Reaching out to and guiding couples in cohabitation with tenderness
and compassion is essential to promoting and defending the sanctity of
marriage, Pope Francis said.
Couples who have chosen to live together without getting married in
the church “are, in spiritual and moral terms, among the poor and the
least, toward whom the church, in the footsteps of her teacher and Lord,
wants to be a mother who doesn’t abandon, but who draws near and cares
for,” he said in an audience with parish priests Feb. 25.
Look upon such couples with “tenderness and compassion,” he said,
urging the clergy to remember that ministry to the least and the
neediest “is an essential part of your work in promoting and defending
the sacrament of marriage.”
The pope spoke to parish priests who were in Rome attending a course
on marriage preparation and the new rules to reform the process for
verifying the validity of a marriage.
The course was offered Feb. 22-25
and was sponsored by the Vatican’s Roman Rota, a marriage tribunal.
Pope Francis told the priests he was pleased the priests participated
in the studies “because it is up to you, above all, to concretely apply
(the teachings) in your daily contact with families.”
The parish is, in fact, “the place, par excellence, of the salvation of souls,” he said.
The parish priest is the one who is acutely aware of the social
realities of the local culture and the complexities of individual
situations: couples married in the church; common-law unions; civil
unions; failed unions; and happy and unhappy families and young people,
he said.
The priest, he said, is the one young people turn to when seeking to
be married in the church and whom married couples experiencing
difficulties may turn to for help “to rekindle the faith and rediscover
the grace of the sacrament” or to ask about an annulment.
“For every person and every situation, you are called to be ‘fellow travelers’ to give witness and support,” he said.
Pope Francis underlined the importance of marriage preparation
courses and making sure engaged couples truly understand and have faith
in a Christian marriage, which is “a sign of the union of Christ and the
church.”
“I am convinced that a real catechumenate is needed for the sacrament of marriage” that is in-depth and long-term, he said.
He said he believed the biggest challenge to overcome may be the way
people think and see marriage as “a social reality” and not a true
sacrament that requires lengthy preparation.
Tirelessly remind couples, he encouraged, that God is reflected in a
Christian marriage — “impressing his image and the indelible character
of his love on them.”
While constantly upholding the “great mystery” and sacred nature of
marriage, also take care of those who have come to realize they are not
in a valid union and want to remedy their situation, the pope said.
Priests, Pope Francis cautioned, will have to handle this “delicate
and necessary” task in a way that the other faithful in their care do
not come to see the priests as “experts in bureaucratic proceedings or
juridical norms, but as brothers who take on an attitude of listening
and understanding.”