Anthropological foundations of the
difference between marriage and “de facto” unions
(19) Marriage is based on some well-defined anthropological foundations which
distinguish it from other kinds of union and which—beyond the realm of concrete
action and what is “factual”—root it in the very essence of the person of the
woman or the man.
These
presuppositions include: equality between men and women, for both are persons
equally [28][28] (although in different ways); the complementary
character of the sexes[29][29] from which comes their natural inclination toward
the generation of children; the possibility to love one another precisely
because they are sexually different and complementary in such a way that “this
love is expressed and perfected uniquely through the acts proper to marriage”;[30][30] the possibility—of freedom—to set up a stable and
definitive relationship, i.e., one that is due in justice;[31][31] and, lastly, the social dimension of the conjugal
and family condition which constitutes the first context of education and
openness to society through family relations (which contribute to shaping the
identity of the human person).[32][32]
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