I am very happy to be here.
This is going to be a soul-searching homily. It will give you
much to think about, to reflect upon, and with God’s grace to
act upon.
I’m going to talk about God’s beautiful plan for
spousal love, for marriage and family. For all important
things in life, God has a plan, a design. He wants us to know
that plan, and then to freely choose to accept it, and to live
it. In this way, we will find happiness.
So, what is God’s plan for marriage and spousal love?
Go back to the beginning, to chapter 2 of the book of Genesis:
“The Lord God then built up into a woman the rib that
he had taken from the man. When he brought her to the man, the
man said: ‘This one, at last, is bone of my bones, and flesh of
my flesh; this one shall be called ‘woman,’ for out of ‘her man’
this one has been taken.’ That is why a man leaves his father
and mother and clings to his wife, and the two of them become
one body” (Gen 2:22-4).
Marriage, as God designed it, is between one man
and one woman. It is a lifetime commitment, and requires total
devotion and fidelity. Spousal love, as God designed it, is
making the total gift of a husband, of himself, to this wife.
She accepts that gift, and then, in turn, she makes the total
gift of herself to him. And he accepts her self-donation. It
is a total gift, an unconditional gift, with no reservations. A
couple grows in their love for each other over the years. They
form a communion of persons, sharing their lives, their love,
their life-giving powers and their destiny.
Simply put, God’s plan for spousal love is total
abstinence before marriage, and total fidelity in marriage, and
always reverencing life.
Today we have drifted, and deviated, a long way from
this plan, and we need to find our way back to the truth of
real love. Look at the divorce rate today: 40% and then some.
That is not God’s plan for marriage. Nationwide, one out
of every four unborn children is aborted. That is not God’s
plan for human life. There is massive use of contraception
and sterilization. This goes contrary to God’s plan for
spousal love. Now we find a widespread reluctance on the
part of young people to get married. Cohabitation and single
sex unions are not God’s plan for human sexuality. We
need to find our way back to living God’s wonderful plan for
life, love, marriage and family.
God gives us lots of help through His Church. The
Church gives us good teaching about morality, so that we
can know what is right and good. The Church gives us the
sacraments, especially the Sacrament of the Eucharist and of
Reconciliation, so that we have the strength to acquire
self-mastery and self-control. Through the Church, God gives us
the sacrament of Marriage so that we can live the requirements
of total fidelity and remain open to the goodness of our
fertility. And the Church teaches us Natural Family
Planning, so that we can exercise responsible parenthood
using morally good means.
NFP teaches us how to value and understand our
fertility. But it teaches us much more. Couples teach other
couples. They learn more about what all goes into “making the
total gift of self.” They learn that love is more than instant
gratification; sometimes it demands patience, giving priority to
the needs of the other, and even a willingness to suffer for
the well-being of another.
A person caught up in the contraceptive mentality has a
lot to learn about real love, about God’s plan for spousal
love. NFP is exactly what our times need. It is much more than
a method. It is spirituality, a way of living. It builds good
marriages, loving spouses, and healthy-happy families.
[That is why there will be a three-hour conference this
afternoon on “God’s Plan for Spousal Love,” beginning at
___________ in the __________________. And for those who can’t
make the conference, there will be a shorter presentation
immediately after this Mass at the __________________ by Dr.
_______________ and __________________
_______________________. I cordially invite you all to come
to these events.]
Today there are some attitudes among Catholics that
need to be challenged.
1) Some people think that contraception and sterilization
do not affect their marriage. But just look at the divorce
rate today. It climbs steadily with the spread of
contraception. Many wives feel they are being used. They feel
like objects, instead of persons. Many couples complain about a
lack of communications. But this lack of communication begins
in the bedroom.
2) Another contemporary attitude that needs to be challenged
is that children are a by-product of marriage. They come
when we want them, at the time we want them. This attitude
implies that we can turn our fertility on and off. Children
become a commodity, instead of being our peers, equal to us in
their value and worth. You sometimes hear the attitude: “We are
entitled to a perfect child.” If the sonogram reveals a
defect, then abort. Or you hear the statement, “We can’t afford
more than two, and day care.” This is something like having a
“hobby- family.” Have you heard this before? “We must space
them five years apart, because we can’t have two in college at
the same time.” All these attitudes imply that we can turn our
fertility on and off. But God’s plan for our fertility is that
it is always a good, always a gift. And we are to treasure it
as such.
3) Another attitude that need to be challenged is that
contraception is a great technological breakthrough for our
times. It eliminates the need for self-control. But real
manhood doesn’t rely upon pills to substitute for
self-mastery. Every young person must acquire self-mastery and
chastity. The Catechism teaches us “Chastity includes an
apprenticeship in self-mastery which is a training in human
freedom. The alternative is clear: either man governs his
passions and find peace, or he lets himself be dominated by them
and becomes unhappy” (Sir 1:22) (CCC #2339). Without
self-mastery we can only have “safe sex,” since we can‘t have
good sex. What does the term “unprotected sex” tell you about
contraception? Protect yourself from what? From your spouse?
From love? From the gift of fertility? If a husband uses the
argument “I can’t control myself,” then what happens on a
business trip, or when his wife is sick?
Brothers and sisters, we all must make a leap of
faith. Trust in God, not the Pill. The Pill attempts to
avoid real challenges; it lures us into thinking that there is
no need for making sacrifices. But God wants more from us. He
wants more than our money. He wants persons who will live
forever. You might have to change your life, but God will
help you. He will show you the way. And he will give you the
strength. When we stop trusting in God, then we rely just upon
ourselves.
Think about our God who created us, and the entire
universe, for one reason: because He loves us. Think of our
God who created us as male and female, with the gift of
fertility, so that we could learn how to love. Think of Jesus,
the perfect husband, who so loved his bride, the Church, that He
was willing to lay down his life for her on the cross. Think of
Jesus when he tells us: “Come to me all you who are burdened
and weary. Take up my cross and come follow me, and I will give
you rest. For my burden is light and my yoke is sweet. Think
of the Holy Sprit who is “the Lord and Giver of all Life.” The
Holy Spirit makes you and me become temples of the Holy Spirit.
My brothers and sisters, reflect upon God’s wonderful
plan for us: for marriage, for spousal love, for children and
the family. God wants what is best for us. But we must be
willing to accept his magnificent plan for us, be willing to
trust in God’s grace in our lives to help us live His plan, and
be willing to always remain in His love by keeping His
commandments.