Let’s walk, families, let’s keep walking
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Love always wins

Embracing the Challenges (nn. 50–57)
The text of Amoris Laetitia highlights the current challenges facing the family, marked by fatigue, lack of dialogue, and difficulties in transmitting the faith. Anxiety and insecurity about the future are increasing, often linked to precarious economic conditions. Despite the variety of situations, there is an invitation to rediscover the authentic value of a stable union. Serious injustices persist, especially toward women, despite some progress.This experience emphasizes the equal dignity of man and woman and the value of reciprocity, underlining the importance of the father’s role in the upbringing of children. Despite everything, many families live in love, and difficulties become opportunities for hope and renewal.
Facing the crisis

In paragraphs 19–22 of *Amoris Laetitia*, Pope Francis offers a deeply realistic insight into the reality of family life.
He neither idealises nor oversimplifies. He speaks of a humanity marked by conflict, violence and misunderstanding.
The family, a place of love, is also – mysteriously – the place where pain can manifest itself with the greatest intensity.
Scripture, to which the Pope refers, does not hide this truth: from the very beginning, human history has been marked by wounded relationships.
It is a path where love is continually threatened, but also continually called to be reborn.
This perspective sheds profound light on the concrete experience of so many families.
I’ve stopped judging him – A family journey

Ten years on from the publication of *Amoris Laetitia*, the invitation is simple: to pause, to listen… and to allow ourselves to be challenged by real life.
And so this journey begins: each month a short passage from the Exhortation, each month a real-life story.
The voice of a family, a couple, a son or a daughter recounting how those words take shape in everyday life: amidst unexpected joys, parenting challenges, fragility and new beginnings.
Here you will find not just reflections, but lived experiences. Because Pope Francis reminds us that love is built day by day, in the folds of real life.
A journey to be read, but above all to be recognised. Because, after all, it speaks of us too.
Your children like olive shoots (Amoris Laetitia nos. 14–18)
When we stopped judging our children, something changed at home: more trust, more dialogue.
This experience reflects the heart of Amoris Laetitia’s message about children as a gift and the need to welcome and accompany them without immediate judgement.
