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http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2008/1104/breaking50.htm
“The Family as the Foundation of Society”
Address by Cardinal
Seán Brady, Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland at
the Céifin Conference, Ennis, Co Clare.
Welcome
Thank you Fr Harry.
It is a particular privilege to be asked to address the Céifin
Conference and, since 1997, it has become one of the best known and
highly respected annual events in the country. It has generated lively
debate and made a very significant contribution to the important topics
discussed over those eleven years. I take this opportunity to
congratulate you Fr Harry and the others involved in founding the
Céifin Conference. I salute your initiative and creativity in
establishing a much needed forum for debate during this critical period
in our country’s history. Long may it continue.
Introduction
You have asked me to address the theme of ‘The Family as the
Foundation of Society’. I am pleased to do so. There are few
institutions more important to the future of our society than the
family. There are few that have been subject to such rapid and
fundamental change in our lifetime.
This morning I would like to explore some of the contours of that
change. In particular I would like to set out the basis for the
Church’s conviction that marriage, the family and the general
good of society are so interdependent that one cannot flourish without
the other. I will examine some of the recent trends associated with
marriage and the family. I will argue that legislation and policies
that promote commitment in marriage are, in fact, more socially
progressive and beneficial to society than those which endorse, simply
because they have become more widespread, attitudes and trends which
undermine that commitment. I will also comment on the question of a
proposed equivalence between cohabitation and marriage as well as
same-sex unions and marriage. This as you know has been the subject of
considerable public debate in light of the Government’s intention
to introduce new legislation in this area.
Let me share with you the contents of a letter which may express more
adequately than I ever could the link essential link between faith,
family and society. It is offered through the eyes and perhaps with the
wisdom of an older generation. It captures something of the scale of
change which has occurred in Ireland in recent years, what the title of
your conference describes as a ‘revolution’. It was sent to
me by a 77 year old Clare woman, now living in Kilkenny, wishing me
well for my visit to her native county. She decided to write to me when
she heard that I was going to talk on the family and to suggest a few
ideas for my talk. When I am asked to talk, such help is always welcome!
She said: “When I grew up we never knew what money looked like,
we were never hungry, we had a family life, we always said the Rosary
and had time to talk with our neighbours”.
‘Today we have so much money that people have no time for
anything, most of all God. There is no word about sin or the Ten
Commandments. There is nothing wrong today. What good is money and big
houses? Do they bring happiness? All those things only last for a
while. This is the only thing that lasts, God.”
“Please tell the people about what matters most, their souls, not
their bodies. Bring back family life, family prayer and read the
Bible”.
Marriage and the Word of God
I was struck by this last sentence in particular. It bore a remarkable
resemblance to something that was said at the recent Synod of Bishops
in Rome, the theme of which was: ‘The Word of God in the life of
the Church’. Proposition 20 of the Synod spoke specifically of
the link between marriage, family and the Word of God. It said: The
Word of God stands at the origins of marriage (Gen 2:24). Jesus himself
inserted marriage among the institutions of his Reign (Mt 19:4-8),
giving it a sacramental status. In the sacramental celebration, man and
woman pronounce a prophetic word of reciprocal donation of self, they
become “one flesh,” a sign of the mystery of the union of
Christ and the Church. (Eph5:32) Through the fidelity and the unity of
the life as a family, the spouses are the first announcers of the Word
of God to their children. It’s necessary to sustain them and to
help them develop within the family, modes of domestic celebration of
the Word such as reading the Bible, and other forms of prayer. Spouses
should recall that the Word of God is a precious source of support amid
difficulties in conjugal life and in the family.
And this brings me to my first point; the family based on marriage as
the foundation of society is a truth revealed by God in the Scriptures:
it also one of the most precious human values. We should not be
surprised then that when people become
less concerned with what God has to say generally, or when the
popularity of an idea replaces objective human values as the basis of
morality, commitment to marriage as the basis of the family also
diminishes. As the letter I have just read suggests, what we are
involved with here is a wider ‘revolution’ about how we
approach morality and values generally.
So how should we respond to this revolution? How might we invite people
to rediscover the importance of the family based on marriage as the
basis of society?
Changes in Attitudes to Marriage
Part of that response, I would suggest, is to acknowledge that some
aspects of this so-called ‘revolution’ have been good for
marriage and the family. While the letter I read reflects a concern
that we have lost something valuable from the past, I am sure no-one
would want to say that everything about marriage and the family in the
past was good. We should be glad for example that there is more
equality between men and women in marriage and in society generally.
There is a greater awareness that both parents have a mutual
responsibility in bringing up children and in sharing domestic tasks.
We have learnt so much about the importance of responding to the
emotional and practical needs of children, about how to support the
development of children in constructive ways. As I will mention again
later, we are also learning just how important a stable family home is
to the happiness and long-term well-being of children.
All of this is good. In fact, I would go as far as to say that the
prospect of a married couple establishing a happy, loving and stable
family home in Ireland today has never been greater. Our challenge is
to help women and men rediscover the joy of marriage, the life-long
fulfilment it can offer, especially those who are reluctant to make a
long-term commitment.
And this brings me to my second point. While some aspects of the
‘revolution’ in our approach to marriage and the family
have been good, is it possible that something good from the past has
been lost? I think this is what my friend from Clare was saying in her
letter. I note it was a theme considered in the first Céifin
Conference entitled, ‘Are we forgetting something?’
My letter from the woman in Clare suggests that part of what is needed
is to help people rediscover the good that comes from faith and prayer.
She mentioned the Bible in particular.
This coincides with a key proposal of the recent Synod. In making
people more familiar with the Word of God, in an informed and formative
way, we can act in support of marriage, the family and the good of
society itself.
This is because, as it explains in the Compendium of the Social
Doctrine of the Church, ‘the importance and centrality of the
family with regard to the person and society is repeatedly underlined
by Sacred Scripture’ (n.209). The family is presented from the
very opening pages of the Word of God as ‘the primary place of
humanisation for the person and society and the cradle of life and
love’ (n.209)
Church Teaching on the Family based on Marriage as the Fundamental Unity of Society
The family is also the natural community in which human social nature
is experienced. It makes a unique and irreplaceable contribution to the
good of society. The family unit is born from the stable and committed
communion of persons which marriage provides. ‘Communion’
has to do with the personal relationship between the ‘I’
and the ‘thou’. ‘Community’ on the other hand
transcends the ‘I’ and ‘thou’ and moves towards
a ‘society’, a ‘we’. The family, therefore, as
a community of persons, is the first human ‘society’. It is
at the very heart of the common good.
The common good “is the sum total of social conditions which
allow people, either as groups or as individuals, to reach their
fulfilment more fully and more easily” (Gaudium et Spes, n. 26)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains it in this way:
‘The family is the original cell of social life. It is the
natural society in which husband and wife are called to give themselves
in love and in the gift of life. Authority, stability, and a life of
relationships within the family constitute the foundations for freedom,
security, and fraternity within society. The family is the community in
which, from childhood, one can learn moral values, begin to honour God,
and make good use of freedom. Family life is an initiation into life in
society.‘ (n.2207)
The Catechism goes on to say: ‘A man and a woman united in
marriage, together with their children, form a family. This institution
is prior to any recognition by public authority, which has an
obligation to recognize it. It should be considered the normal
reference point by which the different forms of family relationship are
to be evaluated’ (n. 2202).
Marriage and the family therefore are of public interest. They are
fundamental to the public good and entitled to special consideration
and care from the State. Other relationships whether they are sexual or
not, are the result of private interest.
They do not have the same fundamental relationship to the good of
society and to the bringing up of children as the family based on
marriage. At the heart of this understanding of marriage is a truth
taught by Scripture and confirmed by human reason. It is the truth that
the ‘Physical... difference and complementarity’ of a woman
and man are oriented toward the goods of marriage and the flourishing
of family life’ (CCC n.2333). Being a man or woman is not
accidental to who we are or to God’s plan for the family and
society. It is essential to it.
This is why the Church holds that the good of persons and the proper
functioning of society are closely connected with the healthy state of
marriage and family life. In the words of the Compendium of the Social
Doctrine of the Church, ‘without families that are strong in
their communion and stable in their commitment’ societies grow
weak. This is also why ‘relegating the family to a subordinate or
secondary role, excluding it from its rightful position in society,
would be to inflict great harm on the authentic growth of society as a
whole.‘
The Positive State of Marriage in Irish Life Some will argue that this
presents an idealised view of marriage and family life. They will point
out that the concept of a nuclear family of father and mother, united
by marriage and bringing up children in a stable and loving environment
does not capture the reality or the ideal of an increasing number of
people. They will point to the existence of an increasingly diverse
range of family units in Irish society, to an increase in long term
cohabitation, to increasing breakdown in marriage and to the prospect
of radically new forms of legally recognised relationship as evidence
that the model of family revealed by the Scriptures is increasingly
irrelevant.
Yet it is worth asking whether these popular assumptions about the
state of marriage as the basis of the family life in Ireland are
actually true? The fact is that life-long marriage remains the
preferred choice of the vast majority of men and women in Ireland.
Recent research by the Catholic Marriage Care Service, Accord, for
example, confirmed that the marriage rate in Ireland has
‘actually increased in the past 10 years — suggesting
something of a “revival” in marriage relative to the mid
and late 1990’s when the rate fell to historically low
levels.‘\[1]
The survey also found that ‘Marriage is a sufficiently rewarding
experience such that 9 out of 10 would recommend it to others’.
In contrast to the view that the traditional family unit revealed in
the Word of God is no longer relevant, the report concluded that
‘the traditional family arrangement of children being raised by
both their natural parents is the one preferred by almost all married
couples in our survey.‘
This is a far cry from any sense of crisis in the family based on
marriage sometimes portrayed in public debate. While some 12% of
couples in Ireland chose long term cohabitation instead of marriage,
the family based on marriage is still the fundamental unit of our
society by a substantial margin. It continues to play an essential part
in the well-being and stability of Irish life. In the words of the
Accord report: in Ireland ‘healthy, happy marriages \[still] make
for strong family life; and strong families contribute to the economy
and demand little in return from the taxpayer. In other words,
“family capital” is at the core of “social
capital”, upon which we build the future for our country.‘
It is this essential link between ‘family capital’ and
‘social capital’ which in part explains the special place
afforded to marriage in the Irish Constitution. Article 40.1.1 of
Bunreacht na hÉireann recognises the family ‘as the
natural primary and fundamental unit group of Society, and as a moral
institution possessing inalienable and imprescriptible rights,
antecedent and superior to all positive law.‘
It is not accurate to suggest that this is merely a remnant of Catholic
influence on the formulation of the Constitution and therefore to be
rejected as anachronistic or sectarian. Similar recognition and
terminology can be found in the Constitutions of many other countries
around the world which have them. The Greek Constitution for example
describes the family as ‘the foundation of the conservation and
progress of the nation.‘ Such values are also consistent with
Article 16 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights when it states:
‘The family is the natural and fundamental unit of society and is
entitled to protection by society and the State.‘ Article 16 of
the Social Charter of Europe (1961), Article 23 of the International
Treaty on Civil Rights, Article 10 of the International Charter on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as well as many other national and
international instruments affirm and develop this basic insight that
the family is the nucleus of society, and for that reason, deserving of
special status, development and care.
Proposed Changes to Legislation and Policy
It is on this basis too that Article 41.3.1 of Bunreacht na
hÉireann places an obligation on the Government to guard the
institution of marriage with special care. This brings me to the
sensitive and complex issue of the Government’s stated intention
to legislate for a variety of relationships other than marriage,
notably for cohabiting and same-sex couples.
In its submission to the Oireachtas All-Party Committee on the
Constitution on this issue, the Committee on the Family of the Irish
Bishops’ Conference in February 2005 acknowledged, and I quote,
that ‘a diversity of family forms support the fundamental human
activities of care, intimacy and belongingness to varying degrees, yet
it is appropriate that the Constitution should guard with special care
the institution of marriage. \[However] such a commitment to special
care of the family based on marriage ought not, nor does it, prevent
the State from seeking to offer appropriate support to individuals in
other forms of family units.‘ (p.6)
The issue then is not whether it is appropriate to introduce policies
and legislation which provide some level of protection for people in
relationships of long term dependency. In many circumstances this will
be totally appropriate and just. The question is at what point such
legislation or policy begins to undermine the family based on marriage
as the fundamental unit of society and thereby undermine the common
good?
In this regard the publication by Government of the General Scheme of
Civil Partnership Bill in June of this year gives cause for concern.
Obviously we must await the publication of the actual legislation
arising from the scheme to make a complete assessment. It is clear
however that the General Scheme envisages the possibility that
Government will grant to cohabiting and same-sex couples the status of
marriage in all but name. Some restrictions will apply to adoption by
same sex couples.
Apart from this however and given reports that the Department of
Justice has confirmed that “social welfare and tax entitlements
on a par with those of spouses will be provided through the finance and
social welfare Bills”, it is difficult to see how anything other
than the introduction of de facto ‘marriage’ for cohabiting
and same-sex couples is envisaged.
If this is the case, those who are committed to the probity of the
Constitution, to the moral integrity of the Word of God, and, to the
precious human value of marriage between a man and a woman as the
foundation of society, may have to pursue all avenues of legal and
democratic challenge to the published legislation.
The intention is not to penalise those who have chosen or find
themselves in different family forms or relationships. It is rather to
uphold the principle that the family based on marriage between a man
and woman is so intimately connected to the good of society that it is
deserving of special care and protection. The value of the
Constitutional guarantees given in this area cannot be limited to the
wording of the Constitution about marriage and the family remaining
unchanged. The relevant Articles of the Constitution are more than a
statement of aspiration. They imply that the State will maintain a
qualitative difference between the level of support and entitlements
provided by the State to the family based on marriage and that afforded
to other forms of dependent relationship.
This makes the stated intention of Government to remove the category
‘Marital Status’ and to replace it with ‘Civil
Status’ through the Equal Status Act particularly worrying. Some
might argue that it is in fact a breach of the Government’s
Constitutional duty to protect the institution of marriage. Those who
believe in the values espoused by the Constitution are entitled to ask
why such a profound and unnecessary change is envisaged along with
others which may yet emerge.
Marriage, and with it the common good, is directly undermined when
legislation and policy reduce marriage to simply one more form of
relationship among others. It is worth noting in this regard that the
definition of marriage for the purposes of the Constitution has been
judicially interpreted “as the voluntary union of one man and one
woman to the exclusion of all others for life”.
The Issue of Equality
Some have argued that what is at stake here is the principle of
equality. This is to argue that what are being compared are two things
which are qualitatively the same. This is manifestly not the case. The
link between a public commitment to life-long marriage, and the
stability of the family unit, as well as the distinct role of a mother
and father in the generation and education of children, gives marriage
a unique and qualitatively different relationship to society than any
other form of relationship.
In the words of the Pontifical Council for the Family in 2000:
‘Equality before the law must respect the principle of justice
which means treating equals equally, and what is different differently:
i.e., to give each one his due in justice. This principle of justice
would be violated if de facto unions were given a juridical treatment
similar or equivalent to the family based on marriage. If the family
based on marriage and de facto unions are neither similar nor
equivalent in their duties, functions and services in society, then
they cannot be similar or equivalent in their juridical status.‘
This qualitative difference between the family based on marriage and
other forms of relationship is increasingly recognised in research. For
example, one of the largest surveys on family life to date, the British
Millennium Cohort Study (2008) has found that one in four children of
cohabiting parents suffer family breakdown before they start school at
the age of five, compared to just 1 in 10 children of married parents.
Other studies in Britain and the US suggest that children born outside
of marriage are more likely to do worse at school, suffer poorer health
and are more likely to face problems of unemployment, drugs and crime.
In the words of one commentator, “The strong implication for
governments is that they should be doing more to support
marriages.”
All the more remarkable then that Ireland looks set to repeat the
mistakes of societies like Britain and the US by introducing
legislation which will promote cohabitation, remove most incentives to
marry and grant same-sex couples the same rights as marriage in all but
adoption. This will effectively dissolve the special status of marriage
between a man and woman enshrined in the Constitution. This would
indeed be a revolution, perhaps the greatest revolution in the history
of the Irish family — as the title of Conference suggests! But
will it be a revolution which promotes the common good of our society?
Will it really help children and married couples or will it further
erode marriage at a time when research and experience point to the
value of marriage for children and society?
Whether what is envisaged will breach the Constitution remains to be
seen once the legislation is published. But no one should underestimate
how radical and far reaching the legislation arising from the General
Scheme published by the Government could be. My key message today is
thus: The priority of the family over society and over the State has to
be reaffirmed. The family does not exist for society or the State, but
society and the State exist for the family.
What is being proposed by the Government undermines the very principle
of equality it claims to uphold. It limits the provision of support in
the General Scheme to relationships which are presumed to be sexual.
This is unjust to those in established relationship of dependency which
are not sexual. It confirms that what is driving the change in
legislation and policy in this area is not a concern for equality at
all. The provision of just, reasonable and much needed support to those
in established and dependent relationships which are not sexual in
nature has been ignored in the General Scheme. Anyone in a caring,
dependent relationship, whether sexual or not, should be given certain
protections such as hospital visitation rights and a stability of
residence in the event of that relationship ending. Why should people
in such relationships be discriminated against because their
relationship is not sexual? There is a need to address important issues
of fairness to people in established relationships of dependency. This
is possible without undermining the unique role of marriage in society
and its contribution to the common good.
More Support for Marriage: A Benefit to Society
Marriage deserves to be supported by society. It is so fundamental to
the common good that the State acts in the interests of society when it
supports marriage through benefits in taxation, social welfare and
social policy.
If we have the good of children and of society at heart then it is also
clear that we need to try and maximise the number of children being
raised by a married mother and father. We can do this through providing
positive incentives and the formation of positive social attitudes to
marriage. We also need to provide greater support for married couples
themselves as they live out their life long commitment to each other
and their children. This includes providing more adequate preparation
for marriage. Accord is involved in outstanding work in this regard for
which they deserve to be applauded. Two of the greatest obstacles
Accord encounters however, is the difficulty in acquiring a sufficient
number of volunteer counsellors and a general resistance on the part of
couples to attending a marriage preparation course. In other countries,
for example in Italy, the pre-marriage courses consist of a least 9
weekend sessions. Here it is much less. In spite of this priests often
comment to me on how couples will spend any amount of time with the
florist, the photographer, the hotel manager in preparation for their
wedding. These arrangements are important but the time given to them
can be in strong contrast to the willingness of engaged couples to take
time out together to reflect on the importance and meaning of what they
are about to do.
Conclusion
During my thirteen years on the staff of the Irish College in Rome, it
was my privilege to marry a great number of couples, hundreds, maybe
thousands. As an aside I have to say that some of the best people in
all those couples came from Clare. I am not saying that because I am
here in Clare but because I believe it and have believed it for many
years. My abiding impression is one of people who had high hopes and
earnest dreams for a happy and fulfilling life together. No-one I know
ever entered marriage with the expectation or desire that it would
fail. The Church offers the compassion of Christ for all those who
suffer in this way. It invites all of us to have compassion and to
offer practical support for those whose marriages have broken down.
And it is here that we come back to our starting point: ‘The Word
of God in the life and mission of the Church’! Jesus was born and
lived in a family, with all its characteristic features. At the wedding
feast in Cana he conferred on marriage the highest dignity of a
sacrament. Jesus could have produced the wine without the help of the
stewards but he decided to involve them and Mary also becomes involved.
I see this as an indication that in God’s design the community,
particularly the immediate family, have a part to play in supporting
marriage. There may be a lot of comedy about prying in-laws but the
extended family have a vital role to play in supporting marriage.
In the story of Cana we also observe how Mary was sensitive to the
needs of the newly married couple. Instead of wringing her hands when
the wine ran out, an obvious cause of embarrassment and possibly of
conflict for the couple, she gets involved telling the stewards
‘Do whatever he tells you’. In this she points all newly
married couples to the true source of their happiness and success in
marriage — seeking the will of God in all things together.
It was this which was identified as a particular virtue in the life and
marriage of Blessed Louis and Zelie Martin, the parents of the Little
Flower, St Therese of Lisieux. They were beatified on 19 October past
by Pope Benedict. It was Mission Sunday. They are only the second
spouses in history declared blessed as a couple.
How appropriate then, that as Ireland prepares to consider legislation
with the potential to undermine God’s will for marriage and the
family, we turn to the example and inspiration of this married couple
and draw strength and direction from it. How well we remember the
wonderful welcome given by the faithful in Ireland to the relics of
their daughter, St Therese of Lisieux, some years ago. The Martin
family of nine children and parents who were fully engaged in business,
social and Church life are a timely source of encouragement for all
those who promote the value of the family based on marriage in our
society.
The Word of God is pro-love, pro-marriage, pro-family, pro-life and
pro-society. My prayer is that, through the intercession of Blessed
Louis and Zelie Martin, more and more people will rediscover this
revolutionary message of the Word of God, for the sake of our society
and its future.
Thank you
© 2008 irishtimes.com
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