to the Word of God in common, which leads to a commitment 
to charity. The staple food of the spiritual life of the family is the 
Eucharist, especially on the Day of the Lord, as a sign of his deep grounding in 
the ecclesial community (cf. John Paul II, Dies Domini, 52; 66). Domestic 
prayer, participation in the liturgy and the practice of Marian and popular 
devotions are an effective means of encountering Jesus Christ and the 
evangelization of the family. This highlights the special vocation of the 
spouses to realize, with the grace of the Holy Spirit, holiness in their married 
life, even in participating in the mystery of the cross of Christ, which 
transforms difficulties and sufferings into an offering of love. 
 
88.  Family tenderness is the bond uniting parents to each other and they with 
their children. Tenderness means to give with joy and stir in the other the joy 
of feeling loved. Tenderness is expressed in a particular way by exercising 
loving care in treating the limitations of the other, especially when they are 
evident. Dealing with delicacy and respect means attending to wounds and 
restoring hope and to rekindle trust in the other. Tenderness in family 
relationships is the daily virtue that serves to overcome inner conflicts and 
disagreements in relations with others. In this regard, Pope Francis invites us 
to reflect: “Do we have the courage to welcome with tenderness the difficulties 
and problems of those who are near to us, or do we prefer impersonal solutions, 
perhaps effective but devoid of the warmth of the Gospel? How much the world 
needs tenderness today! The patience of God, the closeness of God, the 
tenderness of God” (Homily at Midnight Mass on the Solemnity of Christmas, 
24 December 2014). 
 
The Family: Object of Pastoral Care 
 
89.  To be faithful to its mission, the Christian family will have to well 
understand where it originates: the family cannot evangelize without being 
evangelized. The mission of the family includes the fruitful union of the 
spouses, the upbringing of their children, the witness of the Sacrament of 
Matrimony, preparing other couples for marriage and friendly guidance of couples 
or families facing difficulties. Consequently, an effort at evangelization and 
catechesis inside the family is important. In this regard, care should be taken 
in giving proper value to couples and parents as active agents in catechesis, 
especially in their children lives, in collaboration with priests, deacons, 
consecrated persons and catechists. This effort starts from the time a couple 
starts dating. Family catechesis is of great assistance as an effective method 
in training young people and parents to be aware of their mission as 
evangelizers of their own family. Furthermore, the connection between family 
experience and Christian Initiation needs to be stressed. The whole Christian 
community must become a place where families come, meet and seek advice as they 
walk in faith and share ways leading to growth and mutual exchange. 
 
90.  The Church must instill in families a sense of belonging to the Church, a 
sense of “we” in which no member is forgotten. All are encouraged to develop 
their skills and realize their plan of life in serving the Kingdom of God. May 
every family, incorporated in the Church, rediscover the joy of communion with 
other families so as to serve the common good of society by promoting 
policy-making, an economy and a culture in the service of the family, through 
the use of social networks and the media, which calls for the 
ability to create small communities of families as living witnesses of Gospel 
values. Families need to be prepared, trained and empowered to guide others in 
living in a Christian manner. Families who are willing to live the mission ad 
gentes are to be acknowledged and encouraged Finally, we note the 
importance of connecting youth ministry with family ministry. 
 
 
 
The Relationship with Cultures and Institutions 
 
91.  “The Church, living in various circumstances in the course of time, has 
used the discoveries of different cultures so that in her preaching she might 
spread and explain the message of Christ to all nations, that she might examine 
it and more deeply understand it, that she might give it better expression in 
liturgical celebration and in the varied life of the community of the faithful” 
(GS, 58). These cultures and respect for each’s unique characteristics is 
important to bear in mind. The words of Blessed Pope Paul VI deserve 
consideration: “The split between the Gospel and culture is without a doubt the 
drama of our time, just as it was of other times. Therefore every effort must be 
made to ensure a full evangelization of culture, or more correctly of cultures” 
(EN, 20). Pastoral care of marriage and the family needs to acknowledge 
those positive elements that come together in different cultural and religious 
experiences, which are a “praeparatio evangelica.” In the encounter with 
cultures, however, an evangelization which is truly attentive to the needs of 
the promoting the family cannot avoid boldy denouncing any form of pressure 
coming from culture, society, politics or the economy. The growing hegemony of a 
market logic, which upsets the times and places of genuine family life, also 
contributes to worsening discrimination, poverty, exclusion and violence. 
Various families, who are living in conditions of economic poverty, due to 
unemployment, job insecurity or lack of social services and health care, not 
infrequently, because of their inability to receive credit, become the victims 
of usury and are sometimes forced to flee their homes and even their children. 
In this regard, the suggestion was made to create appropriate economic 
structures of support for these families or structures capable of promoting 
familial and social solidarity. 
 
92..  The family is “the first and vital cell of society” (AA, 11). The 
family must rediscover its vocation to support life in society in all its 
aspects. It is essential that families, through their associating one with the 
other, find ways to interact with political, economic and cultural institutions 
in order to build a more just society. In this regard, dialogue and cooperation 
needs to be developed with various social entities, while encouragement and 
support needs to be given to the laity, who are committed as Christians on the 
cultural and socio-political level. In particular, policy-makers must respect 
the principle of subsidiarity and not limit the rights of families. In this 
regard, consideration needs to be given to The Charter of Rights of the 
Family (cf. Pontifical Council for the Family, 22 October 1983) and The 
Universal Declaration of Human Rights" (10 December 1948). For Christians 
engaged in political life, the commitment to life and the family must take 
priority, since a society that neglects the family has lost its access to the 
future. Family associations, engaged in working together with groups of other 
Christian traditions, have as their main aim, among others, promoting and 
defending: life and the family; freedom of education; religious freedom; the 
proper balancing of work-time and time for the family; the defense of women in 
the workplace; and the protection of the right to conscientious objection. 
 
Openness to Mission 
 
93.  Through Baptism, the Family of the Church is missionary by nature and 
increases her faith in the act of sharing that faith with others, above all, 
with her children. The very act of living a life of communion as a family is the 
primary form of proclamation. In fact, evangelization begins in the family, 
which transmits corporeal as well as spiritual life. The role of grandparents in 
the transmission of the faith and religious practices should not be overlooked; 
they are witnesses to the connection between generations and the guardians of 
the great traditions of wisdom, prayer and good example. The family is thus an 
agent of pastoral activity specifically through proclaiming the Gospel and 
through its legacy of varied forms of witness, namely: solidarity with the poor; 
openness to a diversity of people; the protection of creation; moral and 
material solidarity with other families, especially the most needy; a commitment 
to the promotion of the common good, also through the transformation of unjust 
social structures, beginning in the territory in which the family lives; and 
putting into practice the corporal and spiritual works of mercy and spiritual. 
 
94.  During this assembly, we synod fathers, gathered around Pope Francis, 
experienced the tenderness and the prayer of the whole Church, we walked like 
the disciples of Emmaus and recognized the presence of Christ in the breaking of 
bread at the Eucharistic table, in fellowship and the sharing of pastoral 
experiences. We hope that the result of this work, now delivered into the hands 
of the Successor of Peter, might give hope and joy to many families in the 
world, guidance to pastors and pastoral workers, and a stimulus to the work of 
evangelization. In concluding this report, we humbly ask the Holy Father to 
consider the possibility of issuing a document on the family, so that the 
family, the domestic Church, might increasingly radiate Christ, who is the light 
of the world. 
 
 
 
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, 
in you we contemplate 
the splendour of true love, 
to you we turn with trust. 
 
Holy Family of Nazareth, 
grant that our families too 
may be places of communion and prayer, 
authentic schools of the Gospel 
and small domestic Churches. 
 
Holy Family of Nazareth, 
may families never again  
experience violence, rejection and division: 
may all who have been hurt or scandalized 
find ready comfort and healing. 
 
Holy Family of Nazareth, 
make us once more mindful  
of the sacredness and inviolability of the family, 
and its beauty in God’s plan. 
 
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, 
graciously hear our prayer. 
Amen 
 
 
 
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