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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 31 OCTOBER 1984
At the general audience on Wednesday morning, 31 October, Pope John Paul II continued his treatment of the virtue of continence in the light of the teaching of "Humanae Vitae". Following is our translation of the Holy Father's address.
1. We are continuing the analysis of continence in the light of the teaching contained in Humanae Vitae.
It is often thought that continence causes inner tensions which man must free
himself from. In the light of the analyses we have done, continence, understood
integrally, is rather the only way to free man from such tensions. It
means nothing other than the spiritual effort aimed at expressing the
"language of the body," not only in truth but also in the authentic
richness of the manifestations of affection.
Essential reasons
2. Is this effort possible? In other words (and under another aspect)
the question returns here about the feasibility of the moral law, recalled and
confirmed by Humanae Vitae. It constitutes one of the most essential
questions (and currently also one of the most urgent ones) in the sphere of the
spirituality of marriage.
The Church is totally convinced of the correctness of the principle that affirms
responsible fatherhood and motherhood, in the sense explained in previous
catecheses. This is not only for demographic reasons but for more essential
reasons. We call that fatherhood and that motherhood responsible which
correspond to the personal dignity of the couple as parents, to the truth
of their person and of the conjugal act. Hence arises the close and
direct relationship that links this dimension with the whole spirituality of
marriage.
Pope Paul VI, in Humanae Vitae, expressed what had been affirmed
elsewhere by many authoritative moralists and scientists, even non-Catholics(1),
namely, that precisely in this field, so profoundly and essentially human and
personal, it is necessary above all to refer to man as a person, the subject who
decides by himself, and not to means which make him the object (of
manipulations) and depersonalize him. It is therefore a question here of an
authentically humanistic meaning of the development and progress of human
civilization.
3. Is this effort possible? The whole question of the Encyclical
Humanae Vitae is not reduced simply to the biological dimension of human
fertility (the question of the "natural cycles of fertility"), but
goes back to the very subjectivity of man, to that personal "I"
through which the person is man or woman.
Already during the discussion in the Second Vatican Council, in relation
to the chapter of Gaudium et Spes on the "Dignity of Marriage and
the Family and its Promotion," the necessity was discussed for a
deepened analysis of the reactions (and also of the emotions) connected
with the mutual influence of masculinity and femininity on the human
subject.(2) This question belongs not so much to biology as to psychology. From
biology and psychology it then passes into the sphere of the spirituality of
marriage and the family. Here this question is in close relationship with the
way of understanding the virtue of continence, that is, self-mastery and
especially of periodic continence.
Understanding continence
4. A careful analysis of human psychology allows us to arrive at some other
essential affirmations. (Psychology is at the same time a subjective
self-analysis and then becomes an analysis of an "object" accessible
to human knowledge.) In interpersonal relationships in which the mutual
influence of masculinity and femininity is expressed, there is freed in the
psycho-emotive subject in the human "I," alongside a reaction
distinguishable as excitement, another reaction that can and must be
called emotion. Although these two kinds of reaction appear joined, it is
possible to distinguish them experimentally and to differentiate them with
regard to their content or their object.(3)
The objective difference between the one and the other kind of reaction consists
in the fact that the excitement is above all corporeal and in this sense
sensual. On the other hand, even though aroused by the mutual reaction of
masculinity and femininity, emotion refers above all to the other person
understood in the person's integrality. We can say that this is an emotion
caused by the person, in relation to the person's masculinity or femininity.
5. What we are stating here with regard to the psychology of the mutual
reactions of masculinity and femininity helps in understanding the role of the
virtue of continence, which we spoke about previously. Continence is not only—and
not even principally—the
ability to abstain, that is, mastery over the multiple reactions that are
interwoven in the mutual influence of masculinity and femininity. Such a role
would be defined as negative. But there is also another role (which we can call
positive) of self-mastery. It is the ability to direct the respective reactions,
both as to their content and their character.
It has already been said that in the field of the mutual reactions of
masculinity and femininity, excitement and emotion appear not only as two
distinct and different experiences of the human "I." But very often
they appear joined in the sphere of the same experience as two different
elements of that experience. The reciprocal degree to which these two elements
appear in a given experience depends on various circumstances of an interior and
an exterior nature. At times one of the elements is clearly prevalent; at other
times there is rather a balance between them.
Maintaining the balance
6. As the ability to direct excitement and emotion in the sphere of the
mutual influence of masculinity and femininity, continence has the essential
task to maintain the balance between the communion in which the couple wish
to mutually express only their intimate union and that in which (at least
implicitly) they accept responsible parenthood. In fact, on the part of the
subject, excitement and emotion can jeopardize the orientation and the character
of the mutual language of the body.
Excitement seeks above all to be expressed in the form of sensual and
corporeal pleasure. That is, it tends toward the conjugal act which
(depending on the natural cycles of fertility) includes the possibility of
procreation. Emotion, on the other hand, caused by another human being as
a person, even if in its emotive content it is conditioned by the femininity or
masculinity of the "other," does not per se tend toward the
conjugal act. But it limits itself to other manifestations of
affection, which express the spousal meaning of the body, and which
nevertheless do not include its (potentially) procreative meaning.
It is easy to understand what conclusions arise from this with respect to the
question of responsible fatherhood and motherhood. These conclusions are of a
moral nature.
1) Cf., for example, the statements of the "Bund fur evangelisch-katholische Wiedervereinigung" (L'O.R., 19-9-1968, p. 3); Dr. F. King, Anglican (L'O.R., October 5-10-1968, p. 3); and also the Muslim, Mr. Mohammed Cherif Zeghoudu (in the same issue). Especially significant is the letter written on November 28, 1968, to Cardinal Cicognani by Karl Barth, in which he praised the great courage of Paul VI.
2) Cf. the interventions by Card. Leo Suenens at the 13th General Congregation on September 29, 1968: Acta Synodalia S. Concilii Oecumenici Vaticani II, vol. 4, part 3, p. 30.
3) In this regard we should recall what St. Thomas says in a final analysis of human love in relation to the "concupiscible" and to the will (cf. Summa Theologiae, I-II, q. 26, art. 2).
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See