The Heart of John
Paul II - On Women |
APOSTOLIC LETTER
MULIERIS DIGNITATEM
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF JOHN PAUL II
ON THE DIGNITY AND VOCATION OF WOMEN
ON THE OCCASION OF THE MARIAN YEAR
August 15, 1988
Venerable Brothers and dear Sons and Daughters,
Health and the Apostolic Blessing.
I. INTRODUCTION
A sign of the times
1. THE DIGNITY AND THE VOCATION OF WOMEN - a subject of
constant human and Christian reflection - have gained exceptional
prominence in recent years. This can be seen, for example, in the
statements of the Church's Magisterium present in various documents
of the Second Vatican Council, which declares in its Closing
Message: "The hour is coming, in fact has come, when the vocation of
women is being acknowledged in its fullness, the hour in which women
acquire in the world an influence, an effect and a power never
hitherto achieved. That is why, at his moment when the human race is
undergoing so deep a transformation, women imbued with a spirit of
the Gospel can do so much to aid humanity in not falling".1 This
Message sums up what had already been expressed in the Council's
teaching, specifically in the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et
Spes (2) and in the Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity
Apostolicam Actuositatem.3
Similar thinking had already been put forth in the period before the
Council, as can be seen in a number of Pope Pius XII's Discourses4
and in the Encyclical Pacem in Terris of Pope John XXIII.5
After the Second Vatican Council, my predecessor Paul VI showed the
relevance of this "sign of the times", when he conferred the title
"Doctor of the Church" upon Saint Teresa of Jesus and Saint
Catherine of Siena, and likewise when, at the request of the 1971
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, he set up a special Commission for
the study of contemporary problems concerning the "effective
promotion of the dignity and the responsibility of women".7 In one
of his Discourses Paul VI said: "Within Christianity, more than in
any other religion, and since its very beginning, women have had a
special dignity, of which the New Testament shows us many important
aspects...; it is evident that women are meant to form part of the
living and working structure of Christianity in so prominent a
manner that perhaps not all their potentialities have yet been made
clear".8
The Fathers of the recent Assembly of the Synod of Bishops (October
1987), which was devoted to "The Vocation and Mission of the Laity
in the Church and in the World Twenty Years after the Second Vatican
Council", once more dealt with the dignity and vocation of women.
One of their recommendations was for a further study of the
anthropological and theological bases that are needed in order to
solve the problems connected with the meaning and dignity of being a
woman and being a man. It is a question of understanding the reason
for and the consequences of the Creator's decision that the human
being should always and only exist as a woman or a man. It is only
by beginning from these bases, which make it possible to understand
the greatness of the dignity and vocation of women, that one is able
to speak of their active presence in the Church and in society.
This is what I intend to deal with in this document. The Post-Synodal
Exhortation, which will be published later, will present proposals
of a pastoral nature on the place of women in the Church and in
society. On this subject the Fathers offered some important
reflections, after they had taken into consideration the testimonies
of the lay Auditors - both women and men - from the particular
Churches throughout the world.
The Marian Year
2. The last Synod took place within the Marian Year, which gives
special thrust to the consideration of this theme, as the Encyclical
Redemptoris Mater points out.9 This Encyclical develops and
updates the Second Vatican Council's teaching contained in Chapter
VIII of the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium.
The title of this chapter is significant: "The Blessed Virgin Mary,
the Mother of God, in the Mystery of Christ and of the Church". Mary
- the "woman" of the Bible (cf. Gen 3:15;Jn 2:4; 19:16) - intimately
belongs to the salvific mystery of Christ, and is therefore also
present in a special way in the mystery of the Church. Since "the
Church is in Christ as a sacrament... of intimate union with God and
of the unity of the whole human race",10 the special presence of the
Mother of God in the mystery of the Church makes us think of the
exceptional link between this "woman" and the whole human family. It
is a question here of every man and woman, all the sons and
daughters of the human race, in whom from generation to generation a
fundamental inheritance is realized, the inheritance that belongs to
all humanity and that is linked with the mystery of the biblical
"beginning": "God created man in his own image, in the image of God
he created him; male and female he created them"(Gen 1: 27).11
This eternal truth about the human being, man and woman - a truth
which is immutably fixed in human experience - at the same time
constitutes the mystery which only in "the Incarnate Word takes on
light... (since) Christ fully reveals man to himself and makes his
supreme calling clear", as the Council teaches.12 In this "revealing
of man to himself", do we not need to find a special place for that
"woman" who was the Mother of Christ? Cannot the "message" of
Christ, contained in the Gospel, which has as its background the
whole of Scripture, both the Old and the New Testament, say much to
the Church and to humanity about the dignity of women and their
vocation?
This is precisely what is meant to be the common thread running
throughout the present document, which fits into the broader context
of the Marian Year, as we approach the end of the second millennium
after Christ's birth and the beginning of the third. And it seems to
me that the best thing is to give this text the style and character
of a meditation.
II. WOMAN-MOTHER OF GOD (THEOTÓKOS)
Union with God
3. "When the time had fully come, God sent forth his son,
born of woman". With these words of his Letter to the Galatians
(4:4), the Apostle Paul links together the principal moments which
essentially determine the fulfilment of the mystery "pre-determined
in God" (cf. Eph 1:9). The Son, the Word one in substance with the
Father, becomes man, born of a woman, at "the fullness of time".
This event leads to the turning point of man's history on earth,
understood as salvation history. It is significant that Saint Paul
does not call the Mother of Christ by her own name "Mary", but calls
her "woman": this coincides with the words of the Proto-evangelium
in the Book of Genesis (cf. 3:15). She is that "woman" who is
present in the central salvific event which marks the "fullness of
time": this event is realized in her and through her.
Thus there begins the central event, the key event in the history of
salvation: the Lord's Paschal Mystery. Perhaps it would be
worthwhile to reconsider it from the point of view of man's
spiritual history, understood in the widest possible sense, and as
this history is expressed through the different world religions. Let
us recall at this point the words of the Second Vatican Council:
"People look to the various religions for answers to those profound
mysteries of the human condition which, today, even as in olden
times, deeply stir the human heart: What is a human being? What is
the meaning and purpose of our life? What is goodness and what is
sin? What gives rise to our sorrows, and to what intent? Where lies
the path to true happiness? What is the truth about death, judgment
and retribution beyond the grave? What, finally, is that ultimate
and unutterable mystery which engulfs our being, and from which we
take our origin and towards which we move?"13 "From ancient times
down to the present, there has existed among different peoples a
certain perception of that hidden power which is present in the
course of things and in the events of human life; at times, indeed,
recognition can be found of a Supreme Divinity or even a Supreme
Father".14
Against the background of this broad panorama, which testifies to
the aspirations of the human spirit in search of God - at times as
it were "groping its way" (cf. Acts 17: 27) - the "fullness of time"
spoken of in Paul's Letter emphasizes the response of God himself,
"in whom we live and move and have our being" (cf. Acts 17:28). This
is the God who "in many and various ways spoke of old to our fathers
by the prophets, but in these last days has spoken to us by a Son"
(Heb 1:1-2). The sending of this Son, one in substance with the
Father, as a man "born of woman", constitutes the culminating and
definitive point of God's self-revelation to humanity. This
self-revelation is salvific in character, as the Second Vatican
Council teaches in another passage: "In his goodness and wisdom, God
chose to reveal himself and to make known to us the hidden purpose
of his will (cf. Eph 1: 9) by which through Christ, the Word made
flesh, man has access to the Father in the Holy Spirit and comes to
share in the divine nature (cf. Eph 2:18; 2 Pt 1:4)".15
A woman is to be found at the centre of this salvific event. The
self-revelation of God, who is the inscrutable unity of the Trinity,
is outlined in the Annunciation at Nazareth. "Behold, you will
conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name
Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most
High" - "How shall this be, since I have no husband?" - "The Holy
Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will
overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy,
the Son of God... For with God nothing will be impossible" (cf. Lk
1: 31-37).16
It may be easy to think of this event in the setting of the history
of Israel, the Chosen People of which Mary is a daughter, but it is
also easy to think of it in the context of all the different ways in
which humanity has always sought to answer the fundamental and
definitive questions which most beset it. Do we not find in the
Annunciation at Nazareth the beginning of that definitive answer by
which God himself "attempts to calm people's hearts"?17 It is not
just a matter here of God's words revealed through the Prophets;
rather with this response "the Word is truly made flesh" (cf. Jn
1:14). Hence Mary attains a union with God that exceeds all the
expectations of the human spirit. It even exceeds the expectations
of all Israel, in particular the daughters of this Chosen People,
who, on the basis of the promise, could hope that one of their
number would one day become the mother of the Messiah. Who among
them, however, could have imagined that the promised Messiah would
be "the Son of the Most High"? On the basis of the Old Testament's
monotheistic faith such a thing was difficult to imagine. Only by
the power of the Holy Spirit, who "overshadowed" her, was Mary able
to accept what is "impossible with men, but not with God" (cf. Mk
10: 27).
Theotókos
4. Thus the "fullness of time" manifests the extraordinary
dignity of the "woman". On the one hand, this dignity consists in
the supernatural elevation to union with God in Jesus Christ, which
determines the ultimate finality of the existence of every person
both on earth and in eternity. From this point of view, the "woman"
is the representative and the archetype of the whole human race: she
represents the humanity which belongs to all human beings, both men
and women. On the other hand, however, the event at Nazareth
highlights a form of union with the living God which can only belong
to the "woman", Mary: the union between mother and son. The Virgin
of Nazareth truly becomes the Mother of God.
This truth, which Christian faith has accepted from the beginning,
was solemnly defined at the Council of Ephesus (431 A.D.).18 In
opposition to the opinion of Nestorius, who held that Mary was only
the mother of the man Jesus, this Council emphasized the essential
meaning of the motherhood of the Virgin Mary. At the moment of the
Annunciation, by responding with her "fiat", Mary conceived a man
who was the Son of God, of one substance with the Father. Therefore
she is truly the Mother of God, because motherhood concerns the
whole person, not just the body, nor even just human "nature". In
this way the name "Theotókos" - Mother of God - became the name
proper to the union with God granted to the Virgin Mary.
The particular union of the "Theotókos" with God - which fulfils in
the most eminent manner the supernatural predestination to union
with the Father which is granted to every human being (filii in
Filio) - is a pure grace and, as such, a gift of the Spirit. At the
same time, however, through her response of faith Mary exercises her
free will and thus fully shares with her personal and feminine "I"
in the event of the Incarnation. With her "fiat", Mary becomes the
authentic subject of that union with God which was realized in the
mystery of the Incarnation of the Word, who is of one substance with
the Father. All of God's action in human history at all times
respects the free will of the human "I". And such was the case with
the Annunciation at Nazareth.
"To serve means to reign"
5. This event is clearly interpersonal in character: it is a
dialogue. We only understand it fully if we place the whole
conversation between the Angel and Mary in the context of the words:
"full of grace".19 The whole Annunciation dialogue reveals the
essential dimension of the event, namely, its supernatural dimension
(***). Grace never casts nature aside or cancels it out, but rather
perfects it and ennobles it. Therefore the "fullness of grace" that
was granted to the Virgin of Nazareth, with a view to the fact that
she would become "Theotókos", also signifies the fullness of the
perfection of" what is characteristic of woman", of "what is
feminine". Here we find ourselves, in a sense, at the culminating
point, the archetype, of the personal dignity of women.
When Mary responds to the words of the heavenly messenger with her
"fiat", she who is "full of grace" feels the need to express her
personal relationship to the gift that has been revealed to her,
saying: "Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord" (Lk 1:38). This
statement should not be deprived of its profound meaning, nor should
it be diminished by artificially removing it from the overall
context of the event and from the full content of the truth revealed
about God and man. In the expression "handmaid of the Lord", one
senses Mary's complete awareness of being a creature of God. The
word "handmaid", near the end of the Annunciation dialogue, is
inscribed throughout the whole history of the Mother and the Son. In
fact, this Son, who is the true and consubstantial "Son of the Most
High", will often say of himself, especially at the culminating
moment of his mission: "The Son of Man came not to be served but to
serve" (Mk 10:45).
At all times Christ is aware of being "the servant of the Lord"
according to the prophecy of Isaiah (cf. Is 42:1; 49:3, 6; 52:13)
which includes the essential content of his messianic mission,
namely, his awareness of being the Redeemer of the world. From the
first moment of her divine motherhood, of her union with the Son
whom "the Father sent into the world, that the world might be saved
through him" (cf. Jn 3:17), Mary takes her place within Christ's
messianic service.20 It is precisely this service which constitutes
the very foundation of that Kingdom in which "to serve ... means to
reign".21 Christ, the "Servant of the Lord", will show all people
the royal dignity of service, the dignity which is joined in the
closest possible way to the vocation of every person.
Thus, by considering the reality "Woman - Mother of God", we enter
in a very appropriate way into this Marian Year meditation. This
reality also determines the essential horizon of reflection on the
dignity and the vocation of women. In anything we think, say or do
concerning the dignity and the vocation of women, our thoughts,
hearts and actions must not become detached from this horizon. The
dignity of every human being and the vocation corresponding to that
dignity find their definitive measure in union with God. Mary, the
woman of the Bible, is the most complete expression of this dignity
and vocation. For no human being, male or female, created in the
image and likeness of God, can in any way attain fulfillment apart
from this image and likeness.
III. THE IMAGE AND LIKENESS OF GOD
The Book of Genesis
6. Let us enter into the setting of the biblical "beginning". In it
the revealed truth concerning man as "the image and likeness" of God
constitutes the immutable basis of all Christian anthropology.22"God
created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them" (Gen 1:27). This concise passage
contains the fundamental anthropological truths: man is the
highpoint of the whole order of creation in the visible world; the
human race, which takes its origin from the calling into existence
of man and woman, crowns the whole work of creation; both man and
woman are human beings to an equal degree, both are created in God's
image. This image and likeness of God, which is essential for the
human being, is passed on by the man and woman, as spouses and
parents, to their descendants: "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill
the earth and subdue it" (Gen 1: 28). The Creator entrusts dominion
over the earth to the human race, to all persons, to all men and
women, who derive their dignity and vocation from the common
"beginning".
In the Book of Genesis we find another description of the creation
of man - man and woman (cf. 2:18-25) - to which we shall refer
shortly. At this point, however, we can say that the biblical
account puts forth the truth about the personal character of the
human being. Man is a person, man and woman equally so, since both
were created in the image and likeness of the personal God. What
makes man like God is the fact that - unlike the whole world of
other living creatures, including those endowed with senses (animalia)
- man is also a rational being (animal rationale).23 Thanks to this
property, man and woman are able to "dominate" the other creatures
of the visible world (cf. Gen 1:28).
The second description of the creation of man (cf. Gen 2:18-25)
makes use of different language to express the truth about the
creation of man, and especially of woman. In a sense the language is
less precise, and, one might say, more descriptive and metaphorical,
closer to the language of the myths known at the time. Nevertheless,
we find no essential contradiction between the two texts. The text
of Gen 2:18-25 helps us to understand better what we find in the
concise passage of Gen 1:27-28. At the same time, if it is read
together with the latter, it helps us to understand even more
profoundly the fundamental truth which it contains concerning man
created as man and woman in the image and likeness of God.
In the description found in Gen 2:1 8-25, the woman is created by
God "from the rib" of the man and is placed at his side as another
"I", as the companion of the man, who is alone in the surrounding
world of living creatures and who finds in none of them a "helper"
suitable for himself. Called into existence in this way, the woman
is immediately recognized by the man as "flesh of his flesh and bone
of his bones" (cf. Gen 2:23) and for this very reason she is called
"woman". In biblical language this name indicates her essential
identity with regard to man - 'is-'issah - something which
unfortunately modern languages in general are unable to express:
"She shall be called woman ('issah) because she was taken out of man
('is)": Gen 2:23.
The biblical text provides sufficient bases for recognizing the
essential equality of man and woman from the point of view of their
humanity.24 From the very beginning, both are persons, unlike the
other living beings in the world about them. The woman is another
"I" in a common humanity. From the very beginning they appear as a
"unity of the two", and this signifies that the original solitude is
overcome, the solitude in which man does not find "a helper fit for
him" (Gen 2:20). Is it only a question here of a "helper" in
activity, in "subduing the earth" (cf. Gen 1: 28)? Certainly it is a
matter of a life's companion, with whom, as a wife, the man can
unite himself, becoming with her "one flesh" and for this reason
leaving "his father and his mother" (cf. Gen 2: 24). Thus in the
same context as the creation of man and woman, the biblical account
speaks of God's instituting marriage as an indispensable condition
for the transmission of life to new generations, the transmission of
life to which marriage and conjugal love are by their nature
ordered: "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue
it" (Gen 1:28).
Person - Communion - Gift
7. By reflecting on the whole account found in Gen 2:18-25, and by
interpreting it in light of the truth about the image and likeness
of God (cf. Gen 1:26-27), we can understand even more fully what
constitutes the personal character of the human being, thanks to
which both man and woman are like God. For every individual is made
in the image of God, insofar as he or she is a rational and free
creature capable of knowing God and loving him. Moreover, we read
that man cannot exist "alone" (cf. Gen 2:18); he can exist only as a
"unity of the two", and therefore in relation to another human
person. It is a question here of a mutual relationship: man to woman
and woman to man. Being a person in the image and likeness of God
thus also involves existing in a relationship, in relation to the
other "I". This is a prelude to the definitive self-revelation of
the Triune God: a living unity in the communion of the Father, Son
and Holy Spirit.
At the beginning of the Bible this is not yet stated directly. The
whole Old Testament is mainly concerned with revealing the truth
about the oneness and unity of God. Within this fundamental truth
about God the New Testament will reveal the inscrutable mystery of
God's inner life. God, who allows himself to be known by human
beings through Christ, is the unity of the Trinity: unity in
communion. In this way new light is also thrown on man's image and
likeness to God, spoken of in the Book of Genesis. The fact that man
"created as man and woman" is the image of God means not only that
each of them individually is like God, as a rational and free being.
It also means that man and woman, created as a "unity of the two" in
their common humanity, are called to live in a communion of love,
and in this way to mirror in the world the communion of love that is
in God, through which the Three Persons love each other in the
intimate mystery of the one divine life. The Father, Son and Holy
Spirit, one God through the unity of the divinity, exist as persons
through the inscrutable divine relationship. Only in this way can we
understand the truth that God in himself is love (cf. 1 Jn 4:16).
The image and likeness of God in man, created as man and woman (in
the analogy that can be presumed between Creator and creature), thus
also expresses the "unity of the two" in a common humanity. This
"unity of the two", which is a sign of interpersonal communion,
shows that the creation of man is also marked by a certain likeness
to the divine communion ("communio"). This likeness is a quality of
the personal being of both man and woman, and is also a call and a
task. The foundation of the whole human "ethos" is rooted in the
image and likeness of God which the human being bears within himself
from the beginning. Both the Old and New Testament will develop that
"ethos", which reaches its apex in the commandment of love.25
In the "unity of the two", man and woman are called from the
beginning not only to exist "side by side" or "together", but they
are also called to exist mutually "one for the other".
This also explains the meaning of the "help" spoken of in Genesis 2
:1 8-25: "I will make him a helper fit for him". The biblical
context enables us to understand this in the sense that the woman
must "help" the man - and in his turn he must help her - first of
all by the very fact of their "being human persons". In a certain
sense this enables man and woman to discover their humanity ever
anew and to confirm its whole meaning. We can easily understand that
- on this fundamental level - it is a question of a "help" on the
part of both, and at the same time a mutual "help". To be human
means to be called to interpersonal communion. The text of Genesis
2:18-25 shows that marriage is the first and, in a sense, the
fundamental dimension of this call. But it is not the only one. The
whole of human history unfolds within the context of this call. In
this history, on the basis of the principle of mutually being "for"
the other, in interpersonal "communion", there develops in humanity
itself, in accordance with God's will, the integration of what is
"masculine" and what is "feminine". The biblical texts, from Genesis
onwards, constantly enable us to discover the ground in which the
truth about man is rooted, the solid and inviolable ground amid the
many changes of human existence.
This truth also has to do with the history of salvation. In this
regard a statement of the Second Vatican Council is especially
significant. In the chapter on "The Community of Mankind" in the
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, we read: "The Lord Jesus,
when he prayed to the Father 'that all may be one ... as we are one'
(Jn 17: 21-22), opened up vistas closed to human reason. For he
implied a certain likeness between the union of the divine Persons
and the union of God's children in truth and charity. This likeness
reveals that man, who is the only creature on earth which God willed
for its own sake, cannot fully find himself except through a sincere
gift of self".26
With these words, the Council text presents a summary of the whole
truth about man and woman - a truth which is already outlined in the
first chapters of the Book of Genesis, and which is the structural
basis of biblical and Christian anthropology. Man - whether man or
woman - is the only being among the creatures of the visible world
that God the Creator "has willed for its own sake"; that creature is
thus a person. Being a person means striving towards
self-realization (the Council text speaks of self-discovery), which
can only be achieved "through a sincere gift of self". The model for
this interpretation of the person is God himself as Trinity, as a
communion of Persons. To say that man is created in the image and
likeness of God means that man is called to exist "for" others, to
become a gift.
This applies to every human being, whether woman or man, who live it
out in accordance with the special qualities proper to each. Within
the framework of the present meditation on the dignity and vocation
of women, this truth about being human constitutes the indispensable
point of departure. Already in the Book of Genesis we can discern,
in preliminary outline, the spousal character of the relationship
between persons, which will serve as the basis for the subsequent
development of the truth about motherhood, and about virginity, as
two particular dimensions of the vocation of women in the light of
divine Revelation. These two dimensions will find their loftiest
expression at the "fullness of time" (cf. Gal 4:4) in the "woman" of
Nazareth: the Virgin-Mother.
The anthropomorphism of biblical language
8. The presentation of man as "the image and likeness of God" at the
very beginning of Sacred Scripture has another significance too. It
is the key for understanding biblical Revelation as God's word about
himself. Speaking about himself, whether through the prophets, or
through the Son" (cf. Heb 1:1, 2) who became man, God speaks in
human language, using human concepts and images. If this manner of
expressing himself is characterized by a certain anthropomorphism,
the reason is that man is "like" God: created in his image and
likeness. But then, God too is in some measure "like man", and
precisely because of this likeness, he can be humanly known. At the
same time, the language of the Bible is sufficiently precise to
indicate the limits of the "likeness", the limits of the "analogy".
For biblical Revelation says that, while man's "likeness" to God is
true, the "non-likeness"27 which separates the whole of creation
from the Creator is still more essentially true. Although man is
created in God's likeness, God does not cease to be for him the one
"who dwells in unapproachable light" (1 Tim 6:16): he is the
"Different One", by essence the "totally Other".
This observation on the limits of the analogy - the
limits of man's likeness to God in biblical language - must also be kept
in mind when, in different passages of Sacred Scripture (especially
in the Old Testament), we find comparisons that attribute to God
"masculine" or "feminine" qualities. We find in these passages an
indirect confirmation of the truth that both man and woman were
created in the image and likeness of God. If there is a likeness
between Creator and creatures, it is understandable that the Bible
would refer to God using expressions that attribute to him both
"masculine" and "feminine" qualities.
We may quote here some characteristic passages from the prophet
Isaiah: "But Zion said, 'The Lord has forsaken me, my Lord has
forgotten me'. 'Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she
should have no compassion on the son of her womb? Even these may
forget, yet I will not forget you'". (49:14-15). And elsewhere: "As
one whom his mother comforts, so will I comfort you; you shall be
comforted in Jerusalem" (66: 13). In the Psalms too God is compared
to a caring mother: "Like a child quieted at its mother's breast;
like a child that is quieted is my soul. O Israel, hope in the
Lord". (Ps 131:2-3). In various passages the love of God who cares
for his people is shown to be like that of a mother: thus, like a
mother God "has carried" humanity, and in particular, his Chosen
People, within his own womb; he has given birth to it in travail,
has nourished and comforted it (cf. Is 42:14; 46: 3-4). In many
passages God's love is presented as the "masculine" love of the
bridegroom and father (cf. Hosea 11:1-4; Jer 3:4-19), but also
sometimes as the "feminine" love of a mother.
This characteristic of biblical language - its anthropomorphic way
of speaking about God - points indirectly to the mystery of the
eternal "generating" which belongs to the inner life of God.
Nevertheless, in itself this "generating" has neither "masculine"
nor "feminine" qualities. It is by nature totally divine. It is
spiritual in the most perfect way, since "God is spirit" (Jn 4:24)
and possesses no property typical of the body, neither "feminine"
nor "masculine". Thus even "fatherhood" in God is completely divine
and free of the "masculine" bodily characteristics proper to human
fatherhood. In this sense the Old Testament spoke of God as a Father
and turned to him as a Father. Jesus Christ - who called God "Abba
Father" (Mk 14: 36), and who as the only-begotten and consubstantial
Son placed this truth at the very centre of his Gospel, thus
establishing the norm of Christian prayer - referred to fatherhood
in this ultra-corporeal, superhuman and completely divine sense. He
spoke as the Son, joined to the Father by the eternal mystery of
divine generation, and he did so while being at the same time the
truly human Son of his Virgin Mother.
Although it is not possible to attribute human qualities to the
eternal generation of the Word of God, and although the divine
fatherhood does not possess "masculine" characteristics in a
physical sense, we must nevertheless seek in God the absolute model
of all "generation" among human beings. This would seem to be the
sense of the Letter to the Ephesians: "I bow my knees before the
Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named"
(3:14-15). All "generating" among creatures finds its primary model
in that generating which in God is completely divine, that is,
spiritual. All "generating" in the created world is to be likened to
this absolute and uncreated model. Thus every element of human
generation which is proper to man, and every element which is proper
to woman, namely human "fatherhood" and "motherhood", bears within
itself a likeness to, or analogy with the divine "generating" and
with that "fatherhood" which in God is "totally different", that is,
completely spiritual and divine in essence; whereas in the human
order, generation is proper to the "unity of the two": both are
"parents", the man and the woman alike.
IV. EVE-MARY
The "beginning" and the sin
9. "Although he was made by God in a state of justice, from
the very dawn of history man abused his liberty, at the urging of
the Evil One. Man set himself against God and sought to find
fulfillment apart from God".28 With these words the teaching of the
last Council recalls the revealed doctrine about sin and in
particular about that first sin, which is the "original" one. The
biblical "beginning" - the creation of the world and of man in the
world - contains in itself the truth about this sin, which can also
be called the sin of man's "beginning" on the earth. Even though
what is written in the Book of Genesis is expressed in the form of a
symbolic narrative, as is the case in the description of the
creation of man as male and female (cf. Gen 2:18-25), at the same
time it reveals what should be called "the mystery of sin", and even
more fully, "the mystery of evil" which exists in the world created
by God.
It is not possible to read "the mystery of sin" without making
reference to the whole truth about the "image and likeness" to God,
which is the basis of biblical anthropology. This truth presents the
creation of man as a special gift from the Creator, containing not
only the foundation and source of the essential dignity of the human
being - man and woman - in the created world, but also the beginning
of the call to both of them to share in the intimate life of God
himself. In the light of Revelation, creation likewise means the
beginning of salvation history. It is precisely in this beginning
that sin is situated and manifests itself as opposition and
negation.
It can be said, paradoxically, that the sin presented in the third
chapter of Genesis confirms the truth about the image and likeness
of God in man, since this truth means freedom, that is, man's use of
free will by choosing good or his abuse of it by choosing evil,
against the will of God. In its essence, however, sin is a negation
of God as Creator in his relationship to man, and of what God wills
for man, from the beginning and for ever. Creating man and woman in
his own image and likeness, God wills for them the fullness of good,
or supernatural happiness, which flows from sharing in his own life.
By committing sin man rejects this gift and at the same time wills
to become "as God, knowing good and evil" (Gen 3:5), that is to say,
deciding what is good and what is evil independently of God, his
Creator. The sin of the first parents has its own human "measure":
an interior standard of its own in man's free will, and it also has
within itself a certain "diabolic" characteristic,29 which is
clearly shown in the Book of Genesis (3:15). Sin brings about a
break in the original unity which man enjoyed in the state of
original justice: union with God as the source of the unity within
his own "I", in the mutual relationship between man and woman ("communio
personarum") as well as in regard to the external world, to nature.
The biblical description of original sin in the third chapter of
Genesis in a certain way "distinguishes the roles" which the woman
and the man had in it. This is also referred to later in certain
passages of the Bible, for example, Paul's Letter to Timothy: "For
Adam was formed first, then Eve; and Adam was not deceived, but the
woman was deceived and became a transgressor" (1 Tim 2:13-14). But
there is no doubt that, independent of this "distinction of roles"
in the biblical description, that first sin is the sin of man,
created by God as male and female. It is also the sin of the "first
parents", to which is connected its hereditary character. In this
sense we call it "original sin".
This sin, as already said, cannot be properly understood without
reference to the mystery of the creation of the human being - man
and woman - in the image and likeness of God. By means of this
reference one can also understand the mystery of that "non-likeness"
to God in which sin consists, and which manifests itself in the evil
present in the history of the world. Similarly one can understand
the mystery of that "non-likeness" to God, who "alone is good" (cf.
Mt 19:17) and-the fullness of good. If sin's "non-likeness" to God,
who is Holiness itself, presupposes "likeness" in the sphere of
freedom and free will, it can then be said that for this very reason
the "non-likeness" contained in sin is all the more tragic and sad.
It must be admitted that God, as Creator and Father, is here
wounded, "offended" - obviously offended - in the very heart of that
gift which belongs to God's eternal plan for man.
At the same time, however, as the author of the evil of sin, the
human being - man and woman - is affected by it. The third chapter
of Genesis shows this with the words which clearly describe the new
situation of man in the created world. It shows the perspective of
"toil", by which man will earn his living (cf. Gen 3:17-19) and
likewise the great "pain" with which the woman will give birth to
her children (cf. Gen 3 :16). And all this is marked by the
necessity of death, which is the end of human life on earth. In this
way man, as dust, will "return to the ground, for out of it he was
taken": "you are dust, and to dust you shall return" (cf. Gen 3:19).
These words are confirmed generation after generation. They do not
mean that the image and the likeness of God in the human being,
whether woman or man, has been destroyed by sin; they mean rather
that it has been "obscured"30 and in a sense "diminished". Sin in
fact "diminishes" man, as the Second Vatican Council also recalls.31
If man is the image and likeness of God by his very nature as a
person, then his greatness and his dignity are achieved in the
covenant with God, in union with him, in striving towards that
fundamental unity which belongs to the internal "logic" of the very
mystery of creation. This unity corresponds to the profound truth
concerning all intelligent creatures and in particular concerning
man, who among all the creatures of the visible world was elevated
from the beginning through the eternal choice of God in Jesus: "He
chose us in (Christ) before the foundation of the world, ... He
destined us in love to be his sons through Jesus Christ, according
to the purpose of his will" (Eph 1:4-6). The biblical teaching taken
as a whole enables us to say that predestination concerns all human
persons, men and women, each and every one without exception.
"He shall rule over you"
10. The biblical description in the Book of Genesis outlines the
truth about the consequences of man's sin, as it is shown by the
disturbance of that original relationship between man and woman
which corresponds to their individual dignity as persons. A human
being, whether male or female, is a person, and therefore, "the only
creature on earth which God willed for its own sake"; and at the
same time this unique and unrepeatable creature "cannot fully find
himself except through a sincere gift of self".32 Here begins the
relationship of "communion" in which the "unity of the two" and the
personal dignity of both man and woman find expression. Therefore
when we read in the biblical description the words addressed to the
woman: "Your desire shall be for your husband, and he shall rule
over you" (Gen 3:16), we discover a break and a constant threat
precisely in regard to this "unity of the two" which corresponds to
the dignity of the image and likeness of God in both of them. But
this threat is more serious for the woman, since domination takes
the place of "being a sincere gift" and therefore living "for" the
other: "he shall rule over you". This "domination" indicates the
disturbance and loss of the stability of that fundamental equality
which the man and the woman possess in the "unity of the two": and
this is especially to the disadvantage of the woman, whereas only
the equality resulting from their dignity as persons can give to
their mutual relationship the character of an authentic "communio
personarum". While the violation of this equality, which is both a
gift and a right deriving from God the Creator, involves an element
to the disadvantage of the woman, at the same time it also
diminishes the true dignity of the man. Here we touch upon an
extremely sensitive point in the dimension of that "ethos" which was
originally inscribed by the Creator in the very creation of both of
them in his own image and likeness.
This statement in Genesis 3:16 is of great significance. It implies
a reference to the mutual relationship of man and woman in marriage.
It refers to the desire born in the atmosphere of spousal love
whereby the woman's "sincere gift of self" is responded to and
matched by a corresponding "gift" on the part of the husband. Only
on the basis of this principle can both of them, and in particular
the woman, "discover themselves" as a true "unity of the two"
according to the dignity of the person. The matrimonial union
requires respect for and a perfecting of the true personal
subjectivity of both of them. The woman cannot become the "object"
of "domination" and male "possession". But the words of the biblical
text directly concern original sin and its lasting consequences in
man and woman. Burdened by hereditary sinfulness, they bear within
themselves the constant "inclination to sin", the tendency to go
against the moral order which corresponds to the rational nature and
dignity of man and woman as persons. This tendency is expressed in a
threefold concupiscence, which Saint John defines as the lust of the
eyes, the lust of the flesh and the pride of life (cf. 1 Jn 2:16).
The words of the Book of Genesis quoted previously (3: 16) show how
this threefold concupiscence, the "inclination to sin", will burden
the mutual relationship of man and woman.
These words of Genesis refer directly to marriage, but indirectly
they concern the different spheres of social life: the situations in
which the woman remains disadvantaged or discriminated against by
the fact of being a woman. The revealed truth concerning the
creation of the human being as male and female constitutes the
principal argument against all the objectively injurious and unjust
situations which contain and express the inheritance of the sin
which all human beings bear within themselves. The books of Sacred
Scripture confirm in various places the actual existence of such
situations and at the same time proclaim the need for conversion,
that is to say, for purification from evil and liberation from sin:
from what offends neighbour, what "diminishes" man, not only the one
who is offended but also the one who causes the offence. This is the
unchangeable message of the Word revealed by God. In it is expressed
the biblical "ethos" until the end of time.33
In our times the question of "women's rights" has taken on new
significance in the broad context of the rights of the human person.
The biblical and evangelical message sheds light on this cause,
which is the object of much attention today, by safeguarding the
truth about the "unity" of the "two", that is to say the truth about
that dignity and vocation that result from the specific diversity
and personal originality of man and woman. Consequently, even the
rightful opposition of women to what is expressed in the biblical
words "He shall rule over you" (Gen 3:16) must not under any
condition lead to the "masculinization" of women. In the name of
liberation from male "domination", women must not appropriate to
themselves male characteristics contrary to their own feminine
"originality". There is a well-founded fear that if they take this
path, women will not "reach fulfilment", but instead will deform and
lose what constitutes their essential richness. It is indeed an
enormous richness. In the biblical description, the words of the
first man at the sight of the woman who had been created are words
of admiration and enchantment, words which fill the whole history of
man on earth.
The personal resources of femininity are certainly no less than the
resources of masculinity: they are merely different. Hence a woman,
as well as a man, must understand her "fulfilment" as a person, her
dignity and vocation, on the basis of these resources, according to
the richness of the femininity which she received on the day of
creation and which she inherits as an expression of the "image and
likeness of God" that is specifically hers. The inheritance of sin
suggested by the words of the Bible - "Your desire shall be for your
husband, and he shall rule over you" - can be conquered only by
following this path. The overcoming of this evil inheritance is,
generation after generation, the task of every human being, whether
woman or man. For whenever man is responsible for offending a
woman's personal dignity and vocation, he acts contrary to his own
personal dignity and his own vocation.
Proto-evangelium
11. The Book of Genesis attests to the fact that sin is the
evil at man's "beginning" and that since then its consequences weigh
upon the whole human race. At the same time it contains the first
foretelling of victory over evil, over sin. This is proved by the
words which we read in Genesis 3:15, usually called the "Proto-evangelium":
"I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed
and her seed; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his
heel". It is significant that the foretelling of the Redeemer
contained in these words refers to "the woman". She is assigned the
first place in the Proto-evangelium as the progenitrix of him who
will be the Redeemer of man.34 And since the redemption is to be
accomplished through a struggle against evil - through the "enmity"
between the offspring of the woman and the offspring of him who, as
"the father of lies" (Jn 8:44), is the first author of sin in human
history - it is also an enmity between him and the woman.
These words give us a comprehensive view of the whole of Revelation,
first as a preparation for the Gospel and later as the Gospel
itself. From this vantage point the two female figures, Eve and
Mary, are joined under the name of woman.
The words of the Proto-evangelium, re-read in the light of the New
Testament, express well the mission of woman in the Redeemer's
salvific struggle against the author of evil in human history.
The comparison Eve-Mary constantly recurs in the course of
reflection on the deposit of faith received from divine Revelation.
It is one of the themes frequently taken up by the Fathers,
ecclesiastical writers and theologians.35 As a rule, from this
comparison there emerges at first sight a difference, a contrast.
Eve, as "the mother of all the living" (Gen 3: 20), is the witness
to the biblical "beginning", which contains the truth about the
creation of man made in the image and likeness of God and the truth
about original sin. Mary is the witness to the new "beginning" and
the "new creation" (cf. 2 Cor 5:17), since she herself, as the first
of the redeemed in salvation history, is "a new creation": she is
"full of grace". It is difficult to grasp why the words of the
Protoevangelium place such strong emphasis on the "woman", if it is
not admitted that in her the new and definitive Covenant of God with
humanity has its beginning, the Covenant in the redeeming blood of
Christ. The Covenant begins with a woman, the "woman" of the
Annunciation at Nazareth. Herein lies the absolute originality of
the Gospel: many times in the Old Testament, in order to intervene
in the history of his people, God addressed himself to women, as in
the case of the mothers of Samuel and Samson. However, to make his
Covenant with humanity, he addressed himself only to men: Noah,
Abraham, and Moses. At the beginning of the New Covenant, which is
to be eternal and irrevocable, there is a woman: the Virgin of
Nazareth. It is a sign that points to the fact that "in Jesus
Christ" "there is neither male nor female" (Gal 3:28).In Christ the
mutual opposition between man and woman - which is the inheritance
of original sin - is essentially overcome. "For you are all one in
Jesus Christ", Saint Paul will write (ibid.).
These words concern that original "unity of the two" which is linked
with the creation of the human being as male and female, made in the
image and likeness of God, and based on the model of that most
perfect communion of Persons which is God himself. Saint Paul states
that the mystery of man's redemption in Jesus Christ, the son of
Mary, resumes and renews that which in the mystery of creation
corresponded to the eternal design of God the Creator. Precisely for
this reason, on the day of the creation of the human being as male
and female "God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was
very good" (Gen 1:31). The Redemption restores, in a sense, at its
very root, the good that was essentially "diminished" by sin and its
heritage in human history.
The "woman" of the Proto-evangelium fits into the perspective of the
Redemption. The comparison Eve-Mary can be understood also in the
sense that Mary assumes in herself and embraces the mystery of the
"woman" whose beginning is Eve, "the mother of all the living" (Gen
3:20). First of all she assumes and embraces it within the mystery
of Christ, "the new and the last Adam" (cf. 1 Cor 15:45),who assumed
in his own person the nature of the first Adam. The essence of the
New Covenant consists in the fact that the Son of God, who is of one
substance with the eternal Father, becomes man: he takes humanity
into the unity of the divine Person of the Word. The one who
accomplishes the Redemption is also a true man. The mystery of the
world's Redemption presupposes that God the Son assumed humanity as
the inheritance of Adam, becoming like him and like every man in all
things, "yet without sinning" (Heb 4:15). In this way he "fully
reveals man to himself and makes man's supreme calling clear", as
the Second Vatican Council teaches.36 In a certain sense, he has
helped man to discover "who he is" (cf. Ps 8:5).
In the tradition of faith and of Christian reflection throughout the
ages, the coupling Adam-Christ is often linked with that of
Eve-Mary. If Mary is described also as the "new Eve", what are the
meanings of this analogy? Certainly there are many. Particularly
noteworthy is the meaning which sees Mary as the full revelation of
all that is included in the biblical word "woman": a revelation
commensurate with the mystery of the Redemption. Mary means, in a
sense, a going beyond the limit spoken of in the Book of Genesis (3:
16) and a return to that "beginning" in which one finds the "woman"
as she was intended to be in creation, and therefore in the eternal
mind of God: in the bosom of the Most Holy Trinity. Mary is "the new
beginning" of the dignity and vocation of women, of each and every
woman.37
A particular key for understanding this can be found in the words
which the Evangelist puts on Mary's lips after the Annunciation,
during her visit to Elizabeth: "He who is mighty has done great
things for me" (Lk 1:49). These words certainly refer to the
conception of her Son, who is the "Son of the Most High" (Lk1:32),
the "holy one" of God; but they can also signify the discovery of
her own feminine humanity. He "has done great things for me": this
is the discovery of all the richness and personal resources of
femininity, all the eternal originality of the "woman", just as God
wanted her to be, a person for her own sake, who discovers herself
"by means of a sincere gift of self".
This discovery is connected with a clear awareness of God's gift, of
his generosity. From the very "beginning" sin had obscured this
awareness, in a sense had stifled it, as is shown in the words of
the first temptation by the "father of lies" (cf. Genesis 3:1-5).At
the advent of the "fullness of time" (cf. Gal 4:4),when the mystery
of Redemption begins to be fulfilled in the history of humanity,
this awareness bursts forth in all its power in the words of the
biblical "woman" of Nazareth. In Mary, Eve discovers the nature of
the true dignity of woman, of feminine humanity. This discovery must
continually reach the heart of every woman and shape her vocation
and her life.
V. JESUS CHRIST
"They marvelled that he was talking with a woman"
12. The words of the Proto-evangelium in the Book of Genesis enable
us to move into the context of the Gospel. Man's Redemption,
foretold in Genesis, now becomes a reality in the person and mission
of Jesus Christ, in which we also recognize what the reality of the
Redemption means for the dignity and the vocation of women. This
meaning becomes clearer for us from Christ's words and from his
whole attitude towards women, an attitude which is extremely simple,
and for this very reason extraordinary, if seen against the
background of his time. It is an attitude marked by great clarity
and depth. Various women appear along the path of the mission of
Jesus of Nazareth, and his meeting with each of them is a
confirmation of the evangelical "newness of life" already spoken of.
It is universally admitted - even by people with a critical attitude
towards the Christian message - that in the eyes of his
contemporaries Christ became a promoter of women's true dignity and
of the vocation corresponding to this dignity. At times this caused
wonder, surprise, often to the point of scandal: "They marveled that
he was talking with a woman" (Jn 4:27), because this behaviour
differed from that of his contemporaries. Even Christ's own
disciples "marveled". The Pharisee to whose house the sinful woman
went to anoint Jesus' feet with perfumed oil "said to himself, 'If
this man were a prophet, he would have known who and what sort of
woman this is who is touching him, for she is a sinner'" (Lk 7:39).
Even greater dismay, or even "holy indignation", must have filled
the self-satisfied hearers of Christ's words: "the tax collectors
and the harlots go into the Kingdom of God before you" (Mt 21:31).
By speaking and acting in this way, Jesus made it clear that "the
mysteries of the Kingdom" were known to him in every detail. He also
"knew what was in man" (Jn 2:25), in his innermost being, in his
"heart". He was a witness of God's eternal plan for the human being,
created in his own image and likeness as man and woman. He was also
perfectly aware of the consequences of sin, of that "mystery of
iniquity" working in human hearts as the bitter fruit of the
obscuring of the divine image. It is truly significant that in his
important discussion about marriage and its indissolubility, in the
presence of "the Scribes", who by profession were experts in the
Law, Jesus makes reference to the "beginning". The question asked
concerns a man's right "to divorce one's wife for any cause" (Mt
19:3) and therefore also concerns the woman's right, her rightful
position in marriage, her dignity. The questioners think they have
on their side the Mosaic legislation then followed in Israel: "Why
then did Moses command one to give a certificate of divorce, and to
put her away?" (Mt 19: 7). Jesus answers: "For your hardness of
heart Moses allowed you to divorce your wives, but from the
beginning it was not so" (Mt 19: 8). Jesus appeals to the
"beginning", to the creation of man as male and female and their
ordering by God himself, which is based upon the fact that both were
created "in his image and likeness". Therefore, when "a man shall
leave his father and mother and is joined to his wife, so that the
two become one flesh", there remains in force the law which comes
from God himself: "What therefore God has joined together, let no
man put asunder" (Mt 19: 6).
The principle of this "ethos", which from the beginning marks the
reality of creation, is now confirmed by Christ in opposition to
that tradition which discriminated against women. In this tradition
the male "dominated", without having proper regard for woman and for
her dignity, which the "ethos" of creation made the basis of the
mutual relationships of two people united in marriage. This "ethos"
is recalled and confirmed by Christ's words; it is the "ethos" of
the Gospel and of Redemption.
Women in the Gospel
13. As we scan the pages of the Gospel, many women, of different
ages and conditions, pass before our eyes. We meet women with
illnesses or physical sufferings, such as the one who had "a spirit
of infirmity for eighteen years; she was bent over and could not
fully straighten herself" (Lk 13:11); or Simon's mother-in-law, who
"lay sick with a fever" (Mk 1:30); or the woman "who had a flow of
blood" (cf. Mk 5:25-34), who could not touch anyone because it was
believed that her touch would make a person "impure". Each of them
was healed, and the last-mentioned - the one with a flow of blood,
who touched Jesus' garment "in the crowd" (Mk 5:27) - was praised by
him for her great faith: "Your faith has made you well" (Mk 5:34).
Then there is the daughter of Jairus, whom Jesus brings back to
life, saying to her tenderly: "Little girl, I say to you, arise" (Mk
5:41). There also is the widow of Nain, whose only son Jesus brings
back to life, accompanying his action by an expression of
affectionate mercy: "He had compassion on her and said to her, 'Do
not weep!'"(Lk 7:13). And finally there is the Canaanite woman, whom
Christ extols for her faith, her humility and for that greatness of
spirit of which only a mother's heart is capable. "O woman, great is
your faith! Be it done for you as you desire" (Mt 15:28). The
Canaanite woman was asking for the healing of her daughter.
Sometimes the women whom Jesus met and who received so many graces
from him, also accompanied him as he journeyed with the Apostles
through the towns and villages, proclaiming the Good News of the
Kingdom of God; and they "provided for them out of their means". The
Gospel names Joanna, who was the wife of Herod's steward, Susanna
and "many others" (cf. Lk 8:1-3).
Sometimes women appear in the parables which Jesus of Nazareth used
to illustrate for his listeners the truth about the Kingdom of God.
This is the case in the parables of the lost coin (cf. Lk 15: 8-10),
the leaven (cf. Mt 13:33), and the wise and foolish virgins (cf. Mt
25:1-13). Particularly eloquent is the story of the widow's mite.
While "the rich were putting their gifts into the treasury... a poor
widow put in two copper coins". Then Jesus said: "This poor widow
has put in more than all of them... she out of her poverty put in
all the living that she had" (Lk 21:1-4). In this way Jesus presents
her as a model for everyone and defends her, for in the
socio-juridical system of the time widows were totally defenceless
people (cf. also Lk 18:1-7).
In all of Jesus' teaching, as well as in his behaviour, one can find
nothing which reflects the discrimination against women prevalent in
his day. On the contrary, his words and works always express the
respect and honour due to women. The woman with a stoop is called a
"daughter of Abraham" (Lk 13:16), while in the whole Bible the title
"son of Abraham" is used only of men. Walking the Via Dolorosa to
Golgotha, Jesus will say to the women: "Daughters of Jerusalem, do
not weep for me" (Lk 23:28). This way of speaking to and about
women, as well as his manner of treating them, clearly constitutes
an "innovation" with respect to the prevailing custom at that time.
This becomes even more explicit in regard to women whom popular
opinion contemptuously labelled sinners, public sinners and
adulteresses. There is the Samaritan woman, to whom Jesus himself
says: "For you have had five husbands, and he whom you now have is
not your husband". And she, realizing that he knows the secrets of
her life, recognizes him as the Messiah and runs to tell her
neighbours. The conversation leading up to this realization is one
of the most beautiful in the Gospel (cf. Jn 4:7-27).
Then there is the public sinner who, in spite of her condemnation by
common opinion, enters into the house of the Pharisee to anoint the
feet of Jesus with perfumed oil. To his host, who is scandalized by
this, he will say: "Her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she
loved much" (cf. Lk 7:37-47).
Finally, there is a situation which is perhaps the most eloquent: a
woman caught in adulterv is brought to Jesus. To the leading
question "In the law Moses commanded us to stone such. What do you
say about her?", Jesus replies: "Let him who is without sin among
you be the first to throw a stone at her". The power of truth
contained in this answer is so great that "they went away, one by
one, beginning with the eldest". Only Jesus and the woman remain.
"Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?". "No one, Lord".
"Neither do I condemn you; go, and do not sin again" (cf. Jn
8:3-11).
These episodes provide a very clear picture. Christ is the one who
"knows what is in man" (cf. Jn 2:25) - in man and woman. He knows
the dignity of man, his worth in God's eyes. He himself, the Christ,
is the definitive confirmation of this worth. Everything he says and
does is definitively fulfilled in the Paschal Mystery of the
Redemption. Jesus' attitude to the women whom he meets in the course
of his Messianic service reflects the eternal plan of God, who, in
creating each one of them, chooses her and loves her in Christ (cf.
Eph 1:1-5). Each woman therefore is "the only creature on earth
which God willed for its own sake". Each of them from the
"beginning" inherits as a woman the dignity of personhood. Jesus of
Nazareth confirms this dignity, recalls it, renews it, and makes it
a part of the Gospel and of the Redemption for which he is sent into
the world. Every word and gesture of Christ about women must
therefore be brought into the dimension of the Paschal Mystery. In
this way everything is completely explained.
The woman caught in adultery
14. Jesus enters into the concrete and historical situation of
women, a situation which is weighed down by the inheritance of sin.
One of the ways in which this inheritance is expressed is habitual
discrimination against women in favour of men. This inheritance is
rooted within women too. From this point of view the episode of the
woman "caught in adultery" (cf. Jn 8:3-11) is particularly eloquent.
In the end Jesus says to her: "Do not sin again", but first he
evokes an awareness of sin in the men who accuse her in order to
stone her, thereby revealing his profound capacity to see human
consciences and actions in their true light. Jesus seems to say to
the accusers: Is not this woman, for all her sin, above all a
confirmation of your own transgressions, of your "male" injustice,
your misdeeds?
This truth is valid for the whole human race. The episode recorded
in the Gospel of John is repeated in countless similar situations in
every period of history. A woman is left alone, exposed to public
opinion with "her sin", while behind "her" sin there lurks a man - a
sinner, guilty "of the other's sin", indeed equally responsible for
it. And yet his sin escapes notice, it is passed over in silence: he
does not appear to be responsible for "the others's sin"! Sometimes,
forgetting his own sin, he even makes himself the accuser, as in the
case described. How often, in a similar way, the woman pays for her
own sin (maybe it is she, in some cases, who is guilty of the "others's
sin" - the sin of the man), but she alone pays and she pays all
alone! How often is she abandoned with her pregnancy, when the man,
the child's father, is unwilling to accept responsibility for it?
And besides the many "unwed mothers" in our society, we also must
consider all those who, as a result of various pressures, even on
the part of the guilty man, very often "get rid of" the child before
it is born. "They get rid of it": but at what price? Public opinion
today tries in various ways to "abolish" the evil of this sin.
Normally a woman's conscience does not let her forget that she has
taken the life of her own child, for she cannot destroy that
readiness to accept life which marks her "ethos" from the
"beginning".
The attitude of Jesus in the episode described in John 8:3-11 is
significant. This is one of the few instances in which his power -
the power of truth - is so clearly manifested with regard to human
consciences. Jesus is calm, collected and thoughtful. As in the
conversation with the Pharisees (cf. Mt 19:3-9), is Jesus not aware
of being in contact with the mystery of the "beginning", when man
was created male and female, and the woman was entrusted to the man
with her feminine distinctiveness, and with her potential for
motherhood? The man was also entrusted by the Creator to the woman -
they were entrusted to each other as persons made in the image and
likeness of God himself. This entrusting is the test of love,
spousal love. In order to become "a sincere gift" to one another,
each of them has to feel responsible for the gift. This test is
meant for both of them - man and woman - from the "beginning". After
original sin, contrary forces are at work in man and woman as a
result of the threefold concupiscence, the "stimulus of sin". They
act from deep within the human being. Thus Jesus will say in the
Sermon on the Mount: "Every one who looks at a woman lustfully has
already committed adultery with her in his heart" (Mt 5:28). These
words, addressed directly to man, show the fundamental truth of his
responsibility vis-a-vis woman: her dignity, her motherhood, her
vocation. But indirectly these words concern the woman. Christ did
everything possible to ensure that - in the context of the customs
and social relationships of that time - women would find in his
teaching and actions their own subjectivity and dignity. On the
basis of the eternal "unity of the two", this dignity directly
depends on woman herself, as a subject responsible for herself, and
at the same time it is "given as a task" to man. Christ logically
appeals to man's responsibility. In the present meditation on
women's dignity and vocation, it is necessary that we refer to the
context which we find in the Gospel. The dignity and the vocation of
women - as well as those of men - find their eternal source in the
heart of God. And in the temporal conditions of human existence,
they are closely connected with the "unity of the two". Consequently
each man must look within himself to see whether she who was
entrusted to him as a sister in humanity, as a spouse, has not
become in his heart an object of adultery; to see whether she who,
in different ways, is the cosubject of his existence in the world,
has not become for him an "object": an object of pleasure, of
exploitation.
Guardians of the Gospel message
15. Christ's way of acting, the Gospel of his words and deeds, is a
consistent protest against whatever offends the dignity of women.
Consequently, the women who are close to Christ discover themselves
in the truth which he "teaches" and "does", even when this truth
concerns their "sinfulness". They feel "liberated" by this truth,
restored to themselves: they feel loved with "eternal love", with a
love which finds direct expression in Christ himself.
In Christ's sphere of action their position is transformed. They
feel that Jesus is speaking to them about matters which in those
times one did not discuss with a woman. Perhaps the most significant
example of this is the Samaritan woman at the well of Sychar. Jesus
- who knows that she is a sinner and speaks to her about this -
discusses the most profound mysteries of God with her. He speaks to
her of God's infinite gift of love, which is like a "spring of water
welling up to eternal life" (Jn 4:14). He speaks to her about God
who is Spirit, and about the true adoration which the Father has a
right to receive in spirit and truth (cf. Jn 4:24). Finally he
reveals to her that he is the Messiah promised to Israel (cf. Jn
4:26).
This is an event without precedent: that a woman, and what is more a
"sinful woman", becomes a "disciple" of Christ. Indeed, once taught,
she proclaims Christ to the inhabitants of Samaria, so that they too
receive him with faith (cf. Jn 4: 39-42). This is an unprecedented
event, if one remembers the usual way women were treated by those
who were teachers in Israel; whereas in Jesus of Nazareth's way of
acting such an event becomes normal. In this regard, the sisters of
Lazarus also deserve special mention: "Jesus loved Martha and her
sister (Mary) and Lazarus" (cf. Jn 11:5). Mary "listened to the
teaching" of Jesus: when he pays them a visit, he calls Mary's
behaviour "the good portion" in contrast to Martha's preoccupation
with domestic matters (cf. Lk 10: 3842). On another occasion - after
the death of Lazarus - Martha is the one who talks to Christ, and
the conversation concerns the most profound truths of revelation and
faith: "Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died".
"Your brother will rise again". "I know that he will rise again in
the resurrection at the last day". Jesus said to her: "I am the
resurrection and the life; he who believes in me, though he die, yet
shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in me shall never die.
Do you believe this?" "Yes, Lord; I believe that you are the Christ,
the Son of God, he who is coming into the world" (Jn 11:21-27).
After this profession of faith Jesus raises Lazarus. This
conversation with Martha is one of the most important in the Gospel.
Christ speaks to women about the things of God, and they understand
them; there is a true resonance of mind and heart, a response of
faith. Jesus expresses appreciation and admiration for this
distinctly "feminine" response, as in the case of the Canaanite
woman (cf. Mt 15:28). Sometimes he presents this lively faith,
filled with love, as an example. He teaches, therefore, taking as
his starting-point this feminine response of mind and heart. This is
the case with the "sinful" woman in the Pharisee's house, whose way
of acting is taken by Jesus as the starting-point for explaining the
truth about the forgiveness of sins: "Her sins, which are many, are
forgiven, for she loved much; but he who is forgiven little, loves
little" (Lk 7:47). On the occasion of another anointing, Jesus
defends the woman and her action before the disciples, Judas in
particular: "Why do you trouble this woman? For she has done a
beautiful thing to me... In pouring this ointment on my body she has
done it to prepare me for burial. Truly, I say to you, wherever this
gospel is preached in the whole world, what she has done will be
told in memory of her" (Mt 26: 6-13).
Indeed, the Gospels not only describe what that woman did at Bethany
in the house of Simon the Leper; they also highlight the fact that
women were in the forefront at the foot of the Cross, at the
decisive moment in Jesus of Nazareth's whole messianic mission. John
was the only Apostle who remained faithful, but there were many
faithful women. Not only the Mother of Christ and "his mother's
sister, Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary Magdalene" (Jn 19:25) were
present, but "there were also many women there, looking on from
afar, who had followed Jesus from Galilee, ministering to him" (Mt
27: 55). As we see, in this most arduous test of faith and fidelity
the women proved stronger than the Apostles. In this moment of
danger, those who love much succeed in overcoming their fear. Before
this there were the women on the Via Dolorosa, "who bewailed and
lamented him" (Lk 23:27). Earlier still, there was Pilate's wife,
who had warned her husband: "Have nothing to do with that righteous
man, for I have suffered much over him today in a dream" (Mt 27:19).
First witnesses of the Resurrection
16. From the beginning of Christ's mission, women show to him and to
his mystery a special sensitivity which is characteristic of their
femininity. It must also be said that this is especially confirmed
in the Paschal Mystery, not only at the Cross but also at the dawn
of the Resurrection. The women are the first at the tomb. They are
the first to find it empty. They are the first to hear: "He is not
here. He has risen, as he said" (Mt 28:6). They are the first to
embrace his feet (cf. Mt 28:9). They are also the first to be called
to announce this truth to the Apostles (cf. Mt 28:1-10; Lk 24:8-11).
The Gospel of John (cf. also Mk 16: 9) emphasizes the special role
of Mary Magdalene. She is the first to meet the Risen Christ. At
first she thinks he is the gardener; she recognizes him only when he
calls her by name: "Jesus said to her, 'Mary'. She turned and said
to him in Hebrew, 'Rabbuni' (which means Teacher). Jesus said to
her, 'Do not hold me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father, but
go to my brethren and say to them, I am ascending to my Father and
to your Father, to my God and your God'. Mary Magdalene went and
said to the disciples, 'I have seen the Lord'; and she told them
that he had said these things to her" (Jn 20:16-18).
Hence she came to be called "the apostle of the Apostles".38 Mary
Magdalene was the first eyewitness of the Risen Christ, and for this
reason she was also the first to bear witness to him before the
Apostles. This event, in a sense, crowns all that has been said
previously about Christ entrusting divine truths to women as well as
men. One can say that this fulfilled the words of the Prophet: "I
will pour out my spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters
shall prophesy" (Jl 3:1). On the fiftieth day after Christ's
Resurrection, these words are confirmed once more in the Upper Room
in Jerusalem, at the descent of the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete (cf.
Act 2:17).
Everything that has been said so far about Christ's attitude to
women confirms and clarifies, in the Holy Spirit, the truth about
the equality of man and woman. One must speak of an essential
"equality", since both of them - the woman as much as the man - are
created in the image and likeness of God. Both of them are equally
capable of receiving the outpouring of divine truth and love in the
Holy Spirit. Both receive his salvific and sanctifying "visits".
The fact of being a man or a woman involves no limitation here, just
as the salvific and sanctifying action of the Spirit in man is in no
way limited by the fact that one is a Jew or a Greek, slave or free,
according to the well-known words of Saint Paul: "For you are all
one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28). This unity does not cancel out
diversity. The Holy Spirit, who brings about this unity in the
supernatural order of sanctifying grace, contributes in equal
measure to the fact that "your sons will prophesy" and that "your
daughters will prophesy". "To prophesy" means to express by one's
words and one's life "the mighty works of God" (Acts 2: 11),
preserving the truth and originality of each person, whether woman
or man. Gospel "equality", the "equality" of women and men in regard
to the "mighty works of God" - manifested so clearly in the words
and deeds of Jesus of Nazareth - constitutes the most obvious basis
for the dignity and vocation of women in the Church and in the
world. Every vocation has a profoundly personal and prophetic
meaning. In "vocation" understood in this way, what is personally
feminine reaches a new dimension: the dimension of the "mighty works
of God", of which the woman becomes the living subject and an
irreplaceable witness.
VI. MOTHERHOOD - VIRGINITY
Two dimensions of women's vocation"
17. We must now focus our meditation on virginity and motherhood as
two particular dimensions of the fulfillment of the female
personality. In the light of the Gospel, they acquire their full
meaning and value in Mary, who as a Virgin became the Mother of the
Son of God. These two dimensions of the female vocation were united
in her in an exceptional manner, in such a way that one did not
exclude the other but wonderfully complemented it. The description
of the Annunciation in the Gospel of Luke clearly shows that this
seemed impossible to the Virgin of Nazareth. When she hears the
words: "You will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall
call his name Jesus", she immediately asks: "How can this be, since
I have no husband?" (Lk 1: 31, 34). In the usual order of things
motherhood is the result of mutual "knowledge" between a man and
woman in the marriage union. Mary, firm in her resolve to preserve
her virginity, puts this question to the divine messenger, and
obtains from him the explanation: "The Holy Spirit will come upon
you" - your motherhood will not be the consequence of matrimonial
"knowledge", but will be the work of the Holy Spirit; the "power of
the Most High" will "overshadow" the mystery of the Son's conception
and birth; as the Son of the Most High, he is given to you
exclusively by God, in a manner known to God. Mary, therefore,
maintained her virginal "I have no husband" (cf. Lk 1: 34) and at
the same time became a Mother. Virginity and motherhood co-exist in
her: they do not mutually exclude each other or place limits on each
other. Indeed, the person of the Mother of God helps everyone -
especially women - to see how these two dimensions, these two paths
in the vocation of women as persons, explain and complete each
other.
Motherhood
18 . In order to share in this "vision", we must once again seek a
deeper understanding of the truth about the human person recalled by
the Second Vatican Council. The human being - both male and female -
is the only being in the world which God willed for its own sake.
The human being is a person, a subject who decides for himself. At
the same time, man "cannot fully find himself except through a
sincere gift of self".39 It has already been said that this
description, indeed this definition of the person, corresponds to
the fundamental biblical truth about the creation of the human being
- man and woman - in the image and likeness of God. This is not a
purely theoretical interpretation, nor an abstract definition, for
it gives an essential indication of what it means to be human, while
emphasizing the value of the gift of self, the gift of the person.
In this vision of the person we also find the essence of that
"ethos" which, together with the truth of creation, will be fully
developed by the books of Revelation, particularly the Gospels.
This truth about the person also opens up the path to a full
understanding of women's motherhood. Motherhood is the fruit of the
marriage union of a man and woman, of that biblical "knowledge"
which corresponds to the "union of the two in one flesh" (cf. Gen
2:24). This brings about - on the woman's part - a special "gift of
self", as an expression of that spousal love whereby the two are
united to each other so closely that they become "one flesh".
Biblical "knowledge" is achieved in accordance with the truth of the
person only when the mutual self-giving is not distorted either by
the desire of the man to become the "master" of his wife ("he shall
rule over you") or by the woman remaining closed within her own
instincts ("your desire shall be for your husband": Gen 3:16).
This mutual gift of the person in marriage opens to the gift of a
new life, a new human being, who is also a person in the likeness of
his parents. Motherhood implies from the beginning a special
openness to the new person: and this is precisely the woman's
"part". In this openness, in conceiving and giving birth to a child,
the woman "discovers herself through a sincere gift of self". The
gift of interior readiness to accept the child and bring it into the
world is linked to the marriage union, which - as mentioned earlier
- should constitute a special moment in the mutual self-giving both
by the woman and the man. According to the Bible, the conception and
birth of a new human being are accompanied by the following words of
the woman: "I have brought a man into being with the help of the
Lord" (Gen 4:1).This exclamation of Eve, the "mother of all the
living" is repeated every time a new human being comes into the
world. It expresses the woman's joy and awareness that she is
sharing in the great mystery of eternal generation. The spouses
share in the creative power of God!
The woman's motherhood in the period between the baby's conception
and birth is a bio-physiological and psychological process which is
better understood in our days than in the past, and is the subject
of many detailed studies. Scientific analysis fully confirms that
the very physical constitution of women is naturally disposed to
motherhood - conception, pregnancy and giving birth - which is a
consequence of the marriage union with the man. At the same time,
this also corresponds to the psycho-physical structure of women.
What the different branches of science have to say on this subject
is important and useful, provided that it is not limited to an
exclusively bio-physiological interpretation of women and of
motherhood. Such a "restricted" picture would go hand in hand with a
materialistic concept of the human being and of the world. In such a
case, what is truly essential would unfortunately be lost.
Motherhood as a human fact and phenomenon, is fully explained on the
basis of the truth about the person. Motherhood is linked to the
personal structure of the woman and to the personal dimension of the
gift: "I have brought a man into being with the help of the Lord"
(Gen 4:1). The Creator grants the parents the gift of a child. On
the woman's part, this fact is linked in a special way to "a sincere
gift of self". Mary's words at the Annunciation - "Let it be to me
according to your word" - signify the woman's readiness for the gift
of self and her readiness to accept a new life.
The eternal mystery of generation, which is in God himself, the one
and Triune God (cf. Eph 3:14-15), is reflected in the woman's
motherhood and in the man's fatherhood. Human parenthood is
something shared by both the man and the woman. Even if the woman,
out of love for her husband, says: "I have given you a child", her
words also mean: "This is our child". Although both of them together
are parents of their child, the woman's motherhood constitutes a
special "part" in this shared parenthood, and the most demanding
part. Parenthood - even though it belongs to both - is realized much
more fully in the woman, especially in the prenatal period. It is
the woman who "pays" directly for this shared generation, which
literally absorbs the energies of her body and soul. It is therefore
necessary that the man be fully aware that in their shared
parenthood he owes a special debt to the woman. No program of "equal
rights" between women and men is valid unless it takes this fact
fully into account.
Motherhood involves a special communion with the mystery of life, as
it develops in the woman's womb. The mother is filled with wonder at
this mystery of life, and "understands" with unique intuition what
is happening inside her. In the light of the "beginning", the mother
accepts and loves as a person the child she is carrying in her womb.
This unique contact with the new human being developing within her
gives rise to an attitude towards human beings - not only towards
her own child, but every human being - which profoundly marks the
woman's personality. It is commonly thought that women are more
capable than men of paying attention to another person, and that
motherhood develops this predisposition even more. The man - even
with all his sharing in parenthood - always remains "outside" the
process of pregnancy and the baby's birth; in many ways he has to
learn his own "fatherhood" from the mother. One can say that this is
part of the normal human dimension of parenthood, including the
stages that follow the birth of the baby, especially the initial
period. The child's upbringing, taken as a whole, should include the
contribution of both parents: the maternal and paternal
contribution. In any event, the mother's contribution is decisive in
laying the foundation for a new human personality.
Motherhood in relation to the Covenant
19. Our reflection returns to the biblical exemplar of the "woman"
in the Proto-evangelium. The "woman", as mother and first teacher of
the human being (education being the spiritual dimension of
parenthood), has a specific precedence over the man. Although
motherhood, especially in the bio-physical sense, depends upon the
man, it places an essential "mark" on the whole personal growth
process of new children. Motherhood in the bio-physical sense
appears to be passive: the formation process of a new life "takes
place" in her, in her body, which is nevertheless profoundly
involved in that process. At the same time, motherhood in its
personal-ethical sense expresses a very important creativity on the
part of the woman, upon whom the very humanity of the new human
being mainly depends. In this sense too the woman's motherhood
presents a special call and a special challenge to the man and to
his fatherhood.
The biblical exemplar of the "woman" finds its culmination in the
motherhood of the Mother of God. The words of the Proto-evangelium -
"I will put enmity between you and the woman" - find here a fresh
confirmation. We see that through Mary - through her maternal
"fiat", ("Let it be done to me") - God begins a New Covenant with
humanity. This is the eternal and definitive Covenant in Christ, in
his body and blood, in his Cross and Resurrection. Precisely because
this Covenant is to be fulfilled "in flesh and blood" its beginning
is in the Mother. Thanks solely to her and to her virginal and
maternal "fiat", the "Son of the Most High" can say to the Father:
"A body you have prepared for me. Lo, I have come to do your will, O
God" (cf. Heb 10:5, 7).
Motherhood has been introduced into the order of the Covenant that
God made with humanity in Jesus Christ. Each and every time that
motherhood is repeated in human history, it is always related to the
Covenant which God established with the human race through the
motherhood of the Mother of God.
Does not Jesus bear witness to this reality when he answers the
exclamation of that woman in the crowd who blessed him for Mary's
motherhood: "Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts that
you sucked!"? Jesus replies: "Blessed rather are those who hear the
word of God and keep it" (Lk 11:27-28). Jesus confirms the meaning
of motherhood in reference to the body, but at the same time he
indicates an even deeper meaning, which is connected with the order
of the spirit: it is a sign of the Covenant with God who "is spirit"
(Jn 4: 24). This is true above all for the motherhood of the Mother
of God. The motherhood of every woman, understood in the light of
the Gospel, is similarly not only "of flesh and blood": it expresses
a profound "listening to the word of the living God" and a readiness
to "safeguard" this Word, which is "the word of eternal life" (cf.
Jn 6:68). For it is precisely those born of earthly mothers, the
sons and daughters of the human race, who receive from the Son of
God the power to become "children of God" (Jn 1:12). A dimension of
the New Covenant in Christ's blood enters into human parenthood,
making it a reality and a task for "new creatures" (cf. 2 Cor 5:
17). The history of every human being passes through the threshold
of a woman's motherhood; crossing it conditions "the revelation of
the children of God" (cf. Rom 8: 19).
"When a woman is in travail she has sorrow, because her hour has
come; but when she is delivered of the child, she no longer
remembers the anguish, for joy that a child is born into the world"
(Jn 16: 21). The first part of Christ's words refers to the "pangs
of childbirth" which belong to the heritage of original sin; at the
same time these words indicate the link that exists between the
woman's motherhood and the Paschal Mystery. For this mystery also
includes the Mother's sorrow at the foot of the Cross - the Mother
who through faith shares in the amazing mystery of her Son's
"self-emptying": "This is perhaps the deepest 'kenosis' of faith in
human history".40
As we contemplate this Mother, whose heart "a sword has pierced"
(cf. Lk 2: 35), our thoughts go to all the suffering women in the
world, suffering either physically or morally. In this suffering a
woman's sensitivity plays a role, even though she often succeeds in
resisting suffering better than a man. It is difficult to enumerate
these sufferings; it is difficult to call them all by name. We may
recall her maternal care for her children, especially when they fall
sick or fall into bad ways; the death of those most dear to her; the
loneliness of mothers forgotten by their grown up children; the
loneliness of widows; the sufferings of women who struggle alone to
make a living; and women who have been wronged or exploited. Then
there are the sufferings of consciences as a result of sin, which
has wounded the woman's human or maternal dignity: the wounds of
consciences which do not heal easily. With these sufferings too we
must place ourselves at the foot of the Cross.
But the words of the Gospel about the woman who suffers when the
time comes for her to give birth to her child, immediately
afterwards express joy: it is "the joy that a child is born into the
world". This joy too is referred to the Paschal Mystery, to the joy
which is communicated to the Apostles on the day of Christ's
Resurrection: "So you have sorrow now" (these words were said the
day before the Passion); "but I will see you again and your hearts
will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you" (Jn 16:
22-23).
Virginity for the sake of the Kingdom
20. In the teaching of Christ, motherhood is connected with
virginity, but also distinct from it. Fundamental to this is Jesus'
statement in the conversation on the indissolubility of marriage.
Having heard the answer given to the Pharisees, the disciples say to
Christ: "If such is the case of a man with his wife, it is not
expedient to marry" (Mt 19: 10). Independently of the meaning which
"it is not expedient" had at that time in the mind of the disciples,
Christ takes their mistaken opinion as a starting point for
instructing them on the value of celibacy. He distinguishes celibacy
which results from natural defects - even though they may have been
caused by man - from "celibacy for the sake of the Kingdom of
heaven". Christ says, "and there are eunuchs who have made
themselves eunuchs for the sake of the Kingdom of heaven" (Mt
19:12). It is, then, a voluntary celibacy, chosen for the sake of
the Kingdom of heaven, in view of man's eschatological vocation to
union with God. He then adds: "He who is able to receive this, let
him receive it". These words repeat what he had said at the
beginning of the discourse on celibacy (cf. Mt 19:11). Consequently,
celibacy for the kingdom of heaven results not only from a free
choice on the part of man, but also from a special grace on the part
of God, who calls a particular person to live celibacy. While this
is a special sign of the Kingdom of God to come, it also serves as a
way to devote all the energies of soul and body during one's earthly
life exclusively for the sake of the eschatological kingdom.
Jesus' words are the answer to the disciples' question. They are
addressed directly to those who put the question: in this case they
were men. Nevertheless, Christ's answer, in itself, has a value both
for men and for women. In this context it indicates the evangelical
ideal of virginity, an ideal which constitutes a clear "innovation"
with respect to the tradition of the Old Testament. Certainly that
tradition was connected in some way with Israel's expectation of the
Messiah's coming, especially among the women of Israel from whom he
was to be born. In fact, the ideal of celibacy and virginity for the
sake of greater closeness to God was not entirely foreign to certain
Jewish circles, especially in the period immediately preceding the
coming of Jesus. Nevertheless, celibacy for the sake of the Kingdom,
or rather virginity, is undeniably an innovation connected with the
incarnation of God.
From the moment of Christ's coming, the expectation of the People of
God has to be directed to the eschatological Kingdom which is coming
and to which he must lead "the new Israel". A new awareness of faith
is essential for such a turn-about and change of values. Christ
emphasizes this twice: "He who is able to receive this, let him
receive it". Only "those to whom it is given" understand it (Mt
19:11). Mary is the first person in whom this new awareness is
manifested, for she asks the Angel: "How can this be, since I have
no husband?" (Lk 1:34).Even though she is "betrothed to a man whose
name was Joseph" (cf. Lk 1:27), she is firm in her resolve to remain
a virgin. The motherhood which is accomplished in her comes
exclusively from the "power of the Most High", and is the result of
the Holy Spirit's coming down upon her (cf. Lk 1:35). This divine
motherhood, therefore, is an altogether unforeseen response to the
human expectation of women in Israel: it comes to Mary as a gift
from God himself. This gift is the beginning and the prototype of a
new expectation on the part of all. It measures up to the Eternal
Covenant, to God's new and definitive promise: it is a sign of
eschatological hope.
On the basis of the Gospel, the meaning of virginity was developed
and better understood as a vocation for women too, one in which
their dignity, like that of the Virgin of Nazareth, finds
confirmation. The Gospel puts forward the ideal of the consecration
of the person, that is, the person's exclusive dedication to God by
virtue of the evangelical counsels: in particular, chastity, poverty
and obedience. Their perfect incarnation is Jesus Christ himself.
Whoever wishes to follow him in a radical way chooses to live
according to these counsels. They are distinct from the commandments
and show the Christian the radical way of the Gospel. From the very
beginning of Christianity men and women have set out on this path,
since the evangelical ideal is addressed to human beings without any
distinction of sex.
In this wider context, virginity has to be considered also as a path
for women, a path on which they realize their womanhood in a way
different from marriage. In order to understand this path, it is
necessary to refer once more to the fundamental idea of Christian
anthropology. By freely choosing virginity, women confirm themselves
as persons, as beings whom the Creator from the beginning has willed
for their own sake.41 At the same time they realize the personal
value of their own femininity by becoming "a sincere gift" for God
who has revealed himself in Christ, a gift for Christ, the Redeemer
of humanity and the Spouse of souls: a "spousal" gift. One cannot
correctly understand virginity - a woman's consecration in virginity
- without referring to spousal love. It is through this kind of love
that a person becomes a gift for the other.42 Moreover, a man's
consecration in priestly celibacy or in the religious state is to be
understood analogously.
The naturally spousal predisposition of the feminine personality
finds a response in virginity understood in this way. Women, called
from the very "beginning" to be loved and to love, in a vocation to
virginity find Christ first of all as the Redeemer who "loved until
the end" through his total gift of self; and they respond to this
gift with a "sincere gift" of their whole lives. They thus give
themselves to the divine Spouse, and this personal gift tends to
union, which is properly spiritual in character. Through the Holy
Spirit's action a woman becomes "one spirit" with Christ the Spouse
(cf. 1 Cor 6:17).
This is the evangelical ideal of virginity, in which both the
dignity and the vocation of women are realized in a special way. In
virginity thus understood the so-called radicalism of the Gospel
finds expression: "Leave everything and follow Christ" (cf. Mt
19:27). This cannot be compared to remaining simply unmarried or
single, because virginity is not restricted to a mere "no", but
contains a profound "yes" in the spousal order: the gift of self for
love in a total and undivided manner.
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: motherhood "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 different 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.
"My little children with whom I am again in travail"
22. The Gospel reveals and enables us to understand precisely this
mode of being of the human person. The Gospel helps every woman and
every man to live it and thus attain fulfilment. There exists a
total equality with respect to the gifts of the Holy Spirit, with
respect to the "mighty works of God" (Acts 2:11). Moreover, it is
precisely in the face of the "mighty works of God" that Saint Paul,
as a man, feels the need to refer to what is essentially feminine in
order to express the truth about his own apostolic service. This is
exactly what Paul of Tarsus does when he addresses the Galatians
with the words: "My little children, with whom I am again in
travail" (Gal 4:19). In the First Letter to the Corinthians (7: 38)
Saint Paul proclaims the superiority of virginity over marriage,
which is a constant teaching of the Church in accordance with the
spirit of Christ's words recorded in the Gospel of Matthew (19:
10-12); he does so without in any way obscuring the importance of
physical and spiritual motherhood. Indeed, in order to illustrate
the Church's fundamental mission, he finds nothing better than the
reference to motherhood.
The same analogy - and the same truth - are present in the Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church. Mary is the "figure" of the Church:43
"For in the mystery of the Church, herself rightly called mother and
virgin, the Blessed Virgin came first as an eminent and singular
exemplar of both virginity and motherhood. ... The Son whom she
brought forth is He whom God placed as the first-born among many
brethren (cf. Rom 8: 29),namely, among the faithful. In their birth
and development she cooperates with a maternal love".44 "Moreover,
contemplating Mary's mysterious sanctity, imitating her charity, and
faithfully fulfilling the Father's will, the Church herself becomes
a mother by accepting God's word in faith. For by her preaching and
by baptism she brings forth to a new and immortal life children who
are conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of God".45 This is
motherhood "according to the Spirit" with regard to the sons and
daughters of the human race. And this motherhood - as already
mentioned - becomes the woman's "role" also in virginity. "The
Church herself is a virgin, who keeps whole and pure the fidelity
she has pledged to her Spouse".46 This is most perfectly fulfilled
in Mary. The Church, therefore, "imitating the Mother of her Lord,
and by the power of the Holy Spirit, ... preserves with virginal
purity an integral faith, a firm hope, and a sincere charity".47
The Council has confirmed that, unless one looks to the Mother of
God, it is impossible to understand the mystery of the Church, her
reality, her essential vitality. Indirectly we find here a reference
to the biblical exemplar of the "woman" which is already clearly
outlined in the description of the "beginning" (cf. Gen 3:15)and
which procedes from creation, through sin to the Redemption. In this
way there is a confirmation of the profound union between what is
human and what constitutes the divine economy of salvation in human
history. The Bible convinces us of the fact that one can have no
adequate hermeneutic of man, or of what is "human", without
appropriate reference to what is "feminine". There is an analogy in
God's salvific economy: if we wish to understand it fully in
relation to the whole of human history, we cannot omit, in the
perspective of our faith, the mystery of "woman":
virgin-mother-spouse.
VII. THE CHURCH - THE BRIDE OF CHRIST
The "great mystery"
23. Of fundamental importance here are the words of the Letter to
the Ephesians: "Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the
Church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her,
having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, that he
might present the Church to himself in splendour, without spot or
wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without
blemish. Even so husbands should love their wives as their own
bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. For no man ever hates
his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, as Christ does the
Church, because we are members of his body. 'For this reason a man
shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the
two shall become one flesh'. This mystery is a profound one, and I
am saying that it refers to Christ and the Church" (5:25-32).
In this Letter the author expresses the truth about the Church as
the bride of Christ, and also indicates how this truth is rooted in
the biblical reality of the creation of the human being as male and
female. Created in the image and likeness of God as a "unity of the
two", both have been called to a spousal love. Following the
description of creation in the Book of Genesis (2:18-25), one can
also say that this fundamental call appears in the creation of
woman, and is inscribed by the Creator in the institution of
marriage, which, according to Genesis 2:24, has the character of a
union of persons ("communio personarum") from the very beginning.
Although not directly, the very description of the "beginning" (cf.
Gen 1:27; 2:24) shows that the whole "ethos" of mutual relations
between men and women has to correspond to the personal truth of
their being.
All this has already been considered. The Letter to the Ephesians
once again confirms this truth, while at the same time comparing the
spousal character of the love between man and woman to the mystery
of Christ and of the Church. Christ is the Bridegroom of the Church
- the Church is the Bride of Christ. This analogy is not without
precedent; it transfers to the New Testament what was already
contained in the Old Testament, especially in the prophets Hosea,
Jeremiah, Ezekiel and Isaiah.48 The respective passages deserve a
separate analysis. Here we will cite only one text. This is how God
speaks to his Chosen People through the Prophet: "Fear not, for you
will not be ashamed; be not confounded, for you will not be put to
shame; for you will forget the shame of your youth, and the reproach
of your widowhood you will remember no more. For your Maker is your
husband, the Lord of hosts is his name; and the Holy One of Israel
is your Redeemer, the God of the whole earth he is called. For the
Lord has called you like a wife forsaken and grieved in spirit, like
a wife of youth when she is cast off, says your God. For a brief
moment I forsook you, but with great compassion I will gather you.
In overflowing wrath for a moment I hid my face from you, but with
everlasting love I will have compassion on you, says the Lord, your
Redeemer. ... For the mountains may depart and the hills be removed,
but my steadfast love shall not depart from you, and my covenant of
peace shall not be removed, says the Lord, who has compassion on
you" (Is 54:4-8, 10).
Since the human being - man and woman - has been created in God's
image and likeness, God can speak about himself through the lips of
the Prophet using language which is essentially human. In the text
of Isaiah quoted above, the expression of God's love is "human", but
the love itself is divine. Since it is God's love, its spousal
character is properly divine, even though it is expressed by the
analogy of a man's love for a woman. The woman-bride is Israel,
God's Chosen People, and this choice originates exclusively in God's
gratuitous love. It is precisely this love which explains the
Covenant, a Covenant often presented as a marriage covenant which
God always renews with his Chosen People. On the part of God the
Covenant is a lasting "commitment"; he remains faithful to his
spousal love even if the bride often shows herself to be unfaithful.
This image of spousal love, together with the figure of the divine
Bridegroom - a very clear image in the texts of the Prophets - finds
crowning confirmation in the Letter to the Ephesians (5:23-32).
Christ is greeted as the bridegroom by John the Baptist (cf. Jn
3:27-29). Indeed Christ applies to himself this comparison drawn
from the Prophets (cf. Mk 2:19-20). The Apostle Paul, who is a
bearer of the Old Testament heritage, writes to the Corinthians: "I
feel a divine jealousy for you, for I betrothed you to Christ to
present you as a pure bride to her one husband" (2 Cor 11:2). But
the fullest expression of the truth about Christ the Redeemer's
love, according to the analogy of spousal love in marriage, is found
in the Letter to the Ephesians: "Christ loved the Church and gave
himself up for her" (5:25), thereby fully confirming the fact that
the Church is the bride of Christ: "The Holy One of Israel is your
Redeemer" (Is 54:5). In Saint Paul's text the analogy of the spousal
relationship moves simultaneously in two directions which make up
the whole of the "great mystery" ("sacramentum magnum").
The covenant proper to spouses "explains" the spousal character of
the union of Christ with the Church, and in its turn this union, as
a "great sacrament", determines the sacramentality of marriage as a
holy covenant between the two spouses, man and woman. Reading this
rich and complex passage, which taken as a whole is a great analogy,
we must distinguish that element which expresses the human reality
of interpersonal relations from that which expresses in symbolic
language the "great mystery" which is divine.
The Gospel "innovation"
24. The text is addressed to the spouses as real women and men. It
reminds them of the "ethos" of spousal love which goes back to the
divine institution of marriage from the "beginning". Corresponding
to the truth of this institution is the exhortation: "Husbands, love
your wives", love them because of that special and unique bond
whereby in marriage a man and a woman become "one flesh" (Gen 2:24;
Eph 5:31). In this love there is a fundamental affirmation of the
woman as a person. This affirmation makes it possible for the female
personality to develop fully and be enriched. This is precisely the
way Christ acts as the bridegroom of the Church; he desires that she
be "in splendour, without spot or wrinkle" (Eph 5:27). One can say
that this fully captures the whole "style" of Christ in dealing with
women. Husbands should make their own the elements of this style in
regard to their wives; analogously, all men should do the same in
regard to women in every situation. In this way both men and women
bring about "the sincere gift of self".
The author of the Letter to the Ephesians sees no contradiction
between an exhortation formulated in this way and the words: "Wives,
be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the
head of the wife" (5:22-23). The author knows that this way of
speaking, so profoundly rooted in the customs and religious
tradition of the time, is to be understood and carried out in a new
way: as a "mutual subjection out of reverence for Christ" (cf. Eph
5:21). This is especially true because the husband is called the
"head" of the wife as Christ is the head of the Church; he is so in
order to give "himself up for her" (Eph 5:25), and giving himself up
for her means giving up even his own life. However, whereas in the
relationship between Christ and the Church the subjection is only on
the part of the Church, in the relationship between husband and wife
the "subjection" is not one-sided but mutual.
In relation to the "old" this is evidently something "new": it is an
innovation of the Gospel. We find various passages in which the
apostolic writings express this innovation, even though they also
communicate what is "old": what is rooted in the religious tradition
of Israel, in its way of understanding and explaining the sacred
texts, as for example the second chapter of the Book of Genesis.49
The apostolic letters are addressed to people living in an
environment marked by that same traditional way of thinking and
acting. The "innovation" of Christ is a fact: it constitutes the
unambiguous content of the evangelical message and is the result of
the Redemption. However, the awareness that in marriage there is
mutual "subjection of the spouses out of reverence for Christ", and
not just that of the wife to the husband, must gradually establish
itself in hearts, consciences, behaviour and customs. This is a call
which from that time onwards, does not cease to challenge succeeding
generations; it is a call which people have to accept ever anew.
Saint Paul not only wrote: "In Christ Jesus... there is no more man
or woman", but also wrote: "There is no more slave or freeman". Yet
how many generations were needed for such a principle to be realized
in the history of humanity through the abolition of slavery! And
what is one to say of the many forms of slavery to which individuals
and peoples are subjected, which have not yet disappeared from
history?
But the challenge presented by the "ethos" of the Redemption is
clear and definitive. All the reasons in favour of the "subjection"
of woman to man in marriage must be understood in the sense of a
"mutual subjection" of both "out of reverence for Christ". The
measure of true spousal love finds its deepest source in Christ, who
is the Bridegroom of the Church, his Bride.
The symbolic dimension of the "great mystery"
25. In the Letter to the Ephesians we encounter a second dimension
of the analogy which, taken as a whole, serves to reveal the "great
mystery". This is a symbolic dimension. If God's love for the human
person, for the Chosen People of Israel, is presented by the
Prophets as the love of the bridegroom for the bride, such an
analogy expresses the "spousal" quality and the divine and non-human
character of God's love: "For your Maker is your husband ... the God
of the whole earth he is called" (Is 54:5). The same can also be
said of the spousal love of Christ the Redeemer: "For God so loved
the world that he gave his only Son" (Jn 3:16). It is a matter,
therefore, of God's love expressed by means of the Redemption
accomplished by Christ. According to Saint Paul's Letter, this love
is "like" the spousal love of human spouses, but naturally it is not
"the same". For the analogy implies a likeness, while at the same
time leaving ample room for non-likeness.
This is easily seen in regard to the person of the "bride".
According to the Letter to the Ephesians, the bride is the Church,
just as for the Prophets the bride was Israel. She is therefore a
collective subject and not an individual person. This collective
subject is the People of God, a community made up of many persons,
both women and men. "Christ has loved the Church" precisely as a
community, as the People of God. At the same time, in this Church,
which in the same passage is also called his "body" (cf. Eph 5:23),
he has loved every individual person. For Christ has redeemed all
without exception, every man and woman. It is precisely this love of
God which is expressed in the Redemption; the spousal character of
this love reaches completion in the history of humanity and of the
world.
Christ has entered this history and remains in it as the Bridegroom
who "has given himself". "To give" means "to become a sincere gift"
in the most complete and radical way: "Greater love has no man than
this" (Jn 15:13). According to this conception, all human beings -
both women and men - are called through the Church, to be the
"Bride" of Christ, the Redeemer of the world. In this way "being the
bride", and thus the "feminine" element, becomes a symbol of all
that is "human", according to the words of Paul: "There is neither
male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28).
From a linguistic viewpoint we can say that the analogy of spousal
love found in the Letter to the Ephesians links what is "masculine"
to what is "feminine", since, as members of the Church, men too are
included in the concept of "Bride". This should not surprise us, for
Saint Paul, in order to express his mission in Christ and in the
Church, speaks of the "little children with whom he is again in
travail" (cf. Gal 4:19). In the sphere of what is "human" - of what
is humanly personal - "masculinity" and "femininity" are distinct,
yet at the same time they complete and explain each other. This is
also present in the great analogy of the "Bride" in the Letter to
the Ephesians. In the Church every human being - male and female -
is the "Bride", in that he or she accepts the gift of the love of
Christ the Redeemer, and seeks to respond to it with the gift of his
or her own person.
Christ is the Bridegroom. This expresses the truth about the love of
God who "first loved us" (cf. 1 Jn 4:19) and who, with the gift
generated by this spousal love for man, has exceeded all human
expectations: "He loved them to the end" (Jn 13:1). The Bridegroom -
the Son consubstantial with the Father as God - became the son of
Mary; he became the "son of man", true man, a male. The symbol of
the Bridegroom is masculine. This masculine symbol represents the
human aspect of the divine love which God has for Israel, for the
Church, and for all people. Meditating on what the Gospels say about
Christ's attitude towards women, we can conclude that as a man, a
son of Israel, he revealed the dignity of the "daughters of Abraham"
(cf. Lk 13:16), the dignity belonging to women from the very
"beginning" on an equal footing with men. At the same time Christ
emphasized the originality which distinguishes women from men, all
the richness lavished upon women in the mystery of creation.
Christ's attitude towards women serves as a model of what the Letter
to the Ephesians expresses with the concept of "bridegroom".
Precisely because Christ's divine love is the love of a Bridegroom,
it is the model and pattern of all human love, men's love in
particular.
The Eucharist
26. Against the broad background of the "great mystery" expressed in
the spousal relationship between Christ and the Church, it is
possible to understand adequately the calling of the "Twelve". In
calling only men as his Apostles, Christ acted in a completely free
and sovereign manner. In doing so, he exercised the same freedom
with which, in all his behaviour, he emphasized the dignity and the
vocation of women, without conforming to the prevailing customs and
to the traditions sanctioned by the legislation of the time.
Consequently, the assumption that he called men to be apostles in
order to conform with the widespread mentality of his times, does
not at all correspond to Christ's way of acting. "Teacher, we know
that you are true, and teach the way of God truthfully, and care for
no man; for you do not regard the position of men" (Mt 22:16). These
words fully characterize Jesus of Nazareth's behaviour. Here one
also finds an explanation for the calling of the "Twelve". They are
with Christ at the Last Supper. They alone receive the sacramental
charge, "Do this in remembrance of me" (Lk 22:19; 1 Cor 11:24),
which is joined to the institution of the Eucharist. On Easter
Sunday night they receive the Holy Spirit for the forgiveness of
sins: "Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you
retain are retained" (Jn 20:23).
We find ourselves at the very heart of the Paschal Mystery, which
completely reveals the spousal love of God. Christ is the Bridegroom
because "he has given himself": his body has been "given", his blood
has been "poured out" (cf. Lk 22:19-20). In this way "he loved them
to the end" (Jn 13:1). The "sincere gift" contained in the Sacrifice
of the Cross gives definitive prominence to the spousal meaning of
God's love. As the Redeemer of the world, Christ is the Bridegroom
of the Church. The Eucharist is the Sacrament of our Redemption. It
is the Sacrament of the Bridegroom and of the Bride. The Eucharist
makes present and realizes anew in a sacramental manner the
redemptive act of Christ, who "creates" the Church, his body. Christ
is united with this "body" as the bridegroom with the bride. All
this is contained in the Letter to the Ephesians. The perennial
"unity of the two" that exists between man and woman from the very
"beginning" is introduced into this "great mystery" of Christ and of
the Church.
Since Christ, in instituting the Eucharist, linked it in such an
explicit way to the priestly service of the Apostles, it is
legitimate to conclude that he thereby wished to express the
relationship between man and woman, between what is "feminine" and
what is "masculine". It is a relationship willed by God both in the
mystery of creation and in the mystery of Redemption. It is the
Eucharist above all that expresses the redemptive act of Christ the
Bridegroom towards the Church the Bride. This is clear and
unambiguous when the sacramental ministry of the Eucharist, in which
the priest acts "in persona Christi", is performed by a man. This
explanation confirms the teaching of the Declaration Inter
Insigniores, published at the behest of Paul VI in response to the
question concerning the admission of women to the ministerial
priesthood.50
The Gift of the Bride
27. The Second Vatican Council renewed the Church's awareness of the
universality of the priesthood. In the New Covenant there is only
one sacrifice and only one priest: Christ. All the baptized share in
the one priesthood of Christ, both men and women, inasmuch as they
must "present their bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and
acceptable to God (cf. Rom 12:1), give witness to Christ in every
place, and give an explanation to anyone who asks the reason for the
hope in eternal life that is in them (cf. 1 Pt 3:15)".51 Universal
participation in Christ's sacrifice, in which the Redeemer has
offered to the Father the whole world and humanity in particular,
brings it about that all in the Church are "a kingdom of priests"
(Rev 5:10; cf. 1 Pt 2:9), who not only share in the priestly mission
but also in the prophetic and kingly mission of Christ the Messiah.
Furthermore, this participation determines the organic unity of the
Church, the People of God, with Christ. It expresses at the same
time the "great mystery" described in the Letter to the Ephesians:
the bride united to her Bridegroom; united, because she lives his
life; united, because she shares in his threefold mission (tria
munera Christi); united in such a manner as to respond with a
"sincere gift" of self to the inexpressible gift of the love of the
Bridegroom, the Redeemer of the world. This concerns everyone in the
Church, women as well as men. It obviously concerns those who share
in the a ministerial priesthood",52 which is characterized by
service. In the context of the "great mystery" of Christ and of the
Church, all are called to respond - as a bride - with the gift of
their lives to the inexpressible gift of the love of Christ, who
alone, as the Redeemer of the world, is the Church's Bridegroom. The
"royal priesthood", which is universal, at the same time expresses
the gift of the Bride.
This is of fundamental importance for understanding the Church in
her own essence, so as to avoid applying to the Church - even in her
dimension as an "institution" made up of human beings and forming
part of history - criteria of understanding and judgment which do
not pertain to her nature. Although the Church possesses a
"hierarchical" structure,53 nevertheless this structure is totally
ordered to the holiness of Christ's members. And holiness is
measured according to the "great mystery" in which the Bride
responds with the gift of love to the gift of the Bridegroom. She
does this "in the Holy Spirit", since "God's love has been poured
into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us"
(Rom 5:5). The Second Vatican Council, confirming the teaching of
the whole of tradition, recalled that in the hierarchy of holiness
it is precisely the "woman", Mary of Nazareth, who is the "figure"
of the Church. She "precedes" everyone on the path to holiness; in
her person "the Church has already reached that perfection whereby
she exists without spot or wrinkle (cf. Eph 5:27)".54 In this sense,
one can say that the Church is both "Marian" and
"Apostolic-Petrine".55
In the history of the Church, even from earliest times, there were
side-by-side with men a number of women, for whom the response of
the Bride to the Bridegroom's redemptive love acquired full
expressive force. First we see those women who had personally
encountered Christ and followed him. After his departure, together
with the Apostles, they "devoted themselves to prayer" in the Upper
Room in Jerusalem until the day of Pentecost. On that day the Holy
Spirit spoke through "the sons and daughters" of the People of God,
thus fulfilling the words of the prophet Joel (cf. Acts 2: 17).
These women, and others afterwards, played an active and important
role in the life of the early Church, in building up from its
foundations the first Christian community - and subsequent
communities - through their own charisms and their varied service.
The apostolic writings note their names, such as Phoebe, "a
deaconess of the Church at Cenchreae" (cf. Rom 16:1), Prisca with
her husband Aquila (cf. 2 Tim 4:19), Euodia and Syntyche (cf. Phil
4:2), Mary, Tryphaena, Persis, and Tryphosa (cf. Rom 16:6, 12).
Saint Paul speaks of their "hard work" for Christ, and this hard
work indicates the various fields of the Church's apostolic service,
beginning with the "domestic Church". For in the latter, "sincere
faith" passes from the mother to her children and grandchildren, as
was the case in the house of Timothy (cf. 2 Tim 1:5).
The same thing is repeated down the centuries, from one generation
to the next, as the history of the Church demonstrates. By defending
the dignity of women and their vocation, the Church has shown honour
and gratitude for those women who - faithful to the Gospel - have
shared in every age in the apostolic mission of the whole People of
God. They are the holy martyrs, virgins, and mothers of families,
who bravely bore witness to their faith and passed on the Church's
faith and tradition by bringing up their children in the spirit of
the Gospel.
In every age and in every country we find many "perfect" women (cf.
Prov. 31:10) who, despite persecution, difficulties and
discrimination, have shared in the Church's mission. It suffices to
mention: Monica, the mother of Augustine, Macrina, Olga of Kiev,
Matilda of Tuscany, Hedwig of Silesia, Jadwiga of Cracow, Elizabeth
of Thuringia, Birgitta of Sweden, Joan of Arc, Rose of Lima,
Elizabeth Ann Seton and Mary Ward.
The witness and the achievements of Christian women have had a
significant impact on the life of the Church as well as of society.
Even in the face of serious social discrimination, holy women have
acted "freely", strengthened by their union with Christ. Such union
and freedom rooted in God explain, for example, the great work of
Saint Catherine of Siena in the life of the Church, and the work of
Saint Teresa of Jesus in the monastic life.
In our own days too the Church is constantly enriched by the witness
of the many women who fulfil their vocation to holiness. Holy women
are an incarnation of the feminine ideal; they are also a model for
all Christians, a model of the "sequela Christi", an example of how
the Bride must respond with love to the love of the Bridegroom.
VIII. "THE GREATEST OF THESE IS LOVE"
In the face of changes
28. "The Church believes that Christ, who died and was raised up for
all, can through his Spirit offer man the light and the strength to
respond to his supreme destiny".56 We can apply these words of the
Conciliar Constitution Gaudium et Spes to the present reflections.
The particular reference to the dignity of women and their vocation,
precisely in our time, can and must be received in the "light and
power" which the Spirit grants to human beings, including the people
of our own age, which is marked by so many different
transformations. The Church "holds that in her Lord and Master can
be found the key, the focal point, and the goal" of man and "of all
human history", and she "maintains that beneath all changes there
are many realities which do not change and which have their ultimate
foundation in Christ, who is the same yesterday and today, yes and
forever".57
These words of the Constitution on the Church in the Modern World
show the path to be followed in undertaking the tasks connected with
the dignity and vocation of women, against the background of the
significant changes of our times. We can face these changes
correctly and adequately only if we go back to the foundations which
are to be found in Christ, to those "immutable" truths and values of
which he himself remains the "faithful witness" (cf. Rev. 1:5) and
Teacher. A different way of acting would lead to doubtful, if not
actually erroneous and deceptive result
The dignity of women and the order of love
29. The passage from the Letter to the Ephesians already quoted
(5:21-33), in which the relationship between Christ and the Church
is presented as the link between the Bridegroom and the Bride, also
makes reference to the institution of marriage as recorded in the
Book of Genesis (cf. 2:24). This passage connects the truth about
marriage as a primordial sacrament with the creation of man and
woman in the image and likeness of God (cf. Gen 1:27; 5:1). The
significant comparison in the Letter to the Ephesians gives perfect
clarity to what is decisive for the dignity of women both in the
eyes of God - the Creator and Redeemer - and in the eyes of human
beings - men and women. In God's eternal plan, woman is the one in
whom the order of love in the created world of persons takes first
root. The order of love belongs to the intimate life of God himself,
the life of the Trinity. In the intimate life of God, the Holy
Spirit is the personal hypostasis of love. Through the Spirit,
Uncreated Gift, love becomes a gift for created persons. Love, which
is of God, communicates itself to creatures: "God's love has been
poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to
us" (Rom 5:5).
The calling of woman into existence at man's side as "a helper fit
for him" (Gen 2:18) in the "unity of the two", provides the visible
world of creatures with particular conditions so that "the love of
God may be poured into the hearts" of the beings created in his
image. When the author of the Letter to the Ephesians calls Christ
"the Bridegroom" and the Church "the Bride", he indirectly confirms
through this analogy the truth about woman as bride. The Bridegroom
is the one who loves. The Bride is loved: it is she who receives
love, in order to love in return.
Rereading Genesis in light of the spousal symbol in the Letter to
the Ephesians enables us to grasp a truth which seems to determine
in an essential manner the question of women's dignity, and,
subsequently, also the question of their vocation: the dignity of
women is measured by the order of love, which is essentially the
order of justice and charity.58
Only a person can love and only a person can be loved. This
statement is primarily ontological in nature, and it gives rise to
an ethical affirmation. Love is an ontological and ethical
requirement of the person. The person must be loved, since love
alone corresponds to what the person is. This explains the
commandment of love, known already in the Old Testament (cf. Deut
6:5; Lev 19:18) and placed by Christ at the very centre of the
Gospel "ethos" (cf. Mt 22:36-40; Mk 12:28-34). This also explains
the primacy of love expressed by Saint Paul in the First Letter to
the Corinthians: "the greatest of these is love" (cf. 13:13).
Unless we refer to this order and primacy we cannot give a complete
and adequate answer to the question about women's dignity and
vocation. When we say that the woman is the one who receives love in
order to love in return, this refers not only or above all to the
specific spousal relationship of marriage. It means something more
universal, based on the very fact of her being a woman within all
the interpersonal relationships which, in the most varied ways,
shape society and structure the interaction between all persons -
men and women. In this broad and diversified context, a woman
represents a particular value by the fact that she is a human
person, and, at the same time, this particular person, by the fact
of her femininity. This concerns each and every woman, independently
of the cultural context in which she lives, and independently of her
spiritual, psychological and physical characteristics, as for
example, age, education, health, work, and whether she is married or
single.
The passage from the Letter to the Ephesians which we have been
considering enables us to think of a special kind of "prophetism"
that belongs to women in their femininity. The analogy of the
Bridegroom and the Bride speaks of the love with which every human
being - man and woman - is loved by God in Christ. But in the
context of the biblical analogy and the text's interior logic, it is
precisely the woman - the bride - who manifests this truth to
everyone. This "prophetic" character of women in their femininity
finds its highest expression in the Virgin Mother of God. She
emphasizes, in the fullest and most direct way, the intimate linking
of the order of love - which enters the world of human persons
through a Woman - with the Holy Spirit. At the Annunciation Mary
hears the words: "The Holy Spirit will come upon you" (Lk 1:35).
Awareness of a mission
30. A woman's dignity is closely connected with the love which she
receives by the very reason of her femininity; it is likewise
connected with the love which she gives in return. The truth about
the person and about love is thus confirmed. With regard to the
truth about the person, we must turn again to the Second Vatican
Council: "Man, who is the only creature on earth that God willed for
its own sake, cannot fully find himself except through a sincere
gift of self".59 This applies to every human being, as a person
created in God's image, whether man or woman. This ontological
affirmation also indicates the ethical dimension of a person's
vocation. Woman can only hand herself by giving love to others.
From the "beginning", woman - like man - was created and "placed" by
God in this order of love. The sin of the first parents did not
destroy this order, nor irreversibly cancel it out. This is proved
by the words of the Proto-evangelium (cf. Gen 3:15). Our reflections
have focused on the particular place occupied by the "woman" in this
key text of revelation. It is also to be noted how the same Woman,
who attains the position of a biblical "exemplar", also appears
within the eschatological perspective of the world and of humanity
given in the Book of Revelation 60 She is "a woman clothed with the
sun", with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of stars
(cf. Rev 12:1). One can say she is a Woman of cosmic scale, on a
scale with the whole work of creation. At the same time she is
"suffering the pangs and anguish of childbirth" (Rev 12:2) like Eve
"the mother of all the living" (Gen 3:20). She also suffers because
"before the woman who is about to give birth" (cf. Rev 12:4) there
stands "the great dragon ... that ancient serpent" (Rev 12:9),
already known from the Proto-evangelium: the Evil One, the "father
of lies" and of sin (cf. Jn 8:44). The "ancient serpent" wishes to
devour "the child". While we see in this text an echo of the Infancy
Narrative (cf. Mt 2:13,16), we can also see that the struggle with
evil and the Evil One marks the biblical exemplar of the "woman"
from the beginning to the end of history. It is also a struggle for
man, for his true good, for his salvation. Is not the Bible trying
to tell us that it is precisely in the "woman" - Eve-Mary - that
history witnesses a dramatic struggle for every human being, the
struggle for his or her fundamental "yes" or "no" to God and God's
eternal plan for humanity?
While the dignity of woman witnesses to the love which she receives
in order to love in return, the biblical "exemplar" of the Woman
also seems to reveal the true order of love which constitutes
woman's own vocation. Vocation is meant here in its fundamental, and
one may say universal significance, a significance which is then
actualized and expressed in women's many different "vocations" in
the Church and the world.
The moral and spiritual strength of a woman is joined to her
awareness that God entrusts the human being to her in a special way.
Of course, God entrusts every human being to each and every other
human being. But this entrusting concerns women in a special way -
precisely by reason of their femininity - and this in a particular
way determines their vocation.
The moral force of women, which draws strength from this awareness
and this entrusting, expresses itself in a great number of figures
of the Old Testament, of the time of Christ, and of later ages right
up to our own day.
A woman is strong because of her awareness of this entrusting,
strong because of the fact that God "entrusts the human being to
her", always and in every way, even in the situations of social
discrimination in which she may find herself. This awareness and
this fundamental vocation speak to women of the dignity which they
receive from God himself, and this makes them "strong" and
strengthens their vocation.
Thus the "perfect woman" (cf. Prov 31:10) becomes an irreplaceable
support and source of spiritual strength for other people, who
perceive the great energies of her spirit. These "perfect women" are
owed much by their families, and sometimes by whole nations.
In our own time, the successes of science and technology make it
possible to attain material well-being to a degree hitherto unknown.
While this favours some, it pushes others to the edges of society.
In this way, unilateral progress can also lead to a gradual loss of
sensitivity for man, that is, for what is essentially human. In this
sense, our time in particular awaits the manifestation of that
"genius" which belongs to women, and which can ensure sensitivity
for human beings in every circumstance: because they are human! -
and because "the greatest of these is love" (cf. 1 Cor 13:13).
Thus a careful reading of the biblical exemplar of the Woman - from
the Book of Genesis to the Book of Revelation - confirms that which
constitutes women's dignity and vocation, as well as that which is
unchangeable and ever relevant in them, because it has its "ultimate
foundation in Christ, who is the same yesterday and today, yes and
forever".61 If the human being is entrusted by God to women in a
particular way, does not this mean that Christ looks to them for the
accomplishment of the "royal priesthood" (1 Pt 2:9), which is the
treasure he has given to every individual? Christ, as the supreme
and only priest of the New and Eternal Covenant, and as the
Bridegroom of the Church, does not cease to submit this same
inheritance to the Father through the Spirit, so that God may be
"everything to everyone" (1 Cor 15:28).62
Then the truth that "the greatest of these is love" (cf. 1 Cor
13:13) will have its definitive fulfillment.
IX. CONCLUSION
If you knew the gift of God
31. "If you knew the gift of God" (Jn 4:10), Jesus says to the
Samaritan woman during one of those remarkable conversations which
show his great esteem for the dignity of women and for the vocation
which enables them to share in his messianic mission.
The present reflections, now at an end, have sought to recognize,
within the "gift of God", what he, as Creator and Redeemer, entrusts
to women, to every woman. In the Spirit of Christ, in fact, women
can discover the entire meaning of their femininity and thus be
disposed to making a "sincere gift of self" to others, thereby
finding themselves.
During the Marian Year the Church desires to give thanks to the Most
Holy Trinity for the "mystery of woman" and for every woman - for
that which constitutes the eternal measure of her feminine dignity,
for the "great works of God", which throughout human history have
been accomplished in and through her. After all, was it not in and
through her that the greatest event in human history - the
incarnation of God himself - was accomplished?
Therefore the Church gives thanks for each and every woman: for
mothers, for sisters, for wives; for women consecrated to God in
virginity; for women dedicated to the many human beings who await
the gratuitous love of another person; for women who watch over the
human persons in the family, which is the fundamental sign of the
human community; for women who work professionally, and who at times
are burdened by a great social responsibility; for "perfect" women
and for "weak" women - for all women as they have come forth from
the heart of God in all the beauty and richness of their femininity;
as they have been embraced by his eternal love; as, together with
men, they are pilgrims on this earth, which is the temporal
"homeland" of all people and is transformed sometimes into a "valley
of tears"; as they assume, together with men, a common
responsibility for the destiny of humanity according to daily
necessities and according to that definitive destiny which the human
family has in God himself, in the bosom of the ineffable Trinity.
The Church gives thanks for all the manifestations of the feminine
"genius" which have appeared in the course of history, in the midst
of all peoples and nations; she gives thanks for all the charisms
which the Holy Spirit distributes to women in the history of the
People of God, for all the victories which she owes to their faith,
hope and charity: she gives thanks for all the fruits of feminine
holiness.
The Church asks at the same time that these invaluable
"manifestations of the Spirit" (cf. 1 Cor 12:4ff.), which with great
generosity are poured forth upon the "daughters" of the eternal
Jerusalem, may be attentively recognized and appreciated so that
they may return for the common good of the Church and of humanity,
especially in our times. Meditating on the biblical mystery of the
"woman", the Church prays that in this mystery all women may
discover themselves and their "supreme vocation".
May Mary, who "is a model of the Church in the matter of faith,
charity, and perfect union with Christ",63 obtain for all of us this
same "grace", in the Year which we have dedicated to her as we
approach the third millennium from the coming of Christ.
With these sentiments, I impart the Apostolic Blessing to all the
faithful, and in a special way to women, my sisters in Christ.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 15 August, the Solemnity of the
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the year 1988, the tenth
of my Pontificate.
ENDNOTES
1. The Council's Message to Women (December 8, 1965); AAS 58 (1966),
13-14.
2. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on
the Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 8; 9; 60.
3. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Apostolate
of the Laity "Apostolicam Actuositatem," 9.
4. Cf. Pius XII, Address to Italian Women (October 21, 1945): AAS 37
(1945) 284-295; Address to the World Union of Catholic Women's
Organizations (April 24, 1952), AAS 44 (1952), 420-424; Address to
the participants in the XIV International Meeting of the World Union
of Catholic Women's Organizations (September 29,1957): AAS 49
(1957), 906-922.
5. Cf. John XXIII, Encyclical Letter "Pacem in Terris" (April 11,
1963); AAS 55 (1963), 267-268.
6. Proclamation of St. Teresa of Jesus as a "Doctor of the Universal
Church" (September 27, 1970): AAS 62 (1970), 590-596; Proclamation
of St. Catherine of Siena as a "Doctor of the Universal Church"
(October 4, 1970): AAS 62 (1970), 673-678.
7. Cf. MS 65 (1973), 284f.
8. Paul VI, Address to participants at the National Meeting of the
Centro Italiano Femminile (December 6, 1976): "Insegnamenti di Paolo
VI," XIV (1976), 1017.
9. Cf. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris Mater" (March 25, 1987), 46:
AAS 79 (1987), 424f.
10. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church "Lumen Gentium," 1.
11. An illustration of the anthropological and theological
significance of the "beginning" can be seen in the first part of the
Wednesday General Audience Addresses dedicated to the "Theology of
the Body," beginning September 5, 1979: "Insegnamenti II," 2 (1979),
234-236.
12. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 22.
13. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Declaration on the Relation
of the Church to Non-Christian Religions "Nostra Aetate," 1.
14. Ibid., 2.
15. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
Divine Revelation "Dei Verbum," 2.
16. Already according to the Fathers of the Church the first
revelation of the Trinity in the New Testament took place in the
Annunciation. One reads in a homily attributed to St. Gregory
Thaumaturgus: "You, O Mary, are resplendent with light in the
sublime spiritual kingdom! In you the Father, who is without
beginning and whose power has covered you, is glorified. In you the
Son, whom you bore in the flesh, is adored. In you the Holy Spirit,
who has brought about in your womb the birth of the great King, is
celebrated. And it is thanks to you, O Full of grace, that the holy
and consubstantial Trinity has been able to be known in the world" (Hom.
2 in Annuntiat. Virg. Mariae: PG 10, 1169). Cf. also St. Andrew of
Crete, In Annuntiat. B. Mariae: PG 97, 909.
17. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Declaration on the
Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions "Nostra Aetate,"
2.
18. The theological doctrine on the Mother of God (Theotokos), held
by many Fathers of the Church, and clarified and defined at the
Council of Ephesus (DS 251) and at the Council of Chalcedon (DS
301), has been stated again by the Second Vatican Council in Chapter
VIII of the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church "Lumen Gentium,"
52-69. Cf. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris Mater," 4, 31-32 and the
Notes 9, 78-83: loc. cit., 365, 402-404.
19. Cf. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris Mater," 7-11 and the texts of
the Fathers cited in Note 21: loc. cit., 367-373.
20. Cf. ibid., 39-41: loc. cit., 412-418.
21. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church "Lumen Gentium," 36.
22. Cf. St. Irenaeus, "Adv. haer." V, 6, 1; V, 16, 2-3: 5. Ch. 153,
72-81 and 216-221; St. Gregory of Nyssa, De hom. op. 16: PG 44, 180;
In Cant Cant. hom. 2: PG 44, 805-808; St. Augustine, In Ps. 4, 8:
CCL 38, 17.
23. "Persona est naturae rationalis individua substantia": Manlius
Severinus Boethius, Liber de persona et duabus naturis, III: PL 64,
1343; cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, "Summa Theologiae," Ia, q. 29, art. 1.
24. Among the Fathers of the Church who affirm the fundamental
equality of man and woman before God cf. Origen, In Iesu nave IX, 9:
PG 12, 878; Clement of Alexandria, Paed. 1, 4: S. Ch. 70, 128-131;
St. Augustine, Sermo 51, II, 3: PL 38, 334-335.
25. St. Gregory of Nyssa states: "God is above all love and the
fount of love. The great John says this: 'Love is of God' and 'God
is love' (1 Jn 4:7-8). The Creator has impressed this character also
on us. 'By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you
have love for one another' (Jn 13:35). Therefore, if this is not
present, all the image becomes disfigured" (De hom op. 5: PG 44,
137).
26. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 24.
27. Cf. Num 23:19; Hos 11:9; Is 40:18; 46:5; cf. also Fourth Lateran
Council (DS 806).
28. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 13.
29."Diabolic" from the Greek "dia-ballo" = "I divide, separate,
slander."
30. Cf. Origen,"In Gen. hom." 13, 4: PG 12, 234; St. Gregory of
Nyssa, De virg. 12: S. Ch. 119, 404-419; De beat. VI: PG 44, 1272.
31. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on
the Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 13.
32. Cf. ibid., 24.
33. It is precisely by appealing to the divine law that the Fathers
of the fourth century strongly react against the discrimination
still in effect with regard to women in the customs and the civil
legislation of their time. Cf. St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Or. 37, 6:
PG 36, 290; St. Jerome, "Ad Oceanum" ep. 77, 3: PL 22, 691; St.
Ambrose, "De instit. virg." III, 16:PL 16, 309; St. Augustine, Sermo
132, 2: PL 38, 735; Sermo 392, 4: PL 39, 1711.
34. Cf. St. Irenaeus, Adv. haer. III 23, 7: S. Ch. 211, 462-465; V,
21, 1: S. Ch. 153, 260-265; St. Epiphanius, Panar. III, 2, 78: PG
42, 728-729; St. Augustine, Enarr. in Ps. 103, S. 4, 6: CCL 40,
1525.
35. Cf. St. Justin, "Dial. cum Tryph." 100: PG 6, 709712; St.
Irenaeus, "Adv. haer." III, 22, 4: S. Ch. 211, 438-445; v, 19, 1: 5.
Ch. 153, 248-251; St. Cyril of Jerusalem, "Catech." 12, 15: PG 33,
741; St. John Chrysostom, "In Ps." 44, 7: PG 55, 193; St. John
Damascene, "Hom. 2 in dorm." B.V.M. 3: S. Ch. 80, 130-135; Hesychius,
Sermo 5 in Deiparam; PG 93, 1464f.; Tertullian, "De carne Christi"
17: CCL 2, 904f.; St. Jerome, "Epist". 22, 21: PL 22, 408; St.
Augustine, "Sermo" 51, 2-3: PL 38, 335; "Sermo" 232, 2: PL 38, 1108;
J. H. Newman, "A Letter to the Rev. E. B. Pusey," Longmans, London
1865; M. J. Scheeben, "Handbuch der Katholischen Dogmatik," V/1
(Freiburg 1954), 243-266; v/2 (Freiburg 1954), 306-499.
36. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 22.
37. Cf. St. Ambrose, "De instit. virg." V, 33: PL 16, 313.
38. Cf. Rabanus Maurus, "De vita beatae Mariae Magdalenae," XXVII: "Salvator...ascensionis
suae eam (=Mariam Magdalenam) ad apostolos instituit apostolam" (PL
112, 1474). "Facta est Apostolorum Apostola per hoc quod ei
committitur ut resurrectionem dominicam discipulis annuntiet": St.
Thomas Aquinas, "In Ioannem Evangelistam Expositio," c. XX, L. III 6
("Sancti Thomae Aquinatis Comment. in Matthaeum et Ioannem
Evangelistas"), Ed. Parmen. X, 629.
39. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 24.
40. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris Mater", 18: loc. cit., 383.
41. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on
the Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 24.
42. Cf. John Paul II, Wednesday General Audience Addresses, April 7
and 21, 1982: "Insegnamenti" V, 1, (1982), 1126-1131 and 1175-1179.
43. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church "Lumen Gentium," 63; St. Ambrose, In Lc II, 7: S. Ch. 45,
74; De instit. virg. XIV, 87-89: PL 16, 326-327; St. Cyril of
Alexandria, Hom. 4: PG 77, 996; St. Isidore of Seville, "Allegoriae"
139: PL 83, 117.
44. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church "Lumen Gentium," 63.
45. Ibid., 64.
46. Ibid., 64.
47. Ibid., 64. Concerning the relation Mary-Church which
continuously recurs in the reflection of the Fathers of the Church
and of the entire Christian Tradition, cf. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris
Mater," 42-44 and Notes 117-127: loc. cit., 418-422. Cf. also:
Clement of Alexandria, "Paed". 1, 6: S. Ch. 70, 186f.; St. Ambrose,
"In Lc" II, 7: "S. Ch." 45, 74; St. Augustine,"Sermo" 192, 2: PL 38,
1012; "Sermo" 195, 2: PL 38, 1018; "Sermo" 25, 8: PL 46, 938; St.
Leo the Great, "Sermo" 25, 5: PL 54, 211; "Sermo" 26, 2: PL 54, 213;
St. Bede the Venerable, "In Lc" I, 2: PL 92, 330. "Both
mothers--writes Isaac of Stella, disciple of St. Bernard--both
virgins, both conceive through the work of the Holy
Spirit...Mary...has given birth in body to her Head; the
Church...gives to this Head her body. The one and the other are
mothers of Christ: but neither of the two begets him entirely
without the other. Properly for that reason...that which is said in
general of the virgin mother Church is understood especially of the
virgin mother Mary; and that which is said in a special way of the
virgin mother Mary must be attributed in general to the virgin
mother Church; and all that is said about one of the two can be
understood without distinction of one from the other" (Sermo 51,
7-8: S. Ch. 339, 202-205).
48. Cf. for example, Hos 1:2; 2:16-18; Jer 2:2; Ezek 16:8; Is 50:1;
54:5-8.
49. Cf. Col 3:18; 1 Pt 3:1-6; Tit 2:4-5; Eph 5:22-24; 1 Cor 11:3-16;
14:33-35; 1 Tim 2:11-15.
50. Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration
Concerning the Question of the Admission of Women to the Ministerial
Priesthood "Inter Insigniores" (October 15, 1976): A, 45, 69 (1977),
98- 116.
51. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church "Lumen Gentium," 10.
52. Cf. ibid., 10.
53 Cf. ibid., 18-29.
54. Ibid., 65; cf. also 63; cf. Encyclical Letter "Redemptoris
Mater," 2-6; loc. cit., 362-367.
55. "This Marian profile is also--even perhaps more so--fundamental
and characteristic for the Church as is the apostolic and Petrine
profile to which it is profoundly united. ...The Marian dimension of
the Church is antecedent to that of the Petrine, without being in
any way divided from it or being less complementary. Mary Immaculate
precedes all others, including obviously Peter himself and the
Apostles. This is so, not only because Peter and the Apostles, being
born of the human race under the burden of sin, form part of the
Church which is 'holy from out of sinners,' but also because their
triple function has no other purpose except to form the Church in
line with the ideal of sanctity already programmed and prefigured in
Mary. A contemporary theologian has rightly stated that Mary is
'Queen of the Apostles without any pretensions to apostolic powers:
she has other and greater powers' (H. U. von Balthasar, "Neue
Klarstellungen")." Address to the Cardinal and Prelates of the Roman
Curia (December 22, 1987); "L'Osservatore Romano," December 23,
1987.
56. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on
the Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 10.
57. Ibid., 10.
58. Cf. St. Augustine, "De Trinitate," L. Viii, VII, 10-X, 14: CCL
50, 284-291.
59. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 24.
60. Cf. in the Appendix to the works of St. Ambrose, "In Apoc." IV,
3-4: PL 17, 876; St. Augustine, "De symb. ad. catech. sermo" IV: PL
40, 661.
61. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes," 10.
62. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church "Lumen Gentium," 36.
63. Cf. ibid., 63.
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