POPE Francis says it may be “morally
 necessary” for some families to split up, marking a change of tone in 
the Catholic Church’s attitude to troubled marriages.
    
    
   
  
  
“There are cases in which separation is inevitable,” he said during
 his weekly general audience, with a message hoping to encourage greater
 compassion in the Church ahead of a highly anticipated global meeting 
on family life in October.
“Sometimes, it can even be morally 
necessary, when it’s about shielding the weaker spouse or young children
 from the more serious wounds caused by intimidation and violence, 
humiliation and exploitation,” he said.
The Pope said there were many families in “irregular situations” and
 the question should be how to best help them, and “how to accompany 
them so that the child does not become daddy or mummy’s hostage”.
The
 issue is likely to be addressed during the upcoming synod — a gathering
 of bishops — on the family, which Pope Francis hopes will help 
reconcile Catholic thinking with the realities of believers’ lives in 
the early 21st century.
A first synod on the issues last year saw 
riled conservative bishops mobilise to block the approval of language 
heralding an unprecedented opening to the gay community and greater 
flexibility on the treatment of divorced Catholics.
 
 
     
 
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