V
valient_Lucy
Guest
That is something I was thinking about last night. It’s impossible for Catholics to value the family as highly as Mormons or as Protestants,** just as Mormons and Protestants will never value communion as highly as Catholics. ** With that in mind, is it really a good idea to compete with them for better family values? I think there’s this sense that, if Catholics don’t value families, then people will leave the Church. But I don’t think that’s the case. The Early Church said things that strikes us as downright anti-family, and people still flocked to the Church, **probably because their own families were screwed up, just as ours are. **nytimes.com/2011/03/22/us/22pastor.html?_r=2&hp=&pagewanted=all
This is an article about how Evangelical churches are very reluctant to hire single men to be pastors, some even specifically exclude single men from ministry.
*“Some evangelical churches, in particular, openly exclude single candidates; a recent posting for a pastor by a church on Long Island said it was seeking “a family man whose family will be involved in the ministry life of the church.” Other churches convey the message through code words, like “seeking a Biblical man” (translation: a husband and a provider).” *
Obviously, this would never happen in a Catholic or Orthodox church. Protestants, like Mormons, have a poor concept of the Church, so they substitute it with the family. For them, the role of pastors and others in the church is manmade, while the family was ordained by God.
In Catholicism, and probably Orthodoxy, the family is a far less important structure, **which in many ways is a good thing. **
One thing that is striking to me when I read the Gospels is how Jesus promises to destroy the biological family in order to establish the Church in its place. This is Good News, and for many young people in the world today, whose families are even worse than my own, its news they long to hear. I’m sure it was the same thing during the Roman Empire, when girls were left to die on the side of the road and the ones who survived were married at 12 to men they didn’t love.
Many young people are coming from families that are very damaged and disfunctional, and they don’t need, or want, to hear about how families are wonderful. Protestants and Mormons aren’t in a position to respond to them, because they value families too highly. The Catholic Church, on the other hand, can meet them halfway.