Press Release: October 31st 2006
David Thomas, lay advisor to the US
Bishops at the 1980 World Synod on the Family, told the symposium that
homes are holy places because the whole of God’s creation is filled with
God’s presence. “Awareness is the starting point for all spirituality.
There is a clear challenge here for families because they are so busy, yet
busy people can still be spiritual because they have developed practices
for remaining aware, being present to God, to each other. The ordinary
things families do - the way for example that they care for and serve one
another - are holy and important to God. Families are all the time
bringing forth God's life more fully into creation.”
The challenge of seeing God in the
midst of family difficulties was addressed by Kathleen Chesto, another of
the keynote speakers. It’s not the mess that is holy of itself, she
said, but the people we become through the especially poignant challenges
often faced in our family lives. “There are two lasting bequests we give
our children: the first is roots and the second is wings. We root them in
our love, our tradition, our faith, our family and then we give them the
greatest gift of all: we let them go. They are free to make their own
choices and they often choose other than we would have them choose.”
“We are not good parents if they
turn out well – we are good parents if we
turn out well through the process of parenting. God gave us this for our
sanctification; are we becoming less selfish, more spiritual,
more in touch, more aware of the greatness of creation? Through the
process of parenting are we becoming holy? It’s through the pain and the
chaos, through the cracks in our lives, that God’s light enters deeply
within us.”
Thomas Knieps-Porte le Roi, holder of
the INTAMS chair in Marital Spirituality at the University of Leuven, Belgium
called for new theological models for conjugal and family spirituality. It
was vital, he said, to differentiate between marital and family
spirituality. “In the past conjugal and family experience
coincided. Parents died much younger 100 years ago, often as their last
child was reaching maturity. That is no longer the case. Now we need to
pay attention to the spirituality of couples both before marriage and
after the children have left home.”
As a new theological model, Mr Knieps–Porte
le Roi suggested a “covenant” spirituality for spouses and
families, rooted in the notion that “first of all we are brothers and
sisters of Christ and thus brother and sister to each other, before we are
husband and wife or son and daughter of our father and mother.”
More
than 120 delegates including married couples, single people, priests, and
theologians attended Releasing
Formidable Energy which was organised by the Catholic Bishops of
England and Wales as part of their Celebrating
Family: Blessed, Broken, Living Love initiative, the response to Listening
2004: My Family, My Church, a conversation in which 15,000 Catholic families
shared their experiences of life and faith.
“Families actually live a great deal
of holiness in the love they live but they have never named it and claimed
it as such,” said
Bishop John Hine
, Chairman of the Committee
for Marriage & Family Life of the Bishops’ Conference.
“When you read the Listening 2004 report the generous self-giving of
time, attention, love, forgiveness, affirmation, support and so on jump
out of the pages. But none of this was identified as family spirituality!
We clearly need to do more to identify and celebrate God’s presence at
home.”
The symposium ended with delegates
devising new strategies for promoting marital and family spirituality in
the parish. These included the writing of new resources for priests and
catechists to help them identify and affirm the value of family at key
contact points such as sacramental preparation. Also suggested was a
greater emphasis on family-centred vocations of marriage and parenting,
and identification of volunteers within parishes who, with appropriate
support and training, could animate a greater awareness of marital and
family spirituality.
“We have a great deal of material to
work with now in preparing for the launch of Home is a Holy Place in
2007”, said
Elizabeth Davies, Marriage and Family Life project officer for the Bishops’ Conference
of England and Wales. “The symposium has not only highlighted key themes
in the spirituality of the home but also a number of areas where we must
focus more attention.”
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