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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 13 OCTOBER 1982
At the general audience in St Peter's Square on Wednesday morning, 13
October, Pope John Paul II continued his treatment of the subject of the
sacramentality of marriage, basing his analysis on St Paul's Letter to the
Ephesians.
1. In our previous consideration we have tried to study in depth—in
the light of the Letter to the Ephesians—the
sacramental "beginning" of man and marriage in the state of original
justice (or innocence).
We know, however, that the heritage of grace was driven out of the human heart
when the first covenant with the Creator was broken. The perspective of
procreation, instead of being illumined by the heritage of original grace,
given by God as soon as he infused a rational soul, became dimmed by the heritage
of original sin. We can say that marriage, as a primordial sacrament, was
deprived of that supernatural efficacy which at the moment of its institution
belonged to the sacrament of creation in its totality. Nonetheless, even in this
state, that is, in the state of man's hereditary sinfulness, marriage never
ceased being the figure of that sacrament we read about in the Letter to
the Ephesians (Eph 5:21-33) and which the author of that letter does not
hesitate to call a "great mystery." Can we not perhaps deduce that
marriage has remained the platform for the actuation of God's eternal designs,
according to which the sacrament of creation had drawn near to men and had
prepared them for the sacrament of redemption, introducing them to the dimension
of the work of salvation? The analysis of the Letter to the Ephesians,
especially the classic text (5:21-33), seems to lean toward such a conclusion.
2. When in verse 31 the author refers to the words of the institution of
marriage contained in Genesis (2:24: "For this reason a man will leave his
father and mother and will cling to his wife, and the two shall become one
body"), and then immediately states: "This is a great mystery; I mean
that it refers to Christ and the Church" (Eph 5:32), he seems to indicate
not only the identity of the mystery hidden in God from all eternity, but also
that continuity of its actuation. This exists between the primordial sacrament
connected with the supernatural gracing of man in creation itself and the new
gracing, which occurred when "Christ loved the Church and gave himself up
for her to make her holy..." (Eph 5:25-26)—gracing
can be defined in its entirety as the sacrament of redemption. In this
redemptive gift of himself "for" the Church, there is also contained—according
to Pauline thought—Christ's
gift of himself to the Church, in the image of the nuptial relationship that
unites husband and wife in marriage. In this way, the sacrament of redemption
again takes on, in a certain sense, the figure and form of the primordial
sacrament. To the marriage of the first husband and wife, as a sign of the
supernatural gracing of man in the sacrament of creation, there corresponds the
marriage, or rather the analogy of the marriage, of Christ with the Church, as
the fundamental great sign of the supernatural gracing of man in the sacrament
of redemption—of
the gracing in which the covenant of the grace of election is renewed in a
definitive way, the covenant which was broken in the beginning by sin.
Supernatural gracing
3. The image contained in the quoted passage from the Letter to the Ephesians
seems to speak above all of the sacrament of redemption as that definitive
fulfillment of the mystery hidden from eternity in God. Everything that the
Letter to the Ephesians had treated in the first chapter is actuated in this mysterium
magnum (great mystery). As we recall, it says not only "In him [that
is, in Christ] God chose us before the world began, to be holy and blameless in
his sight..." (Eph 1:4), but also "in whom [Christ] we have redemption
through his blood, the remission of sins, so immeasurably generous is God's
favor to us..." (Eph 1:7-8). The new supernatural gracing of man in the
sacrament of redemption is also a new actuation of the mystery hidden in God
from all eternity—new
in relation to the sacrament of creation. At this moment, gracing is in a
certain sense a new creation. However, it differs from the sacrament of creation
insofar as the original gracing, united to man's creation, constituted that man
in the beginning, through grace, in the state of original innocence and justice.
The new gracing of man in the sacrament of redemption, instead, gives him above
all the remission of sins. Yet even here grace can "abound even more,"
as St. Paul expresses elsewhere: "Where sin increased, grace has abounded
even more" (Rom 5:20).
4. The sacrament of redemption—the
fruit of Christ's redemptive love—becomes,
on the basis of his spousal love for the Church, a permanent dimension of
the life of the Church herself, a fundamental and life-giving dimension. It is
the mysterium magnum (great mystery) of Christ and the Church. It is the
eternal mystery actuated by Christ, who "gave himself up for her" (Eph
5:25). It is the mystery that is continually actuated in the Church, because
Christ "loved the Church" (Eph 5:25), uniting himself with her in an
indissoluble love, just as spouses, husband and wife, unite themselves in
marriage. In this way the Church lives on the sacrament of redemption. In her
turn she completes this sacrament just as the wife, in virtue of spousal love,
completes her husband. In a certain way this had already been pointed out
"in the beginning" when the first man found in the first woman "a
helper fit for him" (Gn 2:20). Although the analogy in the Letter to the
Ephesians does not state it precisely, we can add also that the Church united to
Christ, as the wife to her husband, draws from the sacrament of redemption all
her fruitfulness and spiritual motherhood. The words of the letter of St. Peter
testify to this in some way when he writes that we have been "reborn not
from a corruptible, but from an incorruptible seed, through the living and
enduring word of God" (1 Pt 1:23). So the mystery hidden in God from all
eternity—the
mystery that in the beginning, in the sacrament of creation, became a visible
reality through the union of the first man and woman in the perspective of
marriage—becomes
in the sacrament of redemption a visible reality of the indissoluble union of
Christ with the Church, which the author of the Letter to the Ephesians
presents as the nuptial union of spouses, husband and wife.
New actuation of the mystery
5. The sacramentum magnum (the Greek text reads: tò mystérion toûto méga estín) of the Letter to the Ephesians speaks of the new actuation of the mystery hidden in God from all eternity. It is the definitive actuation from the point of view of the earthly history of salvation. It also speaks of "making the mystery visible": the visibility of the Invisible. This visibility is not had unless the mystery ceases to be a mystery. This refers to the marriage constituted in the beginning, in the state of original innocence, in the context of the sacrament of creation. It refers also to the union of Christ with the Church, as the great mystery of the sacrament of redemption. The visibility of the Invisible does not mean—if it can be said this way—a total clearing of the mystery. The mystery, as an object of faith, remains veiled even through what is precisely expressed and fulfilled. The visibility of the Invisible therefore belongs to the order of signs, and the sign indicates only the reality of the mystery, but not the unveiling. The "first Adam"—man, male and female—created in the state of original innocence and called in this state to conjugal union (in this sense we are speaking of the sacrament of creation) was a sign of the eternal mystery. So the "second Adam," Christ, united with the Church through the sacrament of redemption by an indissoluble bond, analogous to the indissoluble covenant of spouses, is a definitive sign of the same eternal mystery. Therefore, in speaking about the eternal mystery being actuated, we are speaking also about the fact that it becomes visible with the visibility of the sign. Therefore we are speaking also about the sacramentality of the whole heritage of the sacrament of redemption, in reference to the entire work of creation and redemption, and more so in reference to marriage instituted within the context of the sacrament of creation, as also in reference to the Church as the spouse of Christ, endowed by a quasi-conjugal covenant with him.
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See