
WHAT IS SPOUSAL LOVE? |

Every couple wants a deeply committed marriage and a happy
family. All of us want to reverse current trends in no-fault
easy divorce, broken families, single moms, and fatherless
families. But how?
We can rediscover God’s plan for spousal love. If we do
this, and use all the helps He provides to make this plan
possible, then there will be a return to successful
marriages, committed relationships, and healthy-happy
families.
That is why Karol Wojtyla wrote the Theology of the Body in
the early 1970s, and then used it for the content of 128
Wednesday audiences during the first four years of his
pontificate. He wanted to probe into what Jesus taught us
about spousal love in divine revelation. To this, he added
his own insights gleaned from his studies in philosophical
ethics and moral theology, especially using Christian
Personalism and phenomenology. John Paul wanted to provide
us with a “total picture” of marriage and spousal love,
using divine revelation, teachings of the Magisterium, and
good reasoning.
In many ways, the Theology of the Body (TOB) can be seen as
providing a massive background for understanding the key
teaching of Humanae Vitae, that every act of spousal love
must be open to the unitive (love-giving) dimension and to
the procreative (life-giving) dimension of the act. And this
is highly important because spousal love is expressed most
concretely and poignantly by the spousal act.
The TOB concentrates upon the significance of the fact that
we are bodied- persons, either male or female, endowed with
fertility and sexuality. But there are many ways to be
confused about this, and to miss the true meaning of spousal
love.
If we are bodied-persons, then how close to our core
identity is our body? Modern trends, since Francis Bacon,
Descartes and Kant, regard the human body as something
sub-personal, not part of my real self. My real self, they
think, is my self-awareness, consciousness, and the ability
to think and communicate. My body is simply part of the
material world, over which we have greater and greater
control. Thus we see the trend to accept all sorts of
interventions and controls over our bodies: contraception,
sterilization, abortion, artificial procreation, cloning,
eugenics and euthanasia. Michael Waldstein provides a good
treatment of this in his extensive introduction to a new and
more complete translation of the TOB. See pp. 34-77 of his
Man and Woman He Created Them (Pauline Press, Boston: 2006).
A true anthropology views the human person as a composite of
an immaterial (and eternal) spirit united with a material
body. My body is an integral part of my identity. I do not
have a body; I am my body. What you do to my body, you do to
me. We are bodied-persons, not disembodied spirits. We are
incarnate spirits, and spirit-filled bodies.
Thus we cannot view, or treat, our bodies as something
extraneous to our very selves. We should not redefine sex as
a mutual search for pleasure in intimacy while sterilizing
its life-giving dimension. We should not reject the meaning
God has written into spousal love and its most
characteristic act, which is a language of total self-giving
and fruitfulness. True human fulfillment in the sexual
sphere can only be found by following this divine plan for
human love. Authentic growth in learning how to love comes
not by way of technology, but by way of personal gift and
total surrender.
In his Wednesday audience of 22 Aug 84 (TOB 123:7), Pope
John Paul explains the essential evil of contracepted sex.
“In the case of an artificial separation of these two
meanings in the conjugal act, a real bodily union is
brought about, but it does not correspond to the inner truth
and dignity of personal communion, ‘communio
personarum.’ This communion demands, in fact, that the
‘language of the body’ be expressed reciprocally in the
integral truth of its meaning. If this truth is lacking, one
can speak neither of the truth of the reciprocal gift of
self nor of the reciprocal acceptance of oneself by the
other person. Such a violation of the inner order of
conjugal communion, a communion that plunges its roots into
the very order of the person, constitutes the essential evil
of the contraceptive act.”
If we do not understand what the spousal act was designed to
express and accomplish, then we will never arrive at a true
understanding of spousal love, marriage, or a family.
Cordially yours,
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
mhabiger@kansasmonks.org
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