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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF 11 JULY 1984
On Wednesday morning, 11 July, Pope John Paul II dedicated his audience address in St Peter's Square to reflections on Paul VI's "Humanae Vitae" as an application of the catechesis he had been presenting on the theology of human love in God's plan. Following is our translation of the Holy Father's address.
1. The reflections we have thus far made on human love in the divine plan
would be in some way incomplete if we did not try to see their concrete
application in the sphere of marital and family morality. We want to take this
further step that will bring us to the conclusion of our now long journey, under
the guidance of an important recent pronouncement of the Magisterium, Humanae Vitae, which Pope Paul VI published in July 1968. We will reread this
significant document in the light of the conclusions we have reached in
examining the initial divine plan and the words of Christ which refer to it.
2. "The Church teaches as absolutely required that in any use
whatever of marriage there must be no impairment of its natural capacity to
procreate human life" (Humanae Vitae 11). "This
particular doctrine, often expounded by the Magisterium of the Church, is based
on the inseparable connection, established by God, which man on his own
initiative may not break, between the unitive significance and the procreative
significance which are both inherent to the marriage act" (Humane
Vitae 12).
3. The considerations I am about to make concern especially the passage of Humanae Vitae that deals with the "two significances of the marriage
act" and their "inseparable connection." I do not intend to
present a commentary on the whole encyclical, but rather to illustrate and
examine one of its passages. From the point of view of the doctrine contained in
the quoted document, that passage has a central significance. At the same time,
that passage is closely connected with our previous reflections on marriage
in its dimension as a (sacramental) sign.
As I said, since this is a central passage of the encyclical, it is obvious that
it constitutes a very important part of its whole structure. Therefore, its
analysis must direct us toward the various components of that structure, even if
it is not our intention to comment on the entire text.
A promised fidelity
4. In the reflections on the sacramental sign, it has already been said
several times that it is based on the language of the body reread in truth.
It concerns a truth once affirmed at the beginning of the marriage when the
newlyweds, promising each other "to be always faithful...and to love and
honor each other all the days of their life," become ministers of marriage
as a sacrament of the Church.
It concerns, then, a truth that is always newly affirmed. In fact, the man and
the woman, living in the marriage "until death," re-propose
uninterruptedly, in a certain sense, that sign that they made—through
the liturgy of the sacrament—on
their wedding day.
The aforementioned words of Pope Paul VI's encyclical concern that moment in the
common life of the spouses when both, joining each other in the marriage act,
become, according to the biblical expression, "one flesh" (Gn 2:24).
Precisely at such a moment so rich in significance, it is also especially
important that the language of the body be reread in truth. This reading becomes
the indispensable condition for acting in truth, that is, for behaving in
accordance with the value and the moral norm.
Adequate foundation
5. The encyclical not only recalls this norm, but also seeks to give it adequate
foundation. In order to clarify more completely that "inseparable
connection, established by God...between the unitive significance and the
procreative significance of the marriage act," Paul VI writes in the next
sentence: "The reason is that the marriage act, because of its fundamental
structure, while it unites husband and wife in the closest intimacy, also brings
into operation laws written into the actual nature of man and of woman for the
generation of new life" (Humanae Vitae 12).
We note that in the previous sentence, the text just quoted deals above all with
the significance of marital relations. In the following sentence, it deals with
the fundamental structure (that is, the nature) of marital relations. Defining
that fundamental structure, the text refers to "laws written into the
actual nature of man and of woman."
The passage from the sentence expressing the moral norm, to the sentence which
explains and justifies it, is especially significant. The encyclical leads one
to seek the foundation for the norm which determines the morality of the acts of
the man and the woman in the marriage act, in the nature of this very act, and
more deeply still, in the nature of the subjects themselves who are performing
the act.
Two significances
6. In this way, the fundamental structure (that is, the nature) of the
marriage act constitutes the necessary basis for an adequate reading and
discovery of the two significances that must be carried over into the
conscience and the decisions of the acting parties. It also constitutes the
necessary basis for establishing the adequate relationship of these
significances, that is, their inseparable connection. Since "the marriage
act..."—at
the same time—"unites
husband and wife in the closest intimacy" and together "makes them
capable of generating new life," and both the one and the other happen
"through the fundamental structure," then it follows that the human
person (with the necessity proper to reason, logical necessity) must read at
the same time the "twofold significance of the marriage act" and
also the "inseparable connection between the unitive significance
and the procreative significance of the marriage act."
Here we are dealing with nothing other than reading the language of the body in
truth, as has been said many times in our previous biblical analyses. The moral
norm, constantly taught by the Church in this sphere, and recalled and
reconfirmed by Paul VI in his encyclical, arises from the reading of the
language of the body in truth.
It is a question here of the truth first in the ontological dimension
("fundamental structure") and then—as
a result—in
the subjective and psychological dimension ("significance").
The text of the encyclical stresses that in the case in question we are dealing
with a norm of the natural law.
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See