
THE CHURCH HOLDS OUT SACRAMENTAL MARRIAGE AS AN
ICON, A WINDOW, INTO THE INNER LIFE OF THE TRINITY.
|
Taken
from: Coming Home
Dr. Gerard M. Nadal: Science in Service of the Pro-Life
Movement
http://gerardnadal.com/
Today in the calendar of the Church we celebrate the
Solemnity of The Most Holy Trinity. It is a great feast day
for the pro-life movement.
In our understanding of the Trinity, the Father gives
Himself totally to the Son, and the Son gives Himself
totally to the Father. In this reciprocal act of radical
self-donation made in Love, the Holy Spirit of God is
generated. The Church holds out sacramental marriage as an
icon, a window, into the inner life of the Trinity.
The mutual submission of husbands and wives to one another
of which Saint Paul speaks is not the servile condition that
radical feminism would have us believe. It is rather the
same total emptying of self, the same radical self-donation
as characterizes the inner life of God. In that complete
giving and receiving of self between spouses, there can be
no barriers. In that self-donation, new life is generated as
the product of spousal love.
The Church teaches contraception as an intrinsic evil
precisely because it is an assault on our imitation of the
inner life of the Trinity, because it is an assault on our
fertility, of our capacity to generate new life as the
expression of our love. It is a barrier that is out of sync
with the natural rhythms of human fertility and its cycles.
Natural Family Planning takes into view those cycles and
does not erect such barriers as to make of marital union a
mere plaything devoid of openness and responsibility.
Sterile marriages, marriages that are parsimonious in their
approach to love and its fullest expressions beyond the
bedroom, that are even hostile to life, are marriages that
reject the paradigm of the inner life of the Trinity. The
four Gospels are nothing, if they are not one long
revelation into the inner life of the Trinity. As Jesus
said, “As the Father has loved me {completely}, so I have
loved you {completely}.” and “Love one another as I have
loved you,” which is to say, completely and selflessly.
So God gives us marriage that we might have a vehicle
through which we learn to love, mirroring the example set by
the inner Life of the Trinity. God is truly three persons in
one entity because that oneness comes about through radical,
mutual self-donation. That’s how the two become one in
marriage: two persons, one in mind and heart, and even
almost in being. And in those best of marriages where
self-donation comes closest to perfection, we have reflected
for us the inner life of the Trinity. This is what Jesus was
getting at in His prayer to the Father in John 17:
20 ″My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for
those who will believe in me through their message, 21 that
all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I
am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may
believe that you have sent me. 22 I have given them the
glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one:
23 I in them and you in me. May they be brought to complete
unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved
them even as you have loved me. 24 ″Father, I want those you
have given me to be with me where I am, and to see my glory,
the glory you have given me because you loved me before the
creation of the world. 25 ″Righteous Father, though the
world does not know you, I know you, and they know that you
have sent me. 26 I have made you known to them, and will
continue to make you known in order that the love you have
for me may be in them and that I myself may be in them.”
This model of the Trinity in our lives works when we
ask the Holy Spirit of God to move in us, in our marriages.
It works when we ask the Spirit to teach us wisdom and love,
when we are prepared to abandon sin and empty our lives of
all impediments that lead us to parsimony, rather than
openness.
Especially openness to Life.
BIO
Dr. Nadal holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology
with a minor in Philosophy, Master of Science in Cellular
and Molecular Biology, Master of Philosophy in Biology, and
Ph.D. in Molecular Microbiology from Saint John’s
University, New York City. Between his B.A. and M.S.
studies, Dr. Nadal studied for a year in Seminary and then
Post-baccalaureate Science for three years at Columbia
University, New York City.
Recently, Dr Nadal has joined the Center for Morality in
Public Life as Editor and columnist, as well as columnist
for Headline Bistro, an online news and opinion source for
Roman Catholics published by the Knights of Columbus
He has a very good website: http://gerardnadal.com/
- back to
Q & A --