Archbishop José Gomez of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is celebrating National Marriage Week. | Lacatholics/Facebook
Archbishop José Gomez of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is celebrating National Marriage Week, which is observed from Feb. 7-14 and includes World Marriage Day on Feb. 13.
According to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the purpose of National Marriage Week is “an opportunity to focus on building a culture of life and love that begins with supporting and promoting marriage and the family.”
"In our society, we need to strengthen good marriages and good families, lifting them up as a model to others, especially our young people," Gomez tweeted. "We need to show our young people how beautiful it is to be married and start a family; This #NationalMarriageWeek, we ask Mary Our Blessed Mother to intercede for us, helping each of us come to a new appreciation of marriage and family life. My brothers and sisters, marriage is part of something greater than all of us – it’s part of the mystery of creation. The mystery of marriage is tied together with the mystery of human life, the mystery of the human person made in the image of God."
Throughout the week, the Secretariat of Laity, Marriage, Family Life, and Youth will offer live-streamed events on the For Your Marriage Facebook Page, according to the USCCB.
According to paragraph 1603 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church: “The intimate community of life and love which constitutes the married state has been established by the Creator and endowed by him with its own proper laws ... God himself is the author of marriage. The vocation to marriage is written in the very nature of man and woman as they came from the hand of the Creator. Marriage is not a purely human institution despite the many variations it may have undergone through the centuries in different cultures, social structures, and spiritual attitudes. These differences should not cause us to forget its common and permanent characteristics. Although the dignity of this institution is not transparent everywhere with the same clarity, some sense of the greatness of the matrimonial union exists in all cultures. The well-being of the individual person and of both human and Christian society is closely bound up with the healthy state of conjugal and family life.”