There
are many sociologists and psychologists who say today that the family,
as the basic structure of our society, is disappearing. At the worst,
it could mean that the family as that basic unit is unnecessary. This
the Church will forever fight. At the best, it could mean that the family
has undergone a tremendous change from what that word "family"
has traditionally meant in the Christian perspective. This the Church
would he foolish not to recognize.
But
before we can say another word we must first establish that the family
must be the main concern of the Church. This is so because Christianity
has always been concerned for individuals-for the whole man" and
how he lives- that is, how each individual adjusts to the world as a
fully integrated person, who is capable of realizing the full potential
of his physical, spiritual and intellectual capacity. The Church must
see to this because every person deserves this opportunity as a child
of God.
The
Church begins her responsibility for the whole family phase by binding
two Christians through the Sacrament of Marriage, and these ties, the
Churches teach us, are not broken, even by death. This is why the Church
uses her great power of memory in her Liturgy-to always reunite the
family ..And, of course, for the Church we are all her family. It is
from this beginning that all phases of family life are seen: we are
born into this world, baptized, married and we leave this world via
the Church. It is therefore because the family remains for the Church
the way in which all men fit into this life, that every alert pastor
and every alert Christian must ask himself two questions:
1.
What has happened to the American family-what are the forces which have
caused this great trouble in family life?
2.
What is it that the Church must do?
In
answering the first question- what are those forces-we must realize
that there are many but we can see them all by looking at the greatest
two forces today which include all the others. The first is the great
affluence in which we are drown today. The second is the relativistic
approach to life which removes all absolutes and says "it all depends"
and "anything goes." When we look at this great affluence
in which youthful families are born, we find that they cannot even remember
hard times. These young families, of which I include myself, have romped
through a world where, no matter how rigorously their parents had to
fight for an economic foothold, they themselves have been conditioned
by security. How many of our middle socio-economic families have a need
of food, or clothing, or education. They have been fed fluoride and
vitamins; they have been immunized and vaccinated. Specialists remove
tonsils and pull teeth-one specialist for the right side of your mouth-
another for the left! Today it is many, instead of few-as it used to
be-who have made in through college and-finally they have Medicare to
secure their future. In this affluence we can have everything now and
pay for it later-young couples buy houses on credit, they vacation and
entertain on their expense accounts. In other words, what used to be
the quality of thrift is associated with something tight or miserly-it
is simply no longer looked upon as a virtue.
But
don't misunderstand me. Affluence need not be bad in itself. But it
needs some absolutes-and this is where the Church is needed. Unfortunately,
along with this affluence we have a theory which says everything is
relative-and this is the second great danger to the family. The generation
before us had their depression and their war and they had a definite
social approval or disapproval for what they did.
Extramarital
sex, however more or less there was of it-was simply not publically
condoned. Marijuana to the youth was still something distant. And the
book "Lady Chatterley's Lover" was still the most scandalous
reading. In short, society was able to take a stand-it didn't have to
be as vague, as cosmopolitan and as relativistic as it does today.
And
so what is the outcome of these two great forces on the family? Primarily,
they have led to a man-centered satisfaction. The best example of this
is this great passion for privacy! There was a time when nothing was
thought of it even if a grandfather or grandmother lived with us. But
today the suburban family is almost neurotic. They say today, "I
don't need anybody." They build the highest fences around their
homes and "don't anybody mind my business." Above all, they
are told when they marry, "Don't let your parents live with you."
The young American marrieds would rather rent a trailer or pitch a tent
to escape the company of their in-laws. Meanwhile from all this good
advice, we have 800,000 divorces and 300,000 children tragically involved.
And, of course, because everything is relative, premarital sex and marital
promiscuity are totally accepted as something "natural" and
"relative" to the situation that you are in. You know the
story-if you love the person at the time-sexual relations are acceptable.
They somehow manage to separate what is truthful and good from what
is love and they cannot be separated. It is even accepted by some voices
of the clergy who say that we must have this "freedom" as
they write in the pages of Playboy magazine. And of course Hollywood
has helped in this dying image. It has reached a new moral low in film
production-the main feature are no longer the story-it now glamorizes
prostitution and homosexuality and nudity and gutter language.
And
so it is from the unguided affluence and an unlimited relativism that
we move to the results-to a family situation which is indeed different
than what the Church creates at marriage. Is it any wonder that they
say the family is dying?
But
if I were to stop now I would leave you with nothing but the problem.
This is the second part of that question-What is the Church to do?
I do not have the answer-all but I do know this-if the Church and its
pastors do not attempt to find solutions to these many problems, they
are failing to fulfill the greatest of their challenges-to love through
concern for their people.
Now
everybody talks about the Church being relevant today-this is where
it is first relevant-when it recognizes its spiritual calling, its message
and its mission to its people. But Christian families just don't happen.
They need the guidance which will declare what the absolutes are -what
is right and what is wrong- and the Church can begin by bringing its
people into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. It must not be
a question of Church law- what the Church says-it is how her people
live-it is your life-style. It is time for parents not only to say what
is Christian but to live as Christian. Instead of sending their children
to Church, they must take them, and taking them is not enough if the
first thing they do as they leave Church is to curse their nearest relative
or cheat on their job- or teach your child to love while you hate! It
is a time for parents to take Religious Education seriously-there must
be a tremendous move to be consistent between what we say and what we
do. You know the most important thing about a funeral is not how you
dress. In other words, there is no longer room for hypocrisy!
But
for the Church, we must remember that no lasting change in society was
ever reached without first changing the hearts of men: We as pastors
must change the hearts of our people before any of these changes can
occur.
And
so every specific answer to every specific problem that faces the family-and
there are many-depends on this change of heart-this real love at the
grass roots. A WORD magazine article entitled "I am Christ,"
made the right point. He spoke of the basis of love and concern and
this is where it all starts. It is only this kind of real love from
the Church which will draw the remnants of a losing family into a strong
family. And it is only when the family can turn to the Church and when
the Church, in turn, is ready to answer their needs, through its pastors,
that such a relationship can be established.
Now
I have mentioned the forces which have shaped the contemporary and often
tragic family, and I have tried to show how the Church must react. Now
I would like to make one final point; and it is this: the painful truth
tells us that all who need this help are not outside of the Church.
These problems are not limited to other than those in our family-nor
are they limited to non-Orthodox. The Orthodox family-no matter what
nationality-is no longer the "ghetto-type" family-it must
learn to survive in the contemporary American pluralistic culture and
still remain Orthodox. Some of the families with the most trying problems
come to worship right beside you. It is to them that the pastor must
"go" as Christ did amongst the sinners, not as a fence-sitter,
but to say what is right and what is wrong. And not because they have
more precious souls because they are my parishioners. But because they
too must "convert." To be a Christian is not something that
you are born into-it is something that you become-and we are always
in this state of becoming Christian. So we must convert our own people
first, and that may be a very new and perhaps strange thought to some
of us. But this is a conversion from doubt and fear to hope and life.
And
if we fail here, we fail completely and then they are right-then the
family will have no meaning-then the propaganda of Madison Avenue will
form their values instead of the Church.
Finally,
it is the Church, like Christ, who comes to minister and who comes to
serve. This is the basis of all that Christ gave to us and because of
this, the Church must engender a style of life which indeed ministers
to the problems, to the doubts and to the sufferings of the family-and
indeed to the whole world of our time.
Fr.
Joseph Allen is Pastor of St. Anthony's Church, Bergenfield, NJ.