Cardinal farrell on wmof: 'pope francis wishes to embrace all families' - vatican news

Cardinal farrell on wmof: 'pope francis wishes to embrace all families' - vatican news

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In an interview ahead of the World Meeting of Families set to take place in Rome this week, Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, says Pope Francis


wants the WMOF to be lived in local Churches around the world, and points to the holy examples of married couples who have become canonized saints. BY DEBORAH CASTELLANO LUBOV With this


week's 10th World Meeting of Families in Rome, Pope Francis wishes to embrace and engage all families around the world, and for this reason, he has asked for dioceses worldwide to also


celebrate families locally. Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Prefect of the Vatican's Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, suggested this as he sat down with Vatican News for an interview ahead


of the World Meeting. 31/05/2022 A press conference is held on Tuesday at the Holy See Press Office to announce details of next month’s World Meeting of Families, which will take place in


Rome. The Prefect not only shares his hopes for the meeting and why this year will be particularly poignant, as wars rage around the world, but also reflects on how the pandemic has affected


families. Moreover, he draws attention to married couples who became saints, and discusses his hopes for his Dicastery's recently-issued document intended to help couples prepare for


marriage and live their married and family life. _Here is a transcript of the interview with Cardinal Farrell:_ Q: WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS AS WE FINALLY APPROACH THIS WORLD MEETING OF


FAMILIES AFTER THE PANDEMIC HAD CAUSED IT TO BE POSTPONED? CARDINAL FARRELL: I believe that the pandemic certainly caused a great disruption in the pastoral life of the Church at all levels.


And it was impossible for two years to gather groups of people together. It was impossible to organize in our churches, prayer meetings, conferences… It is therefore my hope that the World


Meeting of Families that will take place in Rome will be an injection of vitamins into the Church. In the past, we invited many families. We knew that many families would not travel during


this time, and especially if they had young children, out of fear… And so, we invited representatives from all the dioceses in the world. We have representatives from every continent. These


are the people who were in charge of family life ministry in the different dioceses, churches, parishes, lay movements, organizations who work in the field of marriage and family life. And


so, it is our hope to inject a new sense of the importance of this change, in the way of doing things within the Church, in preparation for marriage and family life. Listen to Cardinal


Farrell speak about this year's World Meeting of Families: Q: IN YOUR ROLE AS PREFECT OF THE DICASTERY FOR LAITY, FAMILY AND LIFE, HOW HAS THE PANDEMIC CHANGED THE NATURE OF FAMILIES


AND THE NATURE OF THIS MEETING? It has affected in a tremendous way the work of the Church in general and the work of our Dicastery. We have been speaking by Zoom for two years, but my


experience of that, it's not the same as having a personal direct contact with the people involved. And Zoom tends to be one sided or two sided, but it is not a convergence of ideas


around one particular point. But I hope that that is now past us in many parts of the world, even if not completely. I hope that once again, the Church will take up the question of family


life, as Pope Francis always says. This is the central theme of the Church at the moment: marriage and family life. This is where we need to focus our attention. We do exactly as the Pope


has requested us, to instill new life into it. We have already published a book about the saint-couples who are beatified or canonized within the Church to prove that married life also has


saints that everybody forgets about. We tend to remember the popes, the bishops, the martyrs and many other people...Two married couples, two, who have been beatified and canonized as saints


in the Church, as couples. I think that is important. The next point [is] that we have published the guidelines for the catechumenal path to prepare couples for marriage and families after


marriage. And I would call it a kind of a '_vademecum_' for bishops, priests and directors of family life ministry. 31/05/2022 A press conference is held on Tuesday at the Holy See


Press Office to announce details of next month’s World Meeting of Families, which will take place in Rome. On how we go about accompanying couples: Many people would like to jump to the


first step, and the first step is you have to find couples who have the qualities to be able to accompany other couples. You have to identify the couples who have the ability to teach,


correct, and minister to other people. Not everybody has every quality in the book. We have to select people who are good at what they're doing. That's an important point. Listen


to Cardinal Farrell recall married couples who became saints: Q: ALONG WITH THE WORLD MEETING OF FAMILIES, THERE ARE THESE NEW GUIDELINES, DO YOU EXPECT THEM TO BE IMPLEMENTED IN DIOCESES


AND PUT INTO PRACTICE AS A CONCRETE WAY TO HELP COUPLES AND FAMILIES... We hope that they will be put into practice in the different countries. You have to remember these are guidelines for


the universal Church, but the practical application of those guidelines depends on different cultures, different languages, different in every way. It would not be the same to pick up those


guidelines and try and apply them word for word in every situation, the same way. That is not possible. [embedded content] Cardinal Farrell on goals of 10th WMOF Q: IN WHAT WAY WILL THIS


YEAR'S MEETING REMEMBER THE FAMILIES WHERE PERHAPS IN THEIR AREA OR IN THEIR LIVES, RELIGIOUS REPRESSION HAS BEEN A PROBLEM AND FAMILIES THAT ARE STRUGGLING IN GENERAL? This particular


meeting is generally to focus on all of those themes that you mentioned that are always in the back of our mind and families. For example, we know that when the Pope greets those at the


Festival of the Families, there will be couples there from Ukraine, too. [There] will be couples from many other parts of the world where there is religious persecution in many ways, and


where there is violence and they live in a state of war. Who can turn a blind eye watching the suffering of families, mothers with their children, while the fathers are left in Ukraine to


fight, traveling to strange foreign countries that they've never been to before. They have no family members. They're totally on their own. And to see a young woman with two


children, arriving... We applaud in many ways what these countries have done, along with institutions, organizations, and Churches doing so much work to receive and help these immigrants and


refugees. Ukrainian mother and child But it's still it's not the same as being at home. And when your whole life is disrupted, you have nothing. People don't realize


it's not like they moved all their household, as if they got one of these moving companies and moved everything. They go with a small bag and have nothing. And that's the way it


tears away at your heart. The Church could not ignore that reality in the world. There will be families connected online from many parts of the world Q: POPE FRANCIS WROTE TO THE POST SYNOD


APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION ON THE FAMILY _AMORIS LAETITIA_. HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE CHURCH'S CURRENT WELCOME AND APPLICATION OF THIS DOCUMENT, AND HOW WILL IT BE A USEFUL TOOL DURING THIS


MEETING? Obviously this is the basis. _Amoris Laetitia_ is the basis of this meeting. It's our intention to give it, as I said before, a new impulse. I think it has been received


relatively well in the Church in general. I think there was an awful lot of apprehension and misunderstanding at the beginning because people were insisting on one part or another part, but


not reading the document in its totality. I think that in general, Bishops’ Conferences are supportive. I think some dioceses in some parts of the world have done much more, too. For


example, Pope Francis wanted this world gathering of families to be limited because of the pandemic situation here in Rome, but at the same time to be held in every Church and every parish


in the world. Many dioceses have prepared programs and sent us enormous amounts of literature about what they're doing or what they can do from all over the world. And I was pleasantly


surprised to see so much activity taking place. I should say that Pope Francis had the same idea about celebrating the World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly. He didn't want just one


big celebration in one part of the world. A grandfather He wanted it celebrated in every cathedral in the world. Because even with the world gathering and the families, you've got to


remember always that the most attended world gathering of the families that we've had was in Dublin. That was 34 or 35,000 people. That's not even a small little diocese in the


world. Large dioceses around the world could gather that number of people in their own diocese. That's what we want. And that's why we invited all the leaders of it to this event


here in Rome.  Q: WHAT DO YOU EXPECT TO BE THE HIGHLIGHTS OF THIS MEETING IN PARTICULAR? AND HOW IS THE VENUE - THE FACT THAT THE WORLD MEETING IS TAKING PLACE IN ROME - SIGNIFICANT?


It's significant because [of] the Pope. Pope Francis is loved. He's the biggest attraction that we have. No matter what newspaper, no matter from what religious sect or


organization - everybody likes Pope Francis. I think that when he speaks to the families and directly to married couples, they listen. My greatest expectation is that this will be broadcast


all over the world. We hope that it will.