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Pope Francis: All love is meant to be faithful, generous and fruitful


Source: Vatican Media

In his address to pilgrims gathered in St Peter's Square for the Wednesday General Audience today, Pope Francis reflected on the 6th Commandment, 'You shall not commit adultery', and said that as Christians, our "original call" is "to full and faithful spousal love", which Jesus Christ revealed and gave to us.

Commenting on the Letter of St Paul to the Ephesians, he described the concept as "revolutionary" saying that notwithstanding the "anthropology of the time" it affirms that "the husband must love his wife as Christ loves the Church."

The Pope went on to explain that although the Commandment refers "explicitly to matrimonial fidelity", it also speaks to every human relationship and vocation.

The development of human maturity follows the path of love that goes from receiving care to the ability to offer care, from receiving life to the ability to give life, he said.

Pope Francis said when we become adults, we are called to live a spousal and parental attitude, which is manifested in various situations of life, and explained that a person who is "adulterous, luxurious, unfaithful" is really an immature person who "keeps his life for himself" and interprets situations "on the basis of his own well-being and self-satisfaction."

"To really get married," he said, "it is not enough to celebrate marriage! We need to make a journey from the 'I' to the 'We' and think and live for each other."

Marriage, the Pope said, is a beautiful journey, and true love enables us to find ourselves and give ourselves away.

Pope Francis then went on to say that the undying love of Christ, that is the basis of marital fidelity, is also reflected in the spousal love and spiritual parenthood that mark the vocations to priestly ministry and consecrated virginity.

In this sense, he said, every Christian vocation is spousal.

He said the priesthood is such because it is the call, in Christ and in the Church, to serve the community with all the love, care and wisdom that the Lord gives.

"In the priesthood we love the people of God with all the paternity, tenderness and strength of a spouse and a father" he said.

In the same way, he continued, consecrated virginity in Christ must be lived faithfully and joyfully as a spousal relationship of fruitful motherhood and fatherhood.

And referring to the very words of the 6th Commandment, Pope Francis said that as men and women, body and spirit, we are called to love in ways that leave no room for lust or promiscuity.

The command - "You shall not commit adultery" - he said, is an invitation to live fully our original calling to that pure and faithful spousal love that is revealed in Jesus Christ.

In His mystery, he continued, and in his love we come to understand the full meaning of the gift of our human sexuality and the fidelity demanded by the marriage covenant.

"The human creature, in its inseparable unity of spirit and body, and in its masculine and feminine polarity, is a very good reality, destined to love and be loved. The human body is not an instrument of pleasure, but the place of our call to love, and in authentic love there is no room for lust and its superficiality. Men and women deserve more than this!" he said.

In his final greetings Pope Francis recalled that on Thursday we celebrate the Solemnity of All Saints and, on November 2, we commemorate all those who have departed.

"The witness of faith of those who have gone before us, should strengthen in us the certainty that God accompanies us on the path of life, never abandoning anyone to himself, and wants all of us to be holy, as he is holy" he said.


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