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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 21 NOVEMBER 1984
At the weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall on Wednesday, 21 November, Pope John Paul II continued his treatment of the spirituality of marriage, basing his teaching on the doctrine contained in "Humanae Vitae".
Following is our translation of the Holy Father's address.
1. On the basis of the doctrine contained in the Encyclical Humanae Vitae,
we intend to trace an outline of conjugal spirituality. In the spiritual life of
married couples the gifts of the Holy Spirit are at work, especially the gift of
piety, that is, the gift of respect for what is a work of God.
This gift, together with love and chastity, helps to identify in the sum
total of married life that act in which, at least potentially, the
spousal meaning of the body is linked with the procreative meaning. It leads to
understanding, among the possible manifestations of affection, the singular or
rather the exceptional significance of that act: its dignity and the consequent
serious responsibility connected with it. Therefore, the antithesis of conjugal
spirituality is constituted, in a certain sense, by the subjective lack of this
understanding which is linked to contraceptive practice and mentality. In
addition to everything else, this does enormous harm from the point of view of
man's interior culture. The virtue of conjugal chastity, and still more the gift
of respect for what comes from God, mold the couple's spirituality to the
purpose of protecting the particular dignity of this act, of this
manifestation of affection. In it, the truth of the language of the body can be
expressed only by safeguarding the procreative potential.
Responsible fatherhood and motherhood means the spiritual appraisal—conforming
to truth—of
the conjugal act in the knowledge and in the will of both spouses. In this
manifestation of affection, after considering the interior and external
circumstances, especially the biological ones, they express their mature
readiness for fatherhood and motherhood.
3. Respect for the work of God contributes to seeing that the conjugal act does
not become diminished and deprived of the interior meaning of married life as a
whole—that
it does not become a habit—and
that there is expressed in it a sufficient fullness of personal and ethical
content, and also of religious content, that is, veneration for the majesty of
the Creator, the only and the ultimate depository of the source of life, and for
the spousal love of the Redeemer. All this creates and enlarges, so to speak,
the interior space for the mutual freedom of the gift in which there is fully
manifested the spousal meaning of masculinity and femininity.
The obstacle to this freedom is presented by the interior constriction of
concupiscence, directed to the other "I" as an object of pleasure.
Respect for what God creates gives freedom from this constriction. It frees from
all that reduces the other "I" to a mere object and it strengthens the
interior freedom of the gift.
4. This can happen only through a profound appreciation of the personal
dignity of both the feminine "I" and the masculine "I"
in their shared life. This spiritual appreciation is the fundamental fruit of
the gift of the Spirit, which urges the person to respect the work of God. From
this appreciation, and therefore indirectly from that gift, all the affectionate
manifestations which make up the fabric of remaining faithful to the union of
marriage derive their true spousal meaning. This union is expressed through the
conjugal act only in given circumstances. But it can and it must be manifested
continually, every day, through various affectionate manifestations which are
determined by the capacity of a disinterested emotion of the "I" in
relation to femininity and, reciprocally, in relation to masculinity.
The attitude of respect for the work of God, which the Spirit stirs up in
the couple, has an enormous significance for those affectionate manifestations.
This is because side by side with it there is the capacity for deep
satisfaction, admiration, disinterested attention to the visible and at the same
time the invisible beauty of femininity and masculinity, and finally a deep
appreciation of the disinterested gift of the other.
5. All this determines the spiritual identification of what is male or
female, of what is corporeal and at the same time personal. From this spiritual
identification there emerges the awareness of the union through the body,
in safeguarding the interior freedom of the gift. Through the affectionate
manifestations the couple help each other remain faithful to the union. At the
same time these manifestations protect in each of them that deep-rooted peace
which is in a certain sense the interior resonance of chastity guided by the
gift of respect for what God creates.
This gift involves a profound and universal attention to the person in
one's masculinity and femininity, thus creating the interior climate suitable
for personal communion. That procreation which we describe as responsible,
rightly matures only in this climate of the personal communion of the couple.
6. The Encyclical Humanae Vitae enables us to trace an outline of
conjugal spirituality. This is the human and supernatural climate in which—taking
the "biological" order into consideration and, at the same time, on
the basis of chastity sustained by the gift of piety—is
formed the interior harmony of
marriage, in respect for what the encyclical calls "the twofold
significance of the conjugal act" (HV 12). This harmony means that the
couple live together in the interior truth of the language of the body. The
Encyclical Humanae Vitae proclaims that the connection between this truth
and love is inseparable.
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See