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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 26 JANUARY 1983
At the general audience of Wednesday, 26 January, in the Paul VI Hall, the Holy Father delivered the following address:
1. The sign of marriage as a sacrament of the Church is constituted each time
according to that dimension which is proper to it from the
"beginning." At the same time it is constituted on the foundation of
the spousal love of Christ and of the Church as the unique and unrepeatable
expression of the covenant between "this" man and "this"
woman. They are the ministers of marriage as a sacrament of their vocation and
their life. In saying that the sign of marriage as a sacrament of the Church is
constituted on the basis of the language of the body, we are using analogy
(the analogy of attribution), which we have sought to clarify previously. It
is obvious that the body as such does not "speak," but man speaks,
rereading that which requires to be expressed precisely on the basis of the
"body," of the masculinity and femininity of the personal subject,
indeed, on the basis of what can be expressed by man only by means of the body.
In this sense man—male
or female—does
not merely speak with the language of the body. But in a certain sense he
permits the body to speak "for him" and "on his behalf," I
would say, in his name and with his personal authority. In this way even the
concept of the "prophetism of the body" seems to be well founded. The
prophet spoke "for" and "on behalf of"—in
the name and with the authority of a person.
2. The newlywed spouses are aware of it when in contracting marriage they
institute its visible sign. In the perspective of life in common and of the
conjugal vocation, that initial sign, the original sign of marriage as a
sacrament of the Church, will be continually completed by the "prophetism
of the body." The spouses' bodies will speak "for" and
"on behalf of" each of them. They will speak in the name of and
with the authority of the person, of each of the persons, carrying out the
conjugal dialogue proper to their vocation and based on the language of the
body, reread in due course opportunely and continually—and
it is necessary that it be reread in truth! The spouses are called to form their
life and their living together as a communion of persons on the basis of that
language. Granted that there corresponds to the language a complexus of
meaning, the spouses—by
means of their conduct and comportment, by means of their actions and gestures
("gestures of tenderness"—cf.
Gaudium et Spes 49)—are
called to become the authors of such meanings of the "language of the
body." Consequently, love, fidelity, conjugal uprightness and that union
which remains indissoluble until death are constructed and continually deepened.
3. The sign of marriage as a sacrament of the Church is formed precisely by
those meanings which the spouses are the authors of. All these meanings are
initiated and in a certain sense "programmed" in a synthetic manner in
the conjugal consent for the purpose of constructing later—in
a more analytical way, day by day—the
same sign, identifying oneself with it in the dimension of the whole of life.
There is an organic bond between rereading in truth the integral
significance of the language of the body and the consequent use of that
language in conjugal life. In this last sphere the human being—male
and female—is
the author of the meanings of the language of the body. This implies that this
language which he is the author of corresponds to the truth which has been
reread. On the basis of biblical tradition we speak here of the "prophetism
of the body." If the human being—male
and female—in
marriage (and indirectly also in all the spheres of mutual life together) confers
on his behavior a significance in conformity with the fundamental truth of the
language of the body, then he also "is in the truth." In
the contrary case he is guilty of a lie and falsifies the language of the body.
4. If we place ourselves on the perspective line of conjugal consent—which,
as we have already said, offers the spouses a particular participation in the
prophetic mission of the Church handed down from Christ himself—we
can in this regard also use the biblical distinction between true and false
prophets. By means of marriage as a sacrament of the Church, man and woman are
called explicitly to bear witness—by
using correctly the language of the body—to
spousal and procreative love, a witness worthy of true prophets. The true
significance and the grandeur of conjugal consent in the sacrament of the Church
consists in this.
5. The problematic of the sacramental sign of marriage has a highly
anthropological character. We construct it on the basis of theological
anthropology and in particular on that which, from the beginning of the present
considerations, we have defined as the theology of the body. Therefore, in
continuing these analyses, we should always have before our minds the previous
considerations which refer to the analysis of the key words of Christ. (We call
them key words because they open up for us, like a key, the individual
dimensions of theological anthropology, especially of the theology of the body.)
Constructing on this basis the analysis of the sacramental sign of marriage in
which the man and woman always participate, even after original sin, that is,
man and woman as historical man, we must constantly bear in mind the fact that
that historical man, male and female, is at the same time the man of
concupiscence. As such, every man and every woman enter the history of salvation
and they are involved in it through the sacrament which is the visible sign of
the covenant and of grace.
Therefore, we bear this in mind in the context of the present reflections, on
the sacramental structure of the sign of not only what Christ said on the unity
and indissolubility of marriage by referring to the "beginning," but
also (and still more) what he said in the Sermon on the Mount when he referred
to the "human heart."
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See