FOR
MARRIAGE AND SPOUSAL LOVE (Part 9 & 10 ) |
9)
NFP TEACHERS
The
lion’s share of the work in retrieving God’s plan for
marriage, spousal love and family will be done by the laity,
and especially by those who are trained teachers of NFP.
NFP is more than fertility awareness, or a morally good
method for responsible parenthood. It is a way of life that
endorses all the values of God’s plan for marriage and
spousal love. There is much for engaged couples and newly
wed couples to learn. Couples who prepare engaged couples
for marriage, and NFP teachers invest many hours of their
time and much emotional energy for their student couples.
In effect, they are preparing their young charges to become
witnesses to God’s plan for marriage and thus become counter
cultural.
Teachers of NFP should regard their work as a special
vocation. They are dealing with a central dimension of a
young couples’ relationship. A marriage is consummated by
the spousal act, and each spousal act, in a certain way, is
a renewal of the marriage covenant. Learning NFP is only
one part of learning God’s plan for spousal love. It is not
uncommon for a relationship of trust to develop between NFP
teachers and their students. When problems arise in a new
marriage, the newly weds often appeal to their NFP teachers
for coaching them through their difficulties.
If we
are to break through the 50% divorce rate syndrome, it will
happen because many dedicated Catholic couples, who already
enjoy a good marriage, are willing to help young couples
discover what they have already discovered. This will
require a great investment of time, emotional involvement,
and dedication.
Most
dioceses have a shortage of NFP teachers. But this can be
rectified when it becomes public knowledge that all the
clergy are taking a clear stand for God’s plan for marriage
and spousal love. Then many faithful couples will
seriously consider volunteering themselves to help with
building up strong marriages and healthy, happy families.
This is the lay apostolate in its most obvious expression.
The laity is 99.9% of the Church. There are abundant
resources in every diocese to draw upon for additional NFP
teachers.
10) Social Communications
Catholic radio and diocesan newspapers have their own role
to perform in the implementation of God’s plan. Catholic
radio broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It can
bring well-informed resource people to the microphone, and
make their message accessible to millions. It has multiple
opportunities to keep the values and issues related to NFP
before the people of God. These values need to be
explained, and related to real life. There are so many
different facets to building a strong marriage and robust
relationships. There are so many complications to
successful family planning. Raising children and creating a
healthy, happy family present thousands of new challenges.
All of these are very discussable on the airwaves by
competent people.
Catholic newspapers can run regular columns on these
issues. NFP Outreach provides a weekly column called NFP
Q&As. Each column approaches a different aspect of the
benefits coming from NFP and the harms resulting from
contraception and sterilization.
In
today’s world, the Christian is surrounded by a highly
secularized culture that is promoted relentlessly by the
secular media. This must be counteracted by a culture that
is permeated with the values of the Gospel. Social
communications are instruments that Catholics must employ to
get their message out to their own people, as well as to
defend their positions against critics and vilifiers. At
the same time, social communications can be used for the new
evangelization, for bringing the values of the Gospel to the
contemporary culture.
- back to
Q & A --