|
Couples
should contact the Parish Office at least six months before
the date of marriage is set.
Excerpt
from The Vatican's "Catechism of the Catholic
Church" on Matrimony
"The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a
woman establish between themselves a partnership of the
whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of
the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring;
this covenant between baptized persons has been raised by
Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament."
Sacred Scripture begins with the creation of man and woman
in the image and likeness of God and concludes with a vision
of "the wedding-feast of the Lamb." Scripture
speaks throughout of marriage and its "mystery,"
its institution and the meaning God has given it, its origin
and its end, its various realizations throughout the history
of salvation, the difficulties arising from sin and its
renewal "in the Lord" in the New Covenant of
Christ and the Church.
"The intimate community of life and love which
constitutes the married state has been established by the
Creator and endowed by him with its own proper laws. . . .
God himself is the author of marriage." The vocation to
marriage is written in the very nature of man and woman as
they came from the hand of the Creator. Marriage is not a
purely human institution despite the many variations it may
have undergone through the centuries in different cultures,
social structures, and spiritual attitudes. These
differences should not cause us to forget its common and
permanent characteristics. Although the dignity of this
institution is not transparent everywhere with the same
clarity, some sense of the greatness of the matrimonial
union exists in all cultures. "The well-being of the
individual person and of both human and Christian society is
closely bound up with the healthy state of conjugal and
family life."
God who created man out of love also calls him to love the
fundamental and innate vocation of every human being. For
man is created in the image and likeness of God who is
himself love. Since God created him man and woman, their
mutual love becomes an image of the absolute and unfailing
love with which God loves man. It is good, very good, in the
Creator's eyes. And this love which God blesses is intended
to be fruitful and to be realized in the common work of
watching over creation: "And God blessed them, and God
said to them: 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth
and subdue it.'"
Holy Scripture affirms that man and woman were created for
one another: "It is not good that the man should be
alone." The woman, "flesh of his flesh," his
equal, his nearest in all things, is given to him by God as
a "helpmate"; she thus represents God from whom
comes our help. "Therefore a man leaves his father and
his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one
flesh." The Lord himself shows that this signifies an
unbreakable union of their two lives by recalling what the
plan of the Creator had been "in the beginning":
"So they are no longer two, but one flesh."
Read
more... |