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Motherhood according to the Spirit
21. Virginity according to the Gospel means renouncing
marriage and thus physical motherhood. Nevertheless, the renunciation of
this kind of motherhood, a renunciation that can involve great sacrifice for a
woman, makes possible a different kind of motherhood: motherhoad "according
to the Spirit" (cf. Rom 8:4). For virginity does not
deprive a woman of her prerogatives. Spiritual motherhood takes on many
different forms. In the life of consecrated women, for example, who live
according to the charism and the rules of the various apostolic Institutes, it
can express itself as concern for people, especially the most needy: the sick,
the handicapped, the abandoned, orphans, the elderly, children, young people,
the imprisoned and, in general, people on the edges of society. In this way
a consecrated woman finds her Spouse, different and the same in each and
every person, according to his very words: "As you did it to one of the
least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40). Spousal
love always involves a special readiness to be poured out for the sake of those
who come within one's range of activity. In marriage this readiness, even
though open to all, consists mainly in the love that parents give to their
children. In virginity this readiness is open to all people, who are
embraced by the love of Christ the Spouse.
Spousal love - with its maternal potential
hidden in the heart of the woman as a virginal bride - when joined to Christ,
the Redeemer of each and every person, is also predisposed to being open to
each and every person. This is confirmed in the religious communities of
apostolic life, and in a diflerent way in communities of contemplative life, or
the cloister. There exist still other forms of a vocation to virginity for the
sake of the Kingdom; for example, the Secular Institutes, or the communities of
consecrated persons which flourish within Movements, Groups and Associations.
In all of these the same truth about the spiritual motherhood of virgins
is confirmed in various ways. However, it is not only a matter of communal
forms but also of non-communal forms. In brief, virginity as a woman's vocation
is always the vocation of a person - of a unique, individual person. Therefore
the spiritual motherhood which makes itself felt in this vocation is also
profoundly personal.
This is also the basis of a specific convergence
between the virginity of the unmarried woman and the motherhood of
the married woman. This convergence moves not only from motherhood towards
virginity, as emphasized above; it also moves from virginity towards marriage,
the form of woman's vocation in which she becomes a mother by giving birth to
her children. The starting point of this second analogy is the meaning of
marriage. A woman is "married" either through the sacrament of
marriage or spiritually through marriage to Christ. In both cases marriage signifies
the "sincere gift of the person" of the bride to the groom. In this
way, one can say that the profile of marriage is found spiritually in virginity.
And does not physical motherhood also have to be a spiritual motherhood, in
order to respond to the whole truth about the human being who is a unity of
body and spirit? Thus there exist many reasons for discerning in these two
different paths - the two different vocations of women - a profound
complementarity, and even a profound union within a person's being.
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