St Paul's Analogy of
Union of Head and Body Does Not Destroy Individuality of the Person
General Audience, August 25, 1982
1. In the preceding reflections on
the Letter to the Ephesians (5:21-33), we drew attention especially
to the analogy of the relationship which exists between Christ and
the Church, and of that which exists between husband and wife united
by the bond of marriage. Before undertaking the analysis of the
further passages of the text in question, we must note that within
the range of the fundamental Pauline analogy: Christ and the Church,
on the one hand, and man and woman as spouses on the other, there is
a supplementary analogy: the analogy of the head and of the body.
This analogy confers a chiefly ecclesiological significance on the
statement we analyzed: the Church as such is formed by Christ; it is
constituted by him in its essential part, as the body is by the
head. The union of the body with the head is above all of an organic
nature. To put it simply, it is the somatic union of the human
organism. The biological union is founded directly on this organic
union, inasmuch as it can be said that the body lives by the head
(even if at the same time, though in a different way, the head lives
by the body). Besides, in the case of man, the psychic union,
understood in its integrity, and the integral unity of the human
person is also founded on this organic union.
Eschatological perspective
2. As already stated (at least in the passage analyzed), the
author of the Letter to the Ephesians has introduced the
supplementary analogy of the head and the body within the limits of
the analogy of marriage. He even seems to have conceived the first
analogy, "head-body," in a more central manner from the point of
view of the truth about Christ and the Church proclaimed by him.
However, one must equally affirm that he has not placed it alongside
or outside of the analogy of marriage as a conjugal bond—quite the
contrary. In the whole text of the Letter to the Ephesians
(5:21-33), especially in the first part with which we are dealing
(5:22-23), the author speaks as if in marriage also the husband is
"head of the wife," and the wife "the body of the husband," as if
the married couple formed one organic union. This can find its basis
in the text of Genesis which speaks of one flesh (Gn 2:24), or in
that same text to which the author of the Letter to the Ephesians
will shortly refer in the context of this great analogy.
Nevertheless, the text of Genesis makes clear that the man and the
woman are two distinct personal subjects who knowingly decide on
their conjugal union, defined by that ancient text with the words
"one flesh." This is equally clear also in the Letter to the
Ephesians. The author uses a twofold analogy: head-body,
husband-wife, for the purpose of illustrating clearly the nature of
the union between Christ and the Church. In a certain sense,
especially in the first part of the Letter to the Ephesians 5:22-23,
the ecclesiological dimension seems decisive and dominant.
Particular relationship
3. "Wives, be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord. For the
husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the Church,
his body, and is himself its Savior. As the Church is subject to
Christ, so let wives also be subject in everything to their
husbands. Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church, and
gave himself up for her..." (Eph 5:22-25). This supplementary
analogy "head-body" indicates that within the limits of the entire
passage of the Letter to the Ephesians 5:21-33, we are dealing with
two distinct subjects. In virtue of a particular reciprocal
relationship, in a certain sense they become a single subject. The
head, together with the body, constitutes a subject (in the physical
and metaphysical sense), an organism, a human person, a being. There
is no doubt that Christ is a subject different from the Church.
However, in virtue of a particular relationship, he is united with
her, as in an organic union of head and body. The Church is so
strongly, so essentially herself in virtue of a mystical union with
Christ. Is it possible to say the same thing of the spouses, of the
man and the woman united by the marriage bond? If the author of the
Letter to the Ephesians sees also in marriage the analogy of the
union of head and body, this analogy in a certain sense seems to
apply to marriage in consideration of the union which Christ
constitutes with the Church, and the Church with Christ. Therefore,
the analogy regards, above all, marriage itself as that union
through which "the two become one flesh" (Eph 5:31; cf. Gn 2:24).
Bi-subjectivity
4. This analogy, however, does not blur the individuality of the
subjects: that of the husband and that of the wife, that is, the
essential bi-subjectivity which is at the basis of the image of "one
single body." Rather, the essential bi-subjectivity of the husband
and wife in marriage, which makes of them in a certain sense "one
single body," passes within the limits of the whole text we are
examining (Eph 5:21-33) to the image of Church-Body united with
Christ as head. This is seen especially in this text where the
author describes the relationship of Christ to the Church precisely
by means of the image of the relationship of the husband to the
wife. In this description the Church-Body of Christ appears clearly
as the second subject of the spousal union to which the first
subject, Christ, manifests the love with which he has loved her by
giving himself for her. That love is an image and above all a model
of the love which the husband should show to his wife in marriage,
when the two are subject to each other "out of reverence for
Christ."
Two become one flesh
5. We read: "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 splendor, 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 should leave his
father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall
become one flesh'" (Eph 5:25-31).
Aim is sanctification
6. It is easy to perceive that in this part of the text of the
Letter to the Ephesians (5:21-33), bi-subjectivity clearly
dominates. It is manifested both in the relationship Christ-Church,
and also in the relationship husband-wife. This does not mean to say
that the image of a single subject disappears: the image of "a
single body." It is preserved also in the passage of our text, and
in a certain sense it is better explained there. This will be seen
more clearly when we submit the above-quoted passage to a detailed
analysis. Thus the author of the Letter to the Ephesians speaks of
the love of Christ for the Church by explaining the way in which
that love is expressed, and by presenting at the same time both that
love and its expressions as a model which the husband should follow
in regard to his wife. The love of Christ for the Church has
essentially her sanctification as its scope. "Christ loved the
Church and gave himself up for her that he might sanctify her"
(5:25-26). Baptism is a principle of this sanctification. Baptism is
the first and essential fruit of Christ's giving himself for the
Church. In this text baptism is not called by its own proper name,
but is defined as purification "by the washing of water with the
word" (5:26). This washing, with the power that derives from the
redemptive giving of himself by Christ for the Church, brings about
the fundamental purification through which Christ's love for the
Church acquires a spousal character, in the eyes of the author of
the letter.
7. It is known that the sacrament of baptism is received by an
individual subject in the Church. However, beyond the individual
subject of baptism the author of the letter sees the whole Church.
The spousal love of Christ is applied to her, the Church, every time
that a single person receives in her the fundamental purification by
means of baptism. Whoever receives baptism becomes—by the virtue of
the redemptive love of Christ—at the same time a participant in his
spousal love for the Church. In our text "the washing of water with
the word" is an expression of the spousal love in the sense that it
prepares the Bride (Church) for the Bridegroom. It makes the Church
the spouse of Christ, I would say, in actu primo. Some biblical
scholars observe that in this text, the washing with water recalls
the ritual ablution which preceded the wedding—something which
constituted an important religious rite also among the Greeks.
Ecclesiological dimension
8. As the sacrament of baptism, "the washing of water with the word"
(Eph 5:26) renders the Church a spouse not only in actu primo but
also in the more distant perspective, in the eschatological
perspective. This opens up before us when we read in the Letter to
the Ephesians that "the washing of water" serves, on the part of the
groom "to present the Church to himself in splendor without spot or
wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without
blemish" (Eph 5:27). The expression "to present to himself" seems to
indicate that moment of the wedding in which the bride is led to the
groom, already clothed in the bridal dress and adorned for the
wedding. The text quoted indicates that the Christ-spouse himself
takes care to adorn the spouse-Church. He is concerned that she
should be beautiful with the beauty of grace, beautiful by virtue of
the gift of salvation in its fullness, already granted from the
moment of the sacrament of baptism. But baptism is only the
beginning from which the figure of the glorious Church will emerge
(as we read in the text), as a definitive fruit of the redemptive
and spousal love, only with the final coming of Christ (parousia).
We see how profoundly the author of the Letter to the Ephesians
examines the sacramental reality, proclaiming its grand analogy.
Both the union of Christ with the Church, and the conjugal union of
man and woman in marriage are illumined in this way by a particular
supernatural light.
Taken from: L'Osservatore Romano Weekly Edition in English 30 August
1982, page 11
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