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GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 9 FEBRUARY [1983]
On the morning of Wednesday, 9 February, Pope John Paul held the
usual weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall. To the large group of
visitors the Holy Father delivered the following address.
1. We said previously that in the context of the present reflections
on the structure of marriage as a sacramental sign, we should bear in
mind not only what Christ said about its unity and indissolubility in
reference to the beginning, but also (and still more) what he said in
the Sermon on the Mount when he referred to the human heart. Referring
to the commandment, "You shall not commit adultery," Christ spoke of
adultery in the heart. "Everyone who looks at a woman lustfully has
already committed adultery with her in his heart" (Mt 5:28).
The sacramental sign of marriagethe
sign of the conjugal covenant of a man and a womanis
formed on the basis of the language of the body reread in truth (and
continuously reread). In stating this, we realize that he who rereads
this language and then expresses it, not according to the requirements
proper to marriage as a pact and a sacrament, is naturally and morally
the man of concupiscencemale
and female, both of them understood as the "man of concupiscence." The
prophets of the Old Testament certainly have this man before their eyes
when, using an analogy, they condemn the "adultery of Israel and Judah."
The analysis of the words Christ spoke in the Sermon on the Mount lead
us to understand more deeply "adultery" itself. At the same time it
leads us to the conviction that the human heart is not so much accused
and condemned by Christ because of concupiscence (concupiscentia
carnalis), as first of all called. Here there is a decisive
difference between the anthropology (or the anthropological
hermeneutics) of the Gospel and some influential representatives of the
contemporary hermeneutics of man (the so-called masters of suspicion).
The man who is "called"
2. Continuing our present analysis we can observe that even though
man, notwithstanding the sacramental sign of marriage, notwithstanding
conjugal consent and its actuation, remains naturally the "man of
concupiscence," he is at the same time the man who has been "called."
He is called through the mystery of the redemption of the body, a divine
mystery, which at the same time isin
Christ and through Christ in every mana
human reality. That mystery, besides, implies a determinate ethos which
is essentially human, and which we have previously called the ethos of
the redemption.
3. In the light of the words Christ spoke in the Sermon on the Mount, in
the light of the whole Gospel and of the new covenant, the threefold
concupiscence (and in particular the concupiscence of the flesh)
does not destroy the capacity to reread in truth the language of the
bodyand
to reread it continually in an ever more mature and fuller waywhereby
the sacramental sign is constituted both in its first liturgical moment,
and also later in the dimension of the whole of life. In this light one
must note that concupiscence per se causes many errors in
rereading the language of the body. Together with this it gave rise also
to sinmoral
evil, contrary to the virtue of chastity (whether conjugal or
extra-conjugal). Nevertheless in the sphere of the ethos of redemption
the possibility always remains of passing from error to the truth, as
also the possibility of returning, that is, of conversion, from sin to
chastity, as an expression of a life according to the Spirit (cf. Gal
5:16).
Sacramental sign of love
4. In this way, in the evangelical and Christian perspective of the
problem, historical man (after original sin), on the basis of the
language of the body reread in truth, is ableas
male and femaleto
constitute the sacramental sign of love, of conjugal fidelity and
integrity, and this as an enduring sign: "To be faithful to you
always in joy and in sorrow, in sickness and in health, and to love and
honor you all the days of my life." This signifies that man, in a real
way, is the author of the meanings whereby, after having reread in truth
the language of the body, he is also capable of forming in truth that
language in the conjugal and family communion of the persons. He is
capable of it also as the man of concupiscence, being at the same time
called by the reality of the redemption of Christ (simul lapsus et
redemptus).
Hermeneutics of the sacrament
5. By means of the dimension of the sign proper to marriage as a
sacrament there is confirmed the specific theological anthropology, the
specific hermeneutics of man. In this case it could also be called
the hermeneutics of the sacrament, because it permits us to
understand man on the basis of the analysis of the sacramental sign.
Manmale
and femaleas
the minister of the sacrament, the author (co-author) of the sacramental
sign, is a conscious and capable subject of self-determination. Only on
this basis can he be the author of the language of the body, the author
(co-author) of marriage as a signa
sign of the divine creation and redemption of the body. The fact that
man (male and female) is the man of concupiscence does not prejudice his
capacity to reread the language of the body in truth. He is the man of
concupiscence. But at the same time he is capable of discerning truth
from falsity in the language of the body. He can be the author of the
meanings of that language, whether true or false.
Called, not accused
6. He is the man of concupiscence, but he is not completely
determined by libido (in the sense in which this term is often used).
Such a determination would imply that the ensemble of man's behavior,
even, for example, the choice of continence for religious motives, would
be explained only by means of the specific transformations of this
libido. In such a casein
the sphere of the language of the bodyman
would, in a certain sense, be condemned to essential falsifications. He
would merely be one who expresses a specific determination on the part
of the libido, but he would not express the truth or falsity of spousal
love and of the communion of the persons, even though he might think to
manifest it. Consequently, he would then be condemned to suspect himself
and others in regard to the truth of the language of the body. Because
of the concupiscence of the flesh he could only be accused, but he could
not be really called.
The hermeneutics of the sacrament permits us to draw the conclusion that
man is always essentially called and not merely accused, and this
precisely inasmuch as he is the man of concupiscence.
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