IV.
THE IMPORTANCE
OF FEMININE VALUES
IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH
15. In
the Church, woman as “sign” is more than ever central and fruitful, following
as it does from the very identity of the Church, as received from God and
accepted in faith. It is this “mystical” identity, profound and essential,
which needs to be kept in mind when reflecting on the respective roles of men
and women in the Church.
From the beginning of
Christianity, the Church has understood herself to be a community, brought into
existence by Christ and joined to him by a relationship of love, of which the
nuptial experience is the privileged expression. From this it follows that the
Church's first task is to remain in the presence of this mystery of God's love,
manifested in Jesus Christ, to contemplate and to celebrate it. In this regard,
the figure of Mary constitutes the fundamental reference in the Church. One
could say metaphorically that Mary is a mirror placed before the Church, in
which the Church is invited to recognize her own identity as well as the
dispositions of the heart, the attitudes and the actions which God expects from
her.
The existence of Mary is
an invitation to the Church to root her very being in listening and receiving
the Word of God, because faith is not so much the search for God on the part of
human beings, as the recognition by men and women that God comes to us; he
visits us and speaks to us. This faith, which believes that “nothing is
impossible for God” (cf. Gn18:14; Lk 1:37), lives and becomes
deeper through the humble and loving obedience by which the Church can say to
the Father: “Let it be done to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38).
Faith continually makes reference to Jesus: “Do whatever he tells you” (Jn 2:5)
and accompanies Jesus on his way, even to the foot of the Cross. Mary, in the
hour of darkness, perseveres courageously in faithfulness, with the sole
certainty of trust in the Word of God.
It is from Mary that the
Church always learns the intimacy of Christ. Mary, who carried the small child
of Bethlehem in her arms, teaches us to recognize the infinite humility of God.
She who received the broken body of Jesus from the Cross shows the Church how
to receive all those in this world whose lives have been wounded by violence
and sin. From Mary, the Church learns the meaning of the power of love, as
revealed by God in the life of his beloved Son: “he has scattered the proud in
the thoughts of their heart... he has lifted up the lowly” (Lk 1:51-52).
From Mary, the disciples of Christ continually receive the sense and the
delight of praise for the work of God's hands: “The Almighty has done great
things for me” (Lk1:49). They learn that they are in the world to preserve
the memory of those “great things”, and to keep vigil in expectation of the day
of the Lord.
16. To
look at Mary and imitate her does not mean, however, that the Church should
adopt a passivity inspired by an outdated conception of femininity. Nor does it
condemn the Church to a dangerous vulnerability in a world where what count
above all are domination and power. In reality, the way of Christ is neither
one of domination (cf. Phil 2:6) nor of power as understood by the world
(cf. Jn18:36). From the Son of God one learns that this “passivity” is
in reality the way of love; it is a royal power which vanquishes all violence;
it is “passion” which saves the world from sin and death and recreates
humanity. In entrusting his mother to the Apostle John, Jesus on the Cross
invites his Church to learn from Mary the secret of the love that is
victorious.
Far from giving the
Church an identity based on an historically conditioned model of femininity,
the reference to Mary, with her dispositions of listening, welcoming, humility,
faithfulness, praise and waiting, places the Church in continuity with the
spiritual history of Israel. In Jesus and through him, these attributes become
the vocation of every baptized Christian. Regardless of conditions, states of
life, different vocations with or without public responsibilities, they are an
essential aspect of Christian life. While these traits should be characteristic
of every baptized person, women in fact live them with particular intensity and
naturalness. In this way, women play a role of maximum importance in the
Church's life by recalling these dispositions to all the baptized and
contributing in a unique way to showing the true face of the Church, spouse of
Christ and mother of believers.
In this perspective one
understands how the reservation of priestly ordination solely to men22
does not hamper in any way women's access to the heart of Christian life. Women
are called to be unique examples and witnesses for all Christians of how the
Bride is to respond in love to the love of the Bridegroom.
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