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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 10 OCTOBER 1984
On Wednesday morning, 10 October, in the Paul VI Hall, the Holy Father
continued his series of reflections on conjugal spirituality, drawing from
Scripture and Tradition. Following is our translation of the Holy Father's
address.
1. We are continuing to outline the spirituality of married life in the light of
the Encyclical Humanae Vitae.
According to the doctrine contained there, in conformity with biblical
sources and all Tradition, love from the subjective viewpoint is a power, that
is, a capacity of the human soul, of a theological nature. It is
therefore the power given to man in order to participate in that love
with which God himself loves in the mystery of creation and redemption. It is
that love which "rejoices with the truth" (1 Cor 13:6). In it, the
spiritual joy (Augustine's "enjoyment") of every authentic value is
expressed. It is a joy like that of the Creator himself, who in the beginning
saw that everything "was very good" (Gn 1:31).
If the powers of concupiscence try to detach the language of the
body from the truth, that is, they try to falsify it, the power of love
instead strengthens it ever anew in that truth, so that the mystery of the
redemption of the body can bear fruit in it.
The fullness of good
2. Love itself, which makes possible and brings about that conjugal dialogue,
is had according to the full truth of the life of the spouses, is at the same
time a power or a capacity of a moral nature, actively oriented toward the
fullness of good and for this reason toward every true good. And therefore its
role consists in safeguarding the inseparable connection between the "two
meanings of the conjugal act," which the encyclical deals with (HV 12).
That is, it concerns protecting both the value of the true union of the couple
(that is, the personal communion) and the value of responsible fatherhood and
motherhood (in the form that is mature and worthy of man).
Love coordinates
3. According to traditional language, love, as a higher power, coordinates
the actions of the persons, the husband and the wife, in the sphere of the
purposes of marriage. Although in dealing with the question neither the
conciliar constitution nor the encyclical use the language at one time
customary, they nonetheless deal with what the traditional expressions refer to.
As a higher power that the man and the woman receive from God along with the
particular "consecration" of the sacrament of marriage, love involves
a correct coordination of the purposes, according to which—in
the traditional teaching of the Church—there
is constituted the moral (or rather "theological and
moral") order of the life of the couple.
The doctrine of the Constitution Gaudium et Spes, as well as that of the
Encyclical Humanae Vitae, clarifies the same moral order in reference to
love. Love is understood as a higher power that confers adequate content and
value to conjugal acts according to the truth of the two meanings,
the unitive and the procreative, with respect for their inseparability.
In this renewed formulation the traditional teaching on the purposes of marriage
(and their hierarchy) is reaffirmed and at the same time deepened from the
viewpoint of the interior life of the spouses, that is, of conjugal and family
spirituality.
4. The role of love, which is "poured out into (the) hearts" (Rom 5:5)
of the spouses as the fundamental spiritual power of their conjugal pact,
consists—as we
said—in protecting both the value of the true communion of the spouses
and the value of truly responsible fatherhood and motherhood. The power of love—authentic
in the theological and ethical sense—is
expressed in this, that love correctly unites the two meanings of the
conjugal act, excluding not only in theory but above all in practice the
contradiction that might be evidenced in this field. This contradiction is the
most frequent reason for objecting to the Encyclical Humanae Vitae and
the teaching of the Church. There must be a well-examined analysis, not only
theological but also anthropological (we have tried to do this in the whole
present reflection), to show that there is no need here to speak of
contradiction, but only of difficulty. Well then, the encyclical itself stresses
this difficulty in various passages.
And this arises from the fact that the power of love is implanted in man
lured by concupiscence: in human subjects love does battle with the
threefold concupiscence (cf. 1 Jn 2:16), especially with the concupiscence of
the flesh which distorts the truth of the language of the body. Therefore love
too is not able to be realized in the truth of the language of the body except
through overcoming concupiscence.
Linked with chastity
5. If the key element of the spirituality of spouses and parents—that
essential power which spouses must continually draw from the sacramental
consecration—is
love, this love, as it is seen from the text of the encyclical (cf. HV 20), is
by its nature linked with the chastity that is manifested as mastery over
oneself, that is, continence, in particular, as periodic continence. In biblical
language, the author of Ephesians seems to allude to this when in his classic
text he exhorts spouses to "defer to one another out of reverence for
Christ" (Eph 5:21).
We can say that the Encyclical Humanae Vitae constitutes precisely the
development of this biblical truth about conjugal and family Christian
spirituality. Nonetheless, to make it more manifest, there needs to be a
deeper analysis of the virtue of continence and of its special significance
for the truth of the mutual language of the body in married life and
(indirectly) in the whole sphere of mutual relationships between man and woman.
We will take up this analysis during the upcoming Wednesday reflections.
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See