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Sin and Shame
Father Richard M. Hogan |
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Chapter 3
In the first cycle of the Theology of
the Body (nos. 1-23) John Paul II applied the phenomenological
method to the study of the second and third chapters of Genesis. In
these Genesis chapters, the Pope sees the first experiences (solitude
and original unity) of the human race experienced by Adam (humanity) and
then by Adam and Eve. Through these experiences recorded in their
consciousness, Adam and Eve, come to know themselves as beings with
minds, wills, and bodies, and as images of God created in and for love.
This self-knowledge is what the Pope calls the meaning of the
experiences which Adam and Eve had. Interestingly, the self-knowledge of
Adam and Eve, gathered subjectively from their experiences, is identical
to what is revealed in the first chapter of Genesis by God in an
objective way.
We see in the application of the phenomenological method to Genesis the
intertwining of what we called the “double flow of data from the
Scriptures.” Human experiences lead not only to meanings
(self-knowledge), but also to the mystery of the human person. The
mystery of human personhood gives rise to questions about how a person
should act and who a person is. In the second and third chapters of
Genesis, we have the first human experiences recorded. But Genesis, as
all of Scripture, is the Revelation of God. So, we find in Genesis the
first experiences of the human race recorded together with their
meanings. We find also the entrance, the door, to the mystery of human
personhood together with the questions arising from this mystery. But
we also find the answers to these questions. Further, the experiences,
their meanings, and the Revelation which clarifies these experiences and
meanings are succinctly and almost inseparably linked. John Paul, in
partially separating these various aspects, has laid the foundation for
the remaining 106 addresses in his Theology of the Body series.
Beginning the second cycle (nos. 24-63), John Paul analyzes in depth
another one of the very first experiences of Adam and Eve: their
nakedness, especially their nakedness after sin. This study is
undertaken in the first ten addresses of the second cycle (24-33). John
Paul clearly demonstrates that this analysis is necessary to understand
the words of Christ which is the subject matter of the entire second
cycle of the Theology of the Body: “You have heard that it was
said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.' But I say to you, everyone who
looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery with her in
his heart.”
In his teaching on adultery, Christ was speaking to the men and women of
his day, to men and women who were the heirs of Adam and Eve. These men
and women were the heirs of the original experiences and their meanings,
but they were also the heirs to the experiences of nakedness,
particularly the nakedness after sin which caused Adam and Eve to be
ashamed. In order to understand what Christ meant by his teaching on
adultery, the Pope argues that we must understand the state of those in
his audience. But to come to know their state is to come to know our
own because we, together with them, are the heirs of Adam and Eve’s sin.
Frequently, to understand a speaker’s intent it is necessary to
understand the audience because a speaker will tailor his words to those
who hear it. This is partially true with Christ’s words on adultery.
However, since Christ directed his remarks to the interior dimensions of
every person, it is even more vital to understand those dimensions to
interpret Christ’s teachings properly. The Pope writes that “Christ
shifts the essence of the problem [of adultery] to another dimension,
when he says: ‘Every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already
committed adultery with her in his heart.’ (According to ancient
translations: ‘has already made her an adultress in his heart,’ a
formula which seems to be more exact). In this way, Christ appeals to
the interior man.”
Since Christ is talking about an internal act, “looking lustfully,” He
is referencing what goes on inside the human person. But what goes on
inside all of us is partly the result of sin. Adam and Eve’s first
experiences of themselves after sin will reveal this internal state of
all of us. These experiences will reveal the internal state of what the
Pope calls, “historical man,” i.e., all human beings who suffer the
effects of original sin (except for Mary and Christ who were free from
sin). Therefore, the study of Adam and Eve’s nakedness after sin helps
us to interpret Christ’s teachings.
The experiences of nakedness before and after sin are can be examined
using the same tools as were used on the experiences of original
solitude and unity. The experiences of nakedness are recorded
subjectively in the second and third chapters of Genesis. The Pope does
this analysis in the first ten addresses of the second cycle of the
Theology of the Body (nos. 24-33). There follows a detailed analysis
of Christ’s words about adultery, to look with lust, and adultery in the
heart (nos. 34-43). This is followed by a few talks delineating Christ’s
words from the ancient Manichean point of view and from the
interpretation of the modern “masters of suspicion” who have a very
pessimistic view of human nature (nos. 44-46). (It might seem from
Christ words about “adultery in the heart” that he was attacking the
human body and accusing everyone rather than holding out the hope of
acting as we were created to act, i.e., to love in a self-giving way.)
A reflection on ethics and eroticism leads the Pope to what he calls the
“redemption of the body” (nos. 47-48). To participate in this
“redemption of the body,” we all need to make an effort, with the help
of Christ, to gain purity (nos. 49-59). This purity can be helped if the
art world and the media cooperate. The second cycle of the Theology
of the Body concludes with four addresses on the topic of the
reproduction of the human body in art and the media (nos. 60-63.)
Using the tools of phenomenology, the Pope examines Adam and Eve’s
experiences of nakedness in the first ten addresses of the second cycle
of the Theology of the Body series. However, the remainder of the
addresses in this second cycle are not a phenomenological analysis of
experiential data as was the entire first cycle of the Theology of
the Body. A large section is devoted to understanding exactly what
Christ was trying to say (nos. 34-43, and even 44-46) and showing that
Christ’s gentle teaching does not injure true spontaneous love (nos.
47-48). The remainder of the talks in this cycle show that Christ’s
teaching is possible through the redemption of the body (which He offers
all of us) and a modest effort on our part to achieve purity (nos. 49-59
and even 60-63).
In this second cycle of the Theology of the Body, the Pope
relies heavily on the principle that every “historical man” has common
experiences. These common experiences known by every one of us are
clarified through Revelation, i.e., through the Word, who is Christ.
Christ “who knows what is in every man”
clarifies the common experience of sinful man. He can do this because He
is God the Son Who reveals the mystery of the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit in and through His visible humanity. In revealing the Father,
Son and Holy Spirit, Christ reveals God. In revealing God, He shows
every single person (who is created in the image and likeness of God)
who he or she is and how he or she should act. Christ “reveals man to
man himself”
because as God He shows every human person (who is an image of God) who
he or she is and how he or she should act. So, Christ knows what is “in
man.” Therefore, his words touching on the deepest experiences of
historical man clarify and explain those experiences. They are essential
to the theology of the body.
In this chapter, we will discuss the analysis of the experiences of
nakedness (nos. 24-33) and the examination of the words of Christ on
adultery and adultery in the heart (nos. 34-46.) In the following
chapter, the remainder of the second cycle will be considered (nos.
47-63).
I. Adam and Eve's Experiences
of Nakedness
Before Adam and Eve sinned, before the Fall (as
it is known to theology), they were naked but not ashamed.
After they sinned, “The eyes of both of them were opened, and they realized
that they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and made loincloths
for themselves.”
They then hid from God who they heard walking in the garden during the cool
part of the day.
There are then two distinct results of sin reported in Genesis. First, they
cover themselves. Second, they are fearful of God. In fact, Adam even tells
God that “I heard you in the garden; but I was afraid, because I was naked,
so I hid myself."
Both of these results of sin mark significant changes. Before the Fall,
they were naked and were not ashamed, i.e., they did not cover themselves.
Further, before the Fall, there was an easy and familiar relationship with
God. Adam receives God’s command not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good
and evil without protest or reaction.
When we are ashamed, fear is almost always present. But Adam and
Eve’s fear was not only connected with their shame at their physical
nakedness. “In all this, ‘nakedness’ has not solely a literal meaning,
it does not refer only to the body. . . . Actually, through ‘nakedness,’
there is manifested man deprived of participation in the Gift, man
alienated from that Love which had been the source of the original gift
. . . .”
Adam and Eve sinned and experienced
shame and fear. This shame and fear registered in their consciousness
and is recorded on the pages of Genesis. But the true cause of Adam and
Eve’s shame and fear transcends merely their physical nakedness. In
fact, John Paul asks rhetorically, “What state of consciousness can be
manifested in the words: ‘I was afraid, because I was naked, so I hid
myself’.”
John Paul answers his own question by
reminding his readers that before sin, Adam was able to know himself as
a person in and through his human body. Adam’s solitude, his awareness
that no other living body was like his own (until Eve was created), was
the source of Adam’s knowledge that he was different than the animals,
that he was a person. After the creation of Eve, the awareness of both
Adam and Eve that their bodies were created so that they could join with
one another was the source of their mutual understanding that they were
each created for love, i.e., that they were created to love each other
as God loved them. Through their consciousness of human solitude (as
distinguished from the animals) and of unity, Adam and Eve came to know
themselves as persons created for love. This knowledge came from Adam
and Eve’s experiences of their own bodies—first knowing that their
bodies were radically different from those of the animals and then
knowing that their bodies as masculine and feminine were created for one
another.
With Adam and Eve’s experience of
nakedness after sin, an experience also founded on the body, their
awareness of their own bodies was radically different from their
previous awareness of their bodies. This altered consciousness of their
own bodies testifies to a radical change in themselves. Adam and Eve’s
experience of shame and fear is not merely shame and fear at their
physical nakedness but it is shame and fear rooted in their new way of
existing in the world—a way not intended for them by God “from the
beginning.”
Adam and Eve were constituted as
persons with bodies and asked to subdue the earth. The words of Adam,
“I was afraid, because I was naked, so I hid myself,” seem “to express
the awareness of being defenseless, and the sense of insecurity of his
bodily structure before the process of nature.”
In other words, before sin Adam and Eve were “in charge.” As persons,
they were not subject to the natural processes, but nature was supposed
to be subject to them. After sin, the original order had been reversed.
Adam and Eve’s fear after sin was the natural reaction to their new
situation: fear at what the processes of nature might do to them.
However, Adam and Eve’s consciousness
of their shame and fear points to something more than a reversal of the
original order of nature. “They sewed fig leaves together and made
loincloths for themselves.” They hid their own bodies “to remove from
man’s sight what is the visible sign of femininity, and from the woman’s
sight what is the visible sign of masculinity.”
In seeing one another naked after sin, they reacted in way that was
contrary to their value systems. They each knew that the other was to
be cherished and loved. However, after sin and observing each other
without clothes, they experienced a reaction in the presence of the
other which was contrary to the proper attitude they knew they should
have towards one another. They were ashamed because their physical
reactions spoke a language: the language of taking and using in a sexual
way. This contrasted with the language of giving and receiving which
their bodies had always previously (before sin) spoken. In short, they
experienced lust and yet, they still knew that they should love, rather
than use one another. Acting contrary to their value system, they were
ashamed of themselves. They were also fearful that acting in this way
would result in the loss of a value: the loss of the gift of the other
because the other would be deeply offended at being considered an object
of use. The loss of the other would have left both of them utterly
alone and abandoned. Shame and fear at the reversal of the order of
nature and at their reactions at seeing each other without clothes both
testify to an different awareness or their bodies.
The Pope writes that Adam and Eve’s
shame “reveals a specific difficulty of perceiving the human
essentiality of one’s own body.”
In a striking formulation of his thesis, the Pope writes that Adam and
Eve’s experiences of their own bodies after sin reveals “a constitutive
break within the human person, almost a rupture of man’s original
spiritual and somatic unity. He realizes for the first time that his
body has ceased drawing upon the power of the spirit . . . . His
original shame bears within it the signs of a specific humiliation
mediated by his body.”
There is a fundamental change in the body/spirit unity of the human
person. Adam and Eve know that this should not be and are ashamed of
themselves because of the lack of unity within themselves. They are also
ashamed at the results of this lack of unity: the lust they sometimes
feel in the presence of the other and the lack of control over the
natural order. Fear accompanies this shame because they know they are
responsible (because of their own sin) for not having the body/spirit
unity they previously had. This fear and shame testifies to what John
Paul calls “an uneasiness of conscience”
They are also fearful of how nature might harm them and fearful of
losing the other: Adam losing Eve and Eve losing Adam.
The “constitutive break within the
human person” was a loss of self-mastery and self-control. After sin,
Adam and Eve did not control their own bodies “in the same way, with
equal simplicity and ‘naturalness,’ as the man of original innocence
did. The structure of self-mastery essential for the person, is, in a
way, shaken to the very foundations in him.”
If a person is constituted primarily by the powers of mind and will, of
thinking and choosing, then in human persons, since the human body is to
express and reveal the person, the mind and will must be the dominant
powers. The mind and will must have a mastery and a control over the
body. When God created Adam and Eve, they enjoyed this self-mastery.
Their minds and wills had the capability of orchestrating their bodily
powers so that their bodies infallibly and always expressed what they
knew and chose. The break in the human person after sin lies precisely
in the lack of control the mind and will have over the body.
We all have experiences of this
“break” in ourselves. We all know that we might decide to eat only a
few potato chips, or one candy bar, and we often find ourselves eating
more then we had decided. We often hear ourselves say, “I changed my
mind.” What happened was that the desires of the body stimulated by the
food, pressed the mind and the will. Weakened as they are by original
sin, the mind and will often “give in.” We think to ourselves, “One more
won’t hurt me,” and then choose in our wills to eat another one. We
alter our choice—we change our minds—because of the press of the bodily
desires on our minds and wills. The author of the Epistle to the Romans
references the lack of self-mastery in all of us (except the Blessed
Virgin and Christ) when he writes that “I see in my members another
principle at war with the law of my mind, taking me captive to the law
of sin that dwells in my members.”
This scenario did not happen to Adam and Eve before sin because they
enjoyed a self-mastery of themselves. Their minds and wills always
orchestrated their bodily powers, not the other way around.
Adam and Eve’s shame after sin points to a reality which shakes “the
very foundations of their existence.”
But it is not just their existence which is shaken to the foundations.
It is every human being who is the heir of Adam and Eve’s sin—the entire
human race except for Mary and Christ. We all suffer the “constitutive
break within the human person.” We all lack the self-mastery which we
are supposed to have. Adam and Eve’s awareness of their experiences
reveals to them what has happened to them. But since we all share in the
effects of original sin, their awareness of their experiences recorded
in the pages of Genesis also reveals to us our own situation. John
Paul’s examination of Adam and Eve’s consciousness is not merely an
exercise in biblical analysis. It is undertaken to illuminate the
situation of every single human person subject to original sin and its
effects.
We experience the “constitutive break” within ourselves which leads
us away from acting as we should. We experience the hostility of nature
and with that comes fear, at least at times, that the forces of nature
will harm us. (Since we are so accustomed to the reversal of the
original order of the human relationship to nature, most of us are
probably not regularly “ashamed” of this. Nevertheless, there are
occasions when we do feel a certain shame-like frustration when we are
unable to orchestrate nature the way we wish, e.g., when the weather is
ugly for a planned outdoor party.) We certainly experience the lust of
the flesh in sexual ways and the fear which accompanies this lust.
The “constitutive break within the human person,” the result of
original sin, has marred our ability to love as we should, i.e., to give
ourselves selflessly in and through our bodies in marriage. As the Pope
writes, after sin, the capacity to express authentic love in and through
the human body “has been shattered.” It is as if the human body “in its
masculinity and femininity no longer constituted the ‘trustworthy’
substratum of the communion of persons, as if its original function were
‘called in question’ in the consciousness of man and woman.”
It is important to note that the Pope writes that it is in the
consciousness of Adam and Eve that the original meaning of the body
is called into question. The experience of lust has led Adam and Eve to
the self-awareness that their bodies are now different, that their
bodies speak a different and an inappropriate language, i.e.,
inappropriate to human dignity. This new self-awareness changes their
appreciation of their own bodies and in turn changes the way they relate
to one another in and through their bodies. Before sin, they were aware
that their bodies as masculine and feminine were created so that they
could give themselves to each other. After sin, this self-awareness of
masculinity and femininity changed. The Pope teaches that they saw their
physical differences, not as a sign and means for their mutual
self-donation to one another, but rather as a sign and means of
opposition, of confrontation. The Pope goes so far as to say that the
sexual differences between Adam and Eve now became an “obstacle” in the
personal relationship between man and woman.
This is obvious if we understand what the original unity of man and
woman was and what sin did. In original unity before sin, Adam and Eve
each expressed through their bodies and total self-donation to the
other. They gave themselves freely and without reservation almost
without thinking about it. With nothing held back and with nothing
“taken” from the other. Theirs was pure gift. After sin, lust caused
them to see each other as purely sexual beings. They saw in each other
the chance to benefit (through sexual pleasure) from the other. This
changed how they each appreciated their own bodies and they each thought
of the other’s body. In turn, their consciousness of the other as a
means of gratification changed their self-gift into something different.
The communion of persons, founded on gift and self-donation, no longer
existed because they no longer loved each other, i.e., no longer
perceived the other as a gift—but rather perceived the other as an
object of self-gratification, as some “thing” to be taken. This
perception destroyed their communion of persons and turned their
relationship into something unworthy of the human person. In addition to
seeing each other as objects to be taken, each of them now was
threatened by the other because to be “taken” is offensive to the human
person. Even after sin, Adam and Eve retained some semblance of their
own dignity and value. They knew that they were not mere things to be
taken by another. To be perceived as a thing to be taken created a lack
of trust between them. As the Pope writes, “Hence the necessity of
hiding before the ‘other’ with one’s own body, with what determines
one’s own femininity-masculinity. This necessity proves the fundamental
lack of trust, which in itself, indicates the collapse of the original
relationship ‘of communion’.”
In addition to their sense of self-worth (through which they knew
that they should not be regarded as mere objects to be “taken”), Adam
and Eve after sin retained a longing to achieve the unity which they had
experienced in the state of original innocence. Along with their sense
of their own self-worth they retained the almost unquenchable and
deep-seated longing for a loving union. So, the woman’s desire will be
for her husband,
i.e., she will long for that unity which is now almost unachievable, the
unity which existed in the state of original innocence. The husband
will also long to receive his wife and in turn give himself to her. But
this longing will often turn to domination. The husband will often
“take” her as an object and even settle for this “taking” as a
counterfeit, a very poor substitute, for receiving her loving
self-donation. She, in turn, sometimes will allow herself to be taken,
as a counterfeit of true love. But if he takes her as a thing, then in
the mystery of their union, he also becomes an object for her. “If man
in his relationship with woman considers her only as an object to gain
possession of and not as a gift, he condemns himself thereby to become
also for her only an object of appropriation, and not a gift.”
Their union is reduced
to one unworthy of human personhood!
In the state of innocence, Adam and Eve knew that they were to make a
self-donation to one another because they understood that their bodies
were the sign and the means of that gift. They understood the nuptial
meaning of their bodies. This original awareness changed with sin and
lust. Lust limits “the nuptial meaning of the body itself, in which man
and woman participated in the state of original innocence. When we speak
of the nuptial meaning of the body, we refer in the first place to the
full awareness of the human being, but we also include all actual
experience of the body in its masculinity and femininity, and, in any
case, the constant predisposition to this experience.”
Their awareness of themselves and each of their acts of union were
different after sin. The meaning of their bodies has changed for them
and thus the nuptial meaning of the body is limited. It has been “driven
back to another plane,”
i.e., from the plane of self-gift to the plane to the plane of
possession. “The human body in its masculinity and femininity has almost
lost the capacity of expressing” love.
Even so, “the nuptial meaning of the body has not become completely
suffocated by concupiscence, but only habitually threatened.”
As the Pope writes, the human heart has become the focal point of the
struggle between love and lust. Lust interferes with love because it
inhibits the freedom necessary to love. If a person is “compelled” by
the desires of the flesh, by lust, towards a physical union with another
person (even one’s spouse), this is hardly love because love is a
completely free self-donation, chosen by the person in his or her
free will. “Concupiscence entails the loss of the interior freedom
of the gift. The [unlimited] nuptial meaning of the body is connected
precisely with this freedom.”
Love is still possible if a person can freely choose to make a
self-donation to the one loved. But this requires control or
self-mastery which is difficult. Precisely it is this self-mastery which
Christ has in mind in his comments regarding lust.
II. Christ's Appeal to the
Human Heart
Christ’s words: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not
commit adultery.' But I say to you, everyone who looks at a woman with
lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart:”
are addressed to “historical” man, to human beings subject to the
“constitutive break within the human person” caused by sin. Further,
these words of Christ, with their emphasis and “adultery in the heart,”
are an appeal to the interior man. “Adultery in the heart” is an
interior act. Christ shifts the focus of morality from external laws and
precepts to the source of human acts, to the interior man. Christ is
asking each one of us to internalize his teaching so that proper
behavior springs from within each of us. We do not commit adultery not
just because there is a law against it, but because the value (the norm)
of not committing adultery springs from within each of is, i.e., from
the internal perception that to commit adultery is to violate a deeply
held personal appreciation of the dignity of the human person. “A living
morality, in the existential sense, is not formed only by the norms that
invest the form of the commandments, precepts, and prohibitions, as in
the case of ‘you shall not commit adultery.’ The morality in which there
is realized the very meaning of being a man . . . is formed in the
interior perception of values, from which there springs duty as the
expression of conscience, as the response of one’s own personal ‘ego’.”
The paradox here is obvious. Christ is addressing human beings
wounded by the “constitutive break” within them. As John Paul has
explained, this “break” occurred “in” each of us and is perceived
interiorly. Christ addresses the interior person and teaches that this
“break” within each of us must be overcome by interiorly accepting norms
of behavior appropriate to the state of original innocence and then
acting on those norms. Not only does Christ identify the problem with
absolute accuracy, he identifies precisely where the problem is: in the
interior acceptance of the situation caused by sin, i.e., in accepting
the notion that it is proper to live the nuptial meaning of the body
only in a limited way.
In fact, this notion was enshrined in law in the Old Testament. When
the Pharisees questioned Christ about the provisions of divorce in the
law of Moses, Christ referred to the Pharisees’s “hardness of heart.
This “hardness of
heart” is precisely the notion that the effects of sin, the “break”
within the human person, means that it is not necessary to strive to act
according to the values known through the original experiences in the
state of innocence. In the reference to “hardness of heart,” Christ
“accuses, so to speak, the whole ‘interior subject’ who is responsible
for the distortion of the [Old Testament] Law.”
Not only were individuals permitting themselves to accept values
inconsistent with the full truth of human dignity (revealed in the
original experiences in the state of innocence), but these limited
values were actually written into the law of whole societies! Not
acquiescing in this situation, Christ asks the Pharisees (and us) to
overcome the “break” within us, to re-interiorize the values present in
the state of original innocence, and then live accordingly.
Still, it is necessary to be accurate about what Christ is asking us
to do. In the Sermon on the Mount, the text on adultery has three
parts. First, there is adultery, itself. Second, there is the element
of “looking with lust.” Third, there is “adultery in the heart.” The
Pope analyzes each of these phrases in light of the Old Testament
tradition (the tradition known to Christ’s hearers) and in light of the
“constitutive break within the human person.”
In the Jewish law of the Old Testament, adultery consisted of
possessing another man’s wife. David was guilty of adultery with
Bathsheba because Bathsheba was the wife of Uriah the Hittite. David had
many wives, but polygamy was not contrary to the law.
Adultery, the “violation of man’s right of possession regarding each
woman who may be his own legal wife (usually one among many),” was
against the law.
On the other hand, the prophets of the Old Testament use the spousal
analogy to explain the relationship between the Chosen People and God.
The prophets describe the Chosen People as committing adultery against
God, as a wife might commit adultery by leaving her husband and clinging
to another, when they abandon God and worship the false gods of their
neighbors. This is adultery not because God “possesses” the Chosen
People, but because they have abandoned their love for God, i.e., they
have abandoned their “communion” with God to which they are committed by
the oft-repeated Old Testament covenants between God and His people.
Both the legal and the prophetic traditions of the Old Testament would
have been known to the members of Christ’s audience. However, the
prophetic concept of the communion of two people in marriage (as
illustrated by the conceit of God’s marriage to the Chosen People) is
much closer to the content of Christ’s teaching. According to the
prophets, “Adultery is a sin because it constitutes the breakdown of the
personal covenant between the man and the woman.”
This is the sense in which Christ speaks of adultery in his famous
statement: “everyone who looks at a woman with lust has already
committed adultery with her in his heart.”
When Christ speaks about “looking with lust,” he is speaking “in the
context of human experience.”
He is referencing “the experience and the conscience of the man of every
time and place”
because every single human being after Adam and Eve (except, of course,
for Mary and Christ) carries with him or her the original experiences,
including that of nakedness after sin. We all have experienced what Adam
and Eve experienced when they were naked before one another and were
ashamed. Christ does not need to explain lust because it is part of all
of our lives and because, for his listeners, descriptions are not
lacking in the Old Testament.
In an incredibly clear statement (one that emphasizes how everything
we experience is “charged” with a positive or negative value), the Pope
observes that lust “indicates an experience of value to the body, in
which its ‘nuptial’ significance ceases to be that, just because of
concupiscience.”
In looking lustfully, the body of the other is “charged” with a value
which eliminates its true value in the experience of the one looking
lustfully. Through the “look,” the body of the other person suffers the
loss (in the mind of the one looking) of its matrimonial significance.
The nuptial meaning of the other’s body is separated from that person.
Lust reduces the value of the other person to only one characteristic,
the sexual one. The mutual attraction between the masculine and the
feminine, established by God when he created us male and female, is
founded on the mystery of human personhood. It is founded on a whole
host of personal characteristics and values as expressed by each
individual person either through his masculinity or her femininity. The
lustful look reduces the mutual attraction to one value: sex. “It is
one thing to be conscious that the value of sex is a part of all the
rich storehouse of values with which the female appears to the man. It
is another to reduce all the personal riches of femininity to that
single value.”
This reduction of the other is what it means to “look with lust.” Christ
equates this “looking” to “adultery in the heart.”
But, as John Paul notes, this is not “in the heart” until there is a
choice, a decision, to embrace this reduction of the other person to one
value. With that choice, that decision, the individual who “looks with
lust” has decided that the object of his look exists in a different way
for him. He has subjectively embraced an altered reality (altered from
the way things actually are). This decision becomes part of who he is.
It shapes him into existing in a certain altered relationship with the
one who is the object of his look. He has shaped or determined himself
in a certain way by this decision and he has, in his mind, altered the
way the object of his look exists.
All this rests on the principle, oft repeated in the Pope’s works,
that we become what we do. By repeatedly doing certain things, we come
what we do. Those who play the piano, gradually shape themselves into
piano players (although, not necessarily accomplished piano players).
Similarly, those who cook, become cooks. Our decisions and choices
determine who we are. Free will allows us to make choices which, in
turn, allows us to determine who we are. When we make decisions
contrary to reality, we shape ourselves into people who live in a world
determined by ourselves, not by the way things are. When we look
lustfully, we are trying to re-create the world in our own image, i.e.,
we are trying to change the way others exist and the way we exist in
relation to them. This, then, is “adultery in the heart.”
In order to make this point as clear as possible, the Pope devotes
some lines to the possibility of a husband looking at his wife in a
lustful way, or vice-versa. This is also “adultery in the heart.”
Although adultery is defined legally as participating in a sexual union
with someone who is not one’s spouse, “adultery in the heart,” as
defined by Christ, is to reduce another to a mere object that satisfies
one’s desire, namely lust. In this sense, husbands and wives can commit
adultery with one another. When they do, they alter the fundamental
significance of each other and the way they both exist for one another.
This alteration of their true significance, or, as the Pope has put it,
the separation of the nuptial meaning of their bodies from their
persons, has devastating consequences for all of humanity because “the
future of humanity passes by way of the family.”
“Human life, by its nature, is ‘coeducative’ and its dignity, its
balance, depend at every moment of history and at every point of
geographical longitude and latitude, on ‘who’ she will be for him, and
he for her.”
If human persons do not see the full dignity and value of each other,
especially in the heart of the family, then the worth and value of each
one of us, and of all future generations is threatened. “Adultery in
the heart,” the reduction, with a look, of the other to an object for
me, distorting the actual way the other exists in reality, has profound
consequences which threaten the very existence of humanity on the
earth. Christ warns us of this danger because he knows “what was in
man.”
III. Manicheans and the
Masters of Suspicion
Christ’s warning could be interpreted as an accusation against all
“historical” men and women, i.e., all men and women effected by original
sin. The Pope specifically asks this question: “Is the heart accused?”
by Christ’s words.
The Pope also asks himself what the person who accepts Christ’s words
should do; how should such a person act. In other words, how are
Christ’s words binding on the interior person, on the hearts of each of
us, and then how are these interior attitudes of the heart translated
into appropriate action.
Since each of us is a completely free agent, we each act according to
our own insights and values. Christ’s words need to be interiorized and
become part of the value system of each one of us. Then, we strive to
act according to those values. This is what John Paul II calls the
process of the “interpenetration of ethos [the values Christ
taught] and praxis [our acts which follow on the interiorization
of Christ’s teachings].
This process, which continually goes on in the hearts of each one of us
as we enter into a dialogue with Christ and face different situations
almost on a daily basis, is for the most part private and hidden within
each person. Still, intellectuals have written about their reaction to
Christ’s words. They have made public their encounter and dialogue with
Christ. The Pope calls these reflections the echo of Christ’s
words.
One such echo was the Manichean interpretation which held that
it was not just lust which was condemned, but the object of lust, the
human body in its masculinity and femininity. It is not the lustful
look which is evil revealing an attitude of the heart, it is the object
of the lustful look. The evil was transferred in the Manichean view
from the interior attitude to the object looked at. This transference
is common in many areas of human endeavor. For example, some have
suggested that if people drink alcoholic beverages to excess, it is not
those who drink who are committing an evil. Rather, the alcoholic
beverages themselves are evil. Similarly, some would say that guns are
evil in themselves because they are used to kill people. In this view,
it is not the one who kills who is acting improperly, it is the object,
the weapon, he or she uses which is evil: the gun. All these are
examples of transferring the evil of an act from within a person to the
exterior object. In the case of the Manichean interpretation of Christ’s
words, it is the human body itself which is evil. As the Pope writes,
this is a terrible distortion of Christ’s meaning.
Christ’s words on adultery and adultery in the heart, far from being
a condemnation of the body, are “the affirmation of the body as an
element which, together with the spirit, determines man’s ontological
subjectivity and shares in his dignity as a person.”
A Manichean attitude would lead to a “annihilation of the body,”
as an evil. Christ is appealing to all people to realize the incredible
value and dignity of the human body as the expression of the human
person and the means of expressing a profound personal union of love.
In the “Manichean mentality, the body and sexuality constitute, so to
speak, an anti-value,” for Christianity, on the contrary, they remain a
‘value not sufficiently appreciated’.”
The Pope goes on to remark that not only are Christ words not a
condemnation of the body, they are not even a condemnation of the human
heart. Rather, Christ is appealing to the human heart. He is asking each
of us not to submit to the temptations of lust. “The appeal to master
the lust of the flesh springs precisely from the affirmation of the
personal dignity of the body and of sex, and serves only this dignity.”
John Paul next argues that Christ’s words are indeed an appeal and
not an accusation of the human heart as in the case of those he calls
the “masters of suspicion:” Freud, Marx, and Nietzsche. These three men
discovered, argues John Paul, the triple forms of lust mentioned in
Scripture. Freud discovered in humanity the lust of the flesh. Marx
discovered what the Bible calls the lust of the eyes, the lust for
wealth and things. Nietzsche discovered in humanity what the Bible
calls the pride of life, the lust to make oneself into an all-powerful
being. It is an excessive self-love which shuts out everyone else.
Freud, Marx, and Nietzsche accused humanity of these forms of lust, but
offered no solution, no way to overcome these weaknesses. Thus, we are
left with the accusation and nothing else.
Christ also identifies these forms of lust, particularly that of the
lust of the flesh. But He does not stop with the accusation. At the same
time that He warns us not to look lustfully, He appeals to each of us to
live in accordance with the original plan manifested so wondrously in
Genesis before sin. He calls us to re-affirm the dignity of the human
body in the miraculous differences of masculinity and femininity.
Christ makes this appeal, and it is an effective one, because
simultaneously with the appeal, Christ gives us the means of answering
the appeal: the Redemption and the grace flowing from it.
“Redemption is a truth, a reality, in the name of which man must feel
called, and ‘called with efficacy’.” Called to what? Called “to
rediscover, nay more, to realize the nuptial meaning of the body and to
express in this way the interior freedom of the gift.”
No better conclusion to this article could be given than the words of
Pope John Paul II as the conclusion of his forty-sixth address in the
Theology of the Body series
The
appeal contained in Christ’s words in the Sermon on the Mount cannot
be an act detached from the context of concrete existence. It always
means—though only in the dimension of the act to which it refers—the
rediscovery of THE MEANING OF THE WHOLE OF EXISTENCE, OF THE MEANING
OF LIFE, in which there is contained also that meaning of the body
which here we call ‘nuptial.’ . . . These words [Christ’s words]
reveal not only another ethos, but also another vision of man’s
possibilities. It is important that he, precisely in his ‘heart,’
should not only feel irrevocably accused and given as prey to the
lust of the flesh, but that he should feel forcefully called in this
same heart. Called precisely to that supreme value that is love.
Called as a person in the truth of his masculinity and femininity,
in the truth of the body. Called in that truth which has been his
heritage ‘from the beginning,’ the heritage of his heart, which is
deeper than the sinfulness inherited, deeper than lust in its three
forms. The words of Christ, set in the whole reality of creation and
redemption, reactivate that deeper heritage and give it real power
in man’s life.
[1] See Matthew 5:27-28.
[2] See See no. 24, Theology of the Body, April 16, 1980: "Christ
Appeals to Man’s Heart," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 16.
[3] See no. 34, Theology of the Body, August 6, 1980: "Sermon on the
Mount to the Men of Our Day," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 32.
[4] See John Paul II, Redemptor Hominis, The Redeemer of Man, L’Osservatore
Romano (English Edition), vol. 12, no. 12, (March 19, 1979), no. 8.
[5] See Genesis 2:25.
[6] See Genesis 3:7.
[7] See Genesis 3:10.
[8] See Genesis 2:16-17.
[9] See no. 27, Theology of the Body, May 14, 1980: "Real Significance of
Original Nakedness," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol. 13,
no. 20.
[10] See no. 27, Theology of the Body, May 14, 1980: "Real Significance of
Original Nakedness," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol. 13,
no. 20.
[11] See no. 27, Theology of the Body, May 14, 1980: "Real Significance of
Original Nakedness," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol. 13,
no. 20.
[12] See no. 28, Theology of the Body, May 28, 1980: "A Fundamenal
Disquiet In All Human Existence," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 22.
[13] See no. 28, Theology of the Body, May 28, 1980: "A Fundamenal
Disquiet In All Human Existence," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 22.
[14] See no. 28, Theology of the Body, May 28, 1980: "A Fundamenal
Disquiet In All Human Existence," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 22.
[15] See no. 28, Theology of the Body, May 28, 1980: "A Fundamenal
Disquiet In All Human Existence," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 22.
[16] See no. 28, Theology of the Body, May 28, 1980: "A Fundamenal
Disquiet In All Human Existence," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 22.
[17] See Romans 7:23.
[18] See no. 27, Theology of the Body, May 14, 1980: "Real
Significance of Original Nakedness," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 20.
[19] See no. 29, Theology of the Body, June 4, 1980: "Relationship of Lust
to Communion of Persons," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 23.
[20] See no. 29, Theology of the Body, June 4, 1980: "Relationship of Lust
to Communion of Persons," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 23.
[21] See Genesis 3:16.
[22] See no. 33, Theology of the Body, July July 30, 1980: "Opposition in
the Human Heart Between the Spirit and the Body" L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, no. 31.
[23]See no. 31, Theology of the Body, June 25, 1980: "Lust Limits the
Nuptial Meaning of the Body," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 26.
[24] See no. 32, Theology of the Body, July 23, 1980: "The ‘Heart"
A Battlefield Between Love and Lust" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 30.
[25] See no. 32, Theology of the Body, July 23, 1980: "The ‘Heart"
A Battlefield Between Love and Lust" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 30.
[26] See no. 32, Theology of the Body, July 23, 1980: "The ‘Heart"
A Battlefield Between Love and Lust" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 30.
[27] See no. 32, Theology of the Body, July 23, 1980: "The ‘Heart"
A Battlefield Between Love and Lust" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 30.
[28] See Matthew 5:27-28.
[29] See no. 24, Theology of the Body, April 16, 1980: "Christ
Appeals to Man’s Heart" L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 16.
[30] See Matthew 19:3-8.
[31] See no. 34, Theology of the Body, August 6, 1980: "Sermon on
the Mount to the Men of our Day,"L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 32.
[32] See 2 Samuel 11:1-27.
[33] See no. 35, Theology of the Body, August 13, 1980: "Content of
Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery," L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, nos. 33-34.
[34] See no. 37, Theology of the Body, August 27, 1980: "Adultery: A
Breakdown of the Personal Covenant," L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 35.
[35] See Matthew 5:28.
[36] See no. 38, Theology of the Body, September 3, 1980: "Meaning of
Adultery Transferred From the Body to the Heart," L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, no. 36.
[37] See no. 38, Theology of the Body, September 3, 1980: "Meaning of
Adultery Transferred From the Body to the Heart," L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, no. 36.
[38] See no. 39, Theology of the Body, September 10, 1980: "Concupiscence
as a Separation From Matrimonial Significance of the Body," L’Osservatore
Romano (English Edition), vol. 13, no. 37.
[39] See no. 40, Theology of the Body, September 17, 1980: "Mutual
Attraction Differs From Lust," L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 38.
[40] See John Paul II, The Apostolic Exhortation on the Family, Familiaris
Consortio, no. 86.
[41] See no. 43, Theology of the Body, October 8, 1980: "Interpreting the
Concept of Concupiscence" L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 41.
[42] See no. 43, Theology of the Body, October 8, 1980: "Interpreting the
Concept of Concupiscence" L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition), vol.
13, no. 41.
[43] See no. 44, Theology of the Body, October 15, 1980: "Gospel Values
and Duties of the Human Heart" L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 42.
[44] See no. 44, Theology of the Body, October 15, 1980: "Gospel Values
and Duties of the Human Heart" L’Osservatore Romano (English Edition),
vol. 13, no. 42.
[45] See no. 45, Theology of the Body, October 22, 1980: "Realization of
the Body According to the Plan of the Creator" L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, no. 43.
[46] See no. 45, Theology of the Body, October 22, 1980:
"Realization of the Body According to the Plan of the Creator" L’Osservatore
Romano (English Edition), vol. 13, no. 43.
[47] See no. 45, Theology of the Body, October 22, 1980: "Realization of
the Body According to the Plan of the Creator" L’Osservatore Romano
(English Edition), vol. 13, no. 43.
[48] See no. 46, Theology of the Body, October 29, 1980: "Power of
Redeeming Completes Power of Creating" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 44.
[49] See no. 46, Theology of the Body, October 29, 1980: "Power of
Redeeming Completes Power of Creating" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 44.
[50] See no. 46, Theology of the Body, October 29, 1980: "Power of
Redeeming Completes Power of Creating" L’Osservatore Romano (English
Edition), vol. 13, no. 44.
March 5th, 2003 --- Fr. Richard Hogan
N ext
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