Pope Francis spoke clearly and consistently about the importance of the family and the goodness of children. The Holy Father reflected that “[s]adly, in our day, the family all too often needs to be protected against insidious attacks and programs contrary to all that we hold true and sacred, all that is most beautiful and noble in our culture…Specifically, we need to see each child as a gift to be welcomed, cherished and protected.” In seizing upon a particular ill, the attack of the family within our society, he gave a concrete antidote: a care and welcoming of new life. The Pope has spoken again and again about the importance of being open to life and the good of having a large family. To combat the consumeristic mentality that undermines the family, Pope Francis preaches love and sacrifice for the sake of life.
He isn’t telling us to have small families
Unfortunately, a humorous aphorism that underscores the teaching of the Church has been misunderstood and has become the takeaway for his trip. It should not be surprising that when Pope Francis instructed Catholics not to “breed like rabbits,” he isn’t telling us to have small families. Far from it! Less than a month ago, on the feast of the Holy Family, Pope Francis held a gathering focused on large families, holding them up as examples. At this gathering, the Holy Father said: “In a world often marked by egoism, a large family is a school of solidarity and of mission that’s of benefit to the entire society.” If the cure to egoism is a large family and a large family benefits the whole of society, then it would be selfish and destructive to intentionally limit the number of children a family has. The family forms the foundation of society and Pope Francis believes that a large family is a good foundation.
Openness to life never involves deciding to be “done having kids.” It involves welcoming as many or as few children as God blesses a family with. It involves making sacrifices in order to put the creation of new life first and foremost in our marriages. It means forgoing artificial contraceptives that disconnect the gift of love from the gift of life. And while openness to life may involve spacing children for the health of mother and child using Natural Family Planning, it never excuses removing procreation from the ends of marriage.
Pope Francis is absolutely right: there is nothing base or animalistic about openness to life.
This article, Pope Francis on Rabbits and Large Families is a post from The Bellarmine Forum.
https://bellarmineforum.org/pope-francis-on-rabbits-and-large-families/
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