Opposing Views Of The Family And The Catholic View Of Marriage

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The Catholic Church believes that love and the family are key elements to a marriage. It believes that marriage is “a gift” from the Lord (1 Cor 7:7).
It also sees marriage as permanent that cannot be broken. It is a fruitful and faithful union of a man and a woman who have entered into a covenant relationship of love with each other and with god. (Sacraments 101 2011). The Catholic view of marriage is based on the Sacred Scriptures. Its teachings and practices state:
• Marriage is a union of a couple in faithful and mutual love
• Marriage allows the giving of life
• God’s call to holiness is expressed in marriage
• Marriage is a sign of Christ’s love in the world (For your marriage)
Pope Francis in Amoris Laetita argues in marriage that …show more content…

It believes marriage is the basis for a new family and each marriage-based family is what society is built around. The church teaches that God is the author of marriage and has “endowed marriage with various benefits and purposes” including “the good of the spouses and the procreation and upbringing of children”. The church in its teachings says that marriage has two parts. Part one, the union of a husband and wife. Part two, the procreating and raising of children. New life in a family is not only born but also welcomed as a gift of God. (Australian Catholic Bishop Conference 2015). Children, are a living reflection of a couples love, a permanent sign of their conjugal unity. Married love requires of husband and wife the full awareness of their obligations in the matter of responsible parenthood, (Relatio Finalis …show more content…

The church does not believe that divorce ends the permanence of marriage and therefore Catholics who divorce cannot remarry in a Catholic Church. The only way the church will allow someone to remarry in the Catholic Church is if it can be shown that their marriage did not exist in the eyes of the church, in which case the Church can declare their marriage as null. Examples for this include pressure into marriage, infidelity or the marriage was not consummated. (KWL Catholic Studies). The church deals with married couples who experience difficulties in their marriage with support and counselling. This may be in the form of support from agencies such as Centacare or lay groups such as Retrouvaille, parish priests and laity. (Divorce and the Catholic

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