FAMILY EDGE



Carolyn Moynihan | Friday, 8 June 2012

World Congress in Madrid affirms the natural family

The sixth World Congress of Families, held in Madrid on the last weekend of May, drew 3100 delegates to address the issues confronting the family today. In a concluding statement the congress listed the challenges: "Ideologies of statism, atomistic individualism, and sexual revolution challenge the very essences of marriage and family. Recent legal and public policy changes have corrupted the meaning and dignity of marriage, devalued parenting, encouraged easy divorce and births outside of marriage, confused sexual identities, promoted promiscuity, created conditions that increased child abuse, isolated the elderly, and fostered depopulation."

Responding to this crisis, World Congress of Families VI endorsed a set of principles "to create a cultural and political environment that is compatible with life, liberty, and hope for the future." In part, The Madrid Declaration affirmed that:

Click here to read The Madrid Declaration in its entirety. 

Source: Howard Centre Press Release.

Reporting for the Friday Fax, Piero Tozzi noted:

Among the signs of hope, however, was the engagement of Russian civil society organizations and Orthodox prelates in the conference, signaling the revival of Christianity in what was once the Soviet heartland.  While respect for basic civil liberties in Russia is still somewhat tenuous, as the once-free West slides towards criminalizing religious expression and banishing reference to objectively-grounded moral norms, once-Communist Russia appears to be on a reverse trajectory.  At the United Nations in recent years, for example, Russia has put forward a series of “traditional values” resolutions to counter the libertine sexual agenda of Europe and the Obama Administration while calling attention to the folly of population control programs amid demographic implosion. 

The next World Congress is in Sydney, Australia, in May next year.