In Amoris Laetitia, the
pope offers several suggestions on how to keep your marriage strong and happy
through the years
In his apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia, Pope
Francis used St. Paul’s “hymn to love,” taken from his First Letter to the
Corinthians, to offer several pieces of advice on how to keep one’s marriage
strong throughout the years, based on true love.
“Love is patient, love is kind.
love is not jealous or boastful;
it is not arrogant or rude.
Love does not insist on its own way, it is not irritable or resentful;
it does not rejoice at wrong,
but rejoices in the right.
Love bears all things,
believes all things,
hopes all things,
endures all things” (1 Corinthians 13:4-7).
love is not jealous or boastful;
it is not arrogant or rude.
Love does not insist on its own way, it is not irritable or resentful;
it does not rejoice at wrong,
but rejoices in the right.
Love bears all things,
believes all things,
hopes all things,
endures all things” (1 Corinthians 13:4-7).
“It is helpful to think more deeply about the
meaning of this Pauline text and its relevance for the concrete situation of
every family,” he explained.
1. Love
is patient. For Francis, “being patient does not
mean letting ourselves be constantly mistreated, tolerating physical aggression
or allowing other people to use us.” […] “Love always has an aspect of deep
compassion that leads to accepting the other person as part of this world, even
when he or she acts differently than I would like.”
“We encounter problems whenever we think that
relationships or people ought to be perfect, or when we put ourselves at the
center and expect things to turn out our way. Then everything makes us
impatient, everything makes us react aggressively,” he warned.
2. Love
is at the service of others. The
pope underscored that, through his letter, St. Paul “wants to stress that love
is more than a mere feeling. Rather, it should be understood along the lines of
the Hebrew verb “to love”; it is “to do good.”
“As Saint Ignatius of Loyola said, ‘Love is
shown more by deeds than by words.’ It thus shows its fruitfulness and allows
us to experience the happiness of giving, the nobility and grandeur of spending
ourselves unstintingly, without asking to be repaid, purely for the pleasure of
giving and serving.”
3. Love
is not jealous. “Love
has no room for discomfiture at another person’s good fortune (cf. Acts 7:9;
17:5),” the pope emphasized, adding that “Envy is a form of sadness provoked by
another’s prosperity; it shows that we are not concerned for the happiness of
others but only with our own well-being.”
“True love values the other person’s
achievements. It does not see him or her as a threat. It frees us from the sour
taste of envy. It recognizes that everyone has different gifts and a unique
path in life.”
4. Love
is not boastful. Francis
emphasizes that “Those who love not only refrain from speaking too much about
themselves, but are focused on others; they do not need to be the center of
attention.”
“Some think that they are important because
they are more knowledgeable than others; they want to lord it over them. Yet
what really makes us important is a love that understands, shows concern, and
embraces the weak.”
5. Love
is not rude. “To
love is also to be gentle and thoughtful,” the Pope said, “and this indicates
that “love is not rude or impolite; it is not harsh. Its actions, words and
gestures are pleasing and not abrasive. Love abhors making others suffer.”
6. Love is generous. Contrary to the popular saying, that
“to love another we must first love ourselves,” the pope recalls that St.
Paul’s hymn to love “states that love ‘does not seek its own interest,’ nor
‘seek what is its own.’”
“Generously serving others is far more noble than loving
ourselves.”
7. Love is not irritable or resentful. In Amoris
Laetitia, the pope warns us about “a hidden irritation that sets us
on edge where others are concerned, as if they were troublesome or threatening
and thus to be avoided.”
“The Gospel tells us to look to the log in our own eye
(cf. Matthew 7:5),” he adds. “If we must fight evil, so be it; but we must
always say ‘no’ to violence in the home.”
8. Love
forgives. Francis
recommends not leaving any space for “ill will to take root in our hearts,” but
to work for “forgiveness, which is rooted in a positive attitude that seeks to
understand other people’s weaknesses and to excuse them.”
“Family communion,” the pope states, “can
only be preserved and perfected through a great spirit of sacrifice. It
requires, in fact, a ready and generous openness of each and all to
understanding, to forbearance, to pardon, to reconciliation.”
9. Love
rejoices with others. “When
a loving person can do good for others, or sees that others are happy, they
themselves live happily and in this way give glory to God, for ‘God loves a
cheerful giver’ (2 Corinthians 9:7),” the Holy Father says.
“The family must always be a place where,
when something good happens to one of its members, they know that others will
be there to celebrate it with them.”
10. Love
bears all things. This,
the pope explains, “implies limiting judgment, checking the impulse to issue a
firm and ruthless condemnation: ‘Judge not and you will not be judged’ (Luke
6:37).”
“Married couples joined by love speak well of
each other; they try to show their spouse’s good side, not their weakness and
faults. In any event, they keep silent rather than speak ill of them. This is
not merely a way of acting in front of others; it springs from an interior
attitude.”
11. Love
believes all things. “This
goes beyond simply presuming that the other is not lying or cheating,” the pope
explains.
“It means we do not have to control the other
person, to follow their every step lest they escape our grip. Love trusts, it
sets free, it does not try to control, possess and dominate everything.”
12. Love
hopes all things. This
word, the pope says, “speaks of the hope of one who knows that others can
change.”
“This does not mean that everything will
change in this life. It does involve realizing that, though things may not
always turn out as we wish, God may well make crooked lines straight and draw
some good from the evil we endure in this world.”
13. Love
endures all things. The
pope points out that this endurance “involves not only the ability to tolerate
certain aggravations, but something greater: a constant readiness to confront
any challenge.”
“Love does not yield to resentment, scorn for
others or the desire to hurt or to gain some advantage. The Christian ideal,
especially in families, is a love that never gives up.”
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