PART
TWO
THE PLAN OF GOD FOR MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY
Man, the Image of the
God Who Is Love
11. God
created man in His own image and likeness(20): calling
him to existence through love, He called him at the same time for love.
God is love(21) and in Himself He lives a mystery of personal
loving communion. Creating the human race in His own image and continually
keeping it in being, God inscribed in the humanity of man and woman the
vocation, and thus the capacity and responsibility, of love and communion.(22)
Love is therefore the fundamental and innate vocation of every human being.
As an
incarnate spirit, that is a soul which expresses itself in a body and a body
informed by an immortal spirit, man is called to love in his unified totality.
Love includes the human body, and the body is made a sharer in spiritual love.
Christian
revelation recognizes two specific ways of realizing the vocation of the human
person in its entirety, to love: marriage and virginity or celibacy. Either one
is, in its own proper form, an actuation of the most profound truth of man, of
his being "created in the image of God."
Consequently,
sexuality, by means of which man and woman give themselves to one another
through the acts which are proper and exclusive to spouses, is by no means
something purely biological, but concerns the innermost being of the human
person as such. It is realized in a truly human way only if it is an integral
part of the love by which a man and a woman commit themselves totally to one
another until death. The total physical self-giving would be a lie if it were
not the sign and fruit of a total personal self-giving, in which the whole
person, including the temporal dimension, is present: if the person were to
withhold something or reserve the possibility of deciding otherwise in the
future, by this very fact he or she would not be giving totally.
This
totality which is required by conjugal love also corresponds to the demands of
responsible fertility. This fertility is directed to the generation of a human
being, and so by its nature it surpasses the purely biological order and
involves a whole series of personal values. For the harmonious growth of these
values a persevering and unified contribution by both parents is necessary.
The only
"place" in which this self-giving in its whole truth is made possible
is marriage, the covenant of conjugal love freely and consciously chosen,
whereby man and woman accept the intimate community of life and love willed by
God Himself(23) which only in this light manifests its true meaning. The
institution of marriage is not an undue interference by society or authority, nor the extrinsic imposition of a form. Rather it is an
interior requirement of the covenant of conjugal love which is publicly
affirmed as unique and exclusive, in order to live in complete fidelity to the
plan of God, the Creator. A person's freedom, far from being restricted by this
fidelity, is secured against every form of subjectivism or relativism and is
made a sharer in creative Wisdom.
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