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Paul II's Theology of the Body:
Key to an Authentic Marital & Family Spirituality
By Christopher West
What is marital spirituality? How does the family become authentically
spiritual? For John Paul II, the answers to these questions
“of the spirit” are revealed in the body.
This is what we learn from John Paul II’s “theology
of the body.” In this collection of 129 general audience
addresses delivered early in his pontificate, John Paul developed
what promises to be one of his most enduring contributions to
the Church and the world.
Establishing an authentic marital spirituality is essential
if we are to restore the family and build a culture of life.
How do we do it? According to the Holy Father, “Those
who seek the accomplishment of their own human and Christian
vocation in marriage are called, first of all, to make this
‘theology of the body’ ...the content of their life
and behavior” (Apr 2, 1980).
More Catholics are hearing about the theology of the body.
Still, very few of them know what it actually teaches. The purpose
of this article is to introduce some of the themes of John Paul’s
teaching and outline the foundations for building an authentic
marital and family spirituality.
The Body: Revelation of God’s Mystery
The Pope’s thesis, if we let it sink in, is sure to revolutionize
our understanding of the human body, sexuality, and, in turn,
marriage and family life. “The body, and it alone,”
John Paul says, “ is capable of making visible what is
invisible, the spiritual and divine. It was created to transfer
into the visible reality of the world, the invisible mystery
hidden in God from time immemorial, and thus to be a sign of
it” (Feb 20, 1980).
A mouthful of scholarly verbiage, I know. What does it mean?
As physical, bodily creatures we simply cannot see God. He’s
pure Spirit. But God wanted to make his mystery visible to us
so he stamped it into our bodies by creating us as male and
female in his own image (Gn 1:27).
The function of this image is to reflect the Trinity, “an
inscrutable divine communion of [three] Persons” (Nov
14, 1979). John Paul thus concludes that “man became the
‘image and likeness’ of God not only through his
own humanity, but also through the communion of persons which
man and woman form right from the beginning.” And, the
Pope adds, “On all of this, right from ‘the beginning,’
there descended the blessing of fertility linked with human
procreation” (ibid).
The body has a “nuptial meaning” because it reveals
man and woman’s call to become a gift for one another,
a gift fully realized in their “one flesh” union.
The body also has a “generative meaning” that (God
willing) brings a “third” into the world through
their communion. In this way, marriage constitutes a “primordial
sacrament” understood as a sign that truly communicates
the mystery of God’s Trinitarian life and love to husband
and wife, and through them to their children, and through the
family to the whole world.
This is what marital spirituality is all about: participating
in God’s life and love and sharing it with the world.
While this is certainly a sublime calling, it’s not ethereal.
It’s tangible. God’s love is meant to be lived and
felt in daily life as a married couple and as a family. How?
By living according to the full truth of the body.
“In fact, how indispensable,” our Holy Father insists,
“is thorough knowledge of the meaning of the body, in
its masculinity and femininity, along the way of this vocation!
How necessary is a precise awareness of the nuptial meaning
of the body, of its generative meaning – since all that
which forms the content of the life of married couples must
constantly find its full and personal dimension in life together,
in behavior, in feelings!” (Apr 2, 1980).
Embodied Spirituality
One of the greatest threats facing the Church today is a “spiritualism”
in which people disembody their call to holiness. Living a spiritual
life never means eschewing our bodies. Authentic spirituality
is always an embodied spirituality.
This is the very “logic” of Christianity. God communicates
his life to us in and through the body; in and through the Word
made flesh. The spirit that denies this “incarnational
reality” is that of the anti-Christ (see 1 Jn 4:2-3).
Think about this for a moment. John Paul teaches us that the
human body – in the beauty of sexual difference and our
call to nuptial union – possesses a “language”
inscribed by God that not only proclaims His eternal mystery,
but makes that mystery present to us. If there is an enemy of
God who wants to keep us from God’s life and love, where,
then, would he go to do it?
Satan’s goal is to scramble the language of our bodies!
And look how successful he’s been. Because of Satan’s
scheme, most of us are illiterate when it comes to reading the
language of the body. How many of us, for example, think that
our bodies are the last place to look for the revelation of
God’s mystery?
Building an Authentic Spirituality
In order to build an authentic marital spirituality, then,
we must begin by learning to read the true language of the body.
We must pray for the eyes to see God’s mystery revealed
through our bodies and through the marital union itself. Sin
is what blinds us: the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes,
and the pride of life (1 Jn 2:16).
In talking about the love between man and woman, we must contend
primarily with the lust of the flesh. Marriage in no way “legitimizes”
lust. Men and women are called by the power of the Holy Spirit
to experience a “real and deep” victory over lust.
Through the “redemption of our bodies,” the Holy
Spirit impregnates sexual desire “with everything that
is noble and beautiful,” with “the supreme value
which is love” (Oct 22 & 29, 1980).
This is how husbands and wives build an authentic spirituality:
by loving one another according to the Holy Spirit in and through
their bodies. Marital love is shown in numerous ways, but spouses
who are filled with the Spirit realize “among the possible
manifestations of affection, the singular, or rather, exceptional
significance of [the conjugal] act” (Nov 21, 1984). They
come to understand that their sexual union“bears in itself
the sign of the great mystery of creation and redemption”
(Nov 14, 1984). In a word, they come to understand that their
union is “Eucharistic.”
When we receive the Eucharist worthily, it bears new life in
the whole of our lives. When we receive it unworthily, we eat
and drink our condemnation (1 Co 11:29). Similarly, when spouses
open their union to the Holy Spirit, their whole marriage continually
bears new life in the Spirit. However, if spouses close their
union to the Spirit, they undermine the whole reality of their
marriage and their family life.
One of the primary ways we remain open to the Spirit is by
remaining open to children. Who is the Holy Spirit but the Lord
and Giver of Life? Those couples who close their union to children
at the same time close their union to the Holy Spirit. Their
union is no longer a sign of God’s Trinitarian love but,
in fact, becomes a counter-sign of it.
This is why John Paul says that “the antithesis of conjugal
spirituality is constituted, in a certain sense, by the subjective
lack of this understanding [of the dignity of the conjugal act]
which is linked to contraceptive practice and mentality”
(ibid).
For those who are filled with the Holy Spirit, contraception
is simply unthinkable. They know it replaces the true language
of the body with a lie. And lying within the heart of marital
intimacy has a ripple effect, as does speaking the truth. Spouses
who strive to speak honestly in the nuptial embrace strive to
be open and honest with each in the whole of their married life.
As professor Mary Roussseau expresses it, when spouses live
an authentic spirituality, “the love that marks their
marital bed spreads ...into the kitchen, the yard, the supermarket,
the workplace, and beyond. Their love eventually spreads throughout
the world, into the realms of politics, work, education, entertainment,
health care, and international relations. Such is the exact
process by which the civilization of love comes to be”
(Chicago Studies, Vol 39:2, p. 175).
In Conclusion
This is why, according to John Paul, education in the theology
of the body “constitutes ...the essential nucleus of conjugal
spirituality” (Oct 3, 1984). This education is a clarion
call not to become more “spiritual” but to become
more incarnational – to allow the Holy Spirit to impregnate
our bodies with divine life.
This is what happens in the sacraments. The Eucharist and Penance,
in particular, are the “infallible and indispensable”
means, John Paul says, “for forming the Christian spirituality
of married life and family life. With these, that essential
and spiritual creative ‘power’ of love reaches human
hearts and, at the same time, human bodies.... This love, in
fact, allows the building of the whole life of the married couple
according to that ‘truth of the sign,’ by means
of which marriage is built up in its sacramental dignity”
(Oct 3, 1984).
Through this “sacramental dignity” spouses and
families participate in the mystery of the Trinity and proclaim
that mystery to the world in an “embodied spirituality.”
© Christopher West. All rights reserved.
www.ChristopherWest.com
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