1. What does
the statement mean: "The desires of the flesh are against the
Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh"
(Gal 5:17)? This question seems important, even fundamental, in
the context of our reflections on purity of heart, which the
Gospel speaks of. However, in this regard the author of
Galatians opens before us even wider horizons. This contrast
between the flesh and the Spirit (Spirit of God), and between
life according to the flesh and life according to the Spirit,
contains the Pauline theology about justification. This is the
expression of faith in the anthropological and ethical realism
of the redemption carried out by Christ, which Paul, in the
context already known to us, also calls the redemption of the
body. According to Romans 8:23, the "redemption of the body"
also has a "cosmic" dimension (referred to the whole of
creation), but at its center, there is man: man constituted in
the personal unity of spirit and body. It is precisely in this
man, in his heart, and consequently in all his behavior, that
Christ's redemption bears fruit, thanks to those powers of the
Spirit which bring about justification, that is, which enable
justice to abound in man, as is inculcated in the Sermon on the
Mount (cf. Mt 5:20), that is, to abound to the extent that God
himself willed and which he expects.
Effects of
the lust of the flesh
2. It is
significant that speaking of the "works of the flesh" (cf. Gal
5:19-21), Paul mentions not only "fornication, impurity,
licentiousness...drunkenness, carousing." This is everything
that, according to an objective way of understanding, takes on
the character of carnal sins and of the sensual enjoyment
connected with the flesh. He names other sins too, to which we
would not be inclined to also attribute a carnal and sensual
character: "idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, anger,
selfishness, dissension, party spirit, envy..." (Gal 5:20-21).
According to our anthropological (and ethical) categories, we
would rather be inclined to call all the works listed here sins
of the spirit, rather than sins of the flesh. Not without reason
we might have glimpsed in them the effects of the lust of the
eyes or of the pride of life, rather than the effects of the
lust of the flesh. However, Paul describes them all as works of
the flesh. That is intended exclusively against the background
of that wider meaning (in a way a metonymical one), which the
term flesh assumes in the Pauline letters. It is opposed not
only and not so much to the human spirit as to the Holy Spirit
who works in man's soul (spirit).
Purity
comes from the heart
3. There
exists, therefore, a significant analogy between what Paul
defines as works of the flesh and the words Christ used to
explain to his disciples what he had previously said to the
Pharisees about ritual purity and impurity (cf. Mt 15:2-20).
According to Christ's words, real purity (as also impurity) in
the moral sense is in the heart and comes from the heart of man.
Impure works in the same sense are defined not only as adultery
and fornication, and so the sins of the flesh in the strict
sense, but also "evil thoughts...theft, false witness, slander."
As we have already noted, Christ uses here both the general and
the specific meaning of impurity (and, indirectly also of
purity). St. Paul expresses himself in a similar way. The works
of the flesh are understood in the Pauline text both in the
general and in the specific sense. All sins are an expression of
life according to the flesh, which contrasts with life according
to the Spirit. In conformity with our linguistic convention
(which is partially justified), what is considered as a sin of
the flesh is, in Paul's list, one of the many manifestations (or
species) of what he calls works of the flesh. In this sense, it
is one of the symptoms, that is, actualizations of life
according to the flesh, and not according to the Spirit.
Two
meanings of death
4. Paul's
words written to the Romans: "So then, brothers, we are debtors,
not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh; for if you
live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit
you put to death the deeds of the body you will live" (Rom
8:12-13)—introduce us again into the rich and differentiated
sphere of the meanings which the terms "body" and Spirit have
for him. However, the definitive meaning of that enunciation is
advisory, exhortative, and so valid for the evangelical ethos.
When he speaks of the necessity of putting to death the deeds of
the body with the help of the Spirit, Paul expresses precisely
what Christ spoke about in the Sermon on the Mount, appealing to
the human heart and exhorting it to control desires, even those
expressed in a man's look at a woman for the purpose of
satisfying the lust of the flesh. This mastery, or as Paul
writes, "putting to death the works of the body with the help of
the Spirit," is an indispensable condition of life according to
the Spirit, that is, of the life which is an antithesis of the
death spoken about in the same context. Life according to the
flesh has death as its fruit. That is, it involves as its effect
the "death" of the spirit.
So the term
"death" does not mean only the death of the body, but also sin,
which moral theology will call "mortal." In Romans and
Galatians, the Apostle continually widens the horizon of
"sin-death," both toward the beginning of human history, and
toward its end. Therefore, after listing the multiform works of
the flesh, he affirms that "those who do such things shall not
inherit the kingdom of God" (Gal 5:21). Elsewhere he will write
with similar firmness: "Be sure of this, that no fornicator or
impure man, or one who is covetous (that is, an idolater), has
any inheritance in the kingdom of God" (Eph 5:5). In this case,
too, the works that exclude inheritance in the kingdom of Christ
and of God—that is, the works of the flesh—are listed as an
example and with general value, although sins against purity in
the specific sense are at the top of the list here (cf. Eph
5:3-7).
To set us
free
5. To
complete the picture of the opposition between the body and the
fruit of the Spirit—it should be observed that in everything
that manifests life and behavior according to the Spirit, Paul
sees at once the manifestation of that freedom for which Christ
"has set us free" (Gal 5:1). He writes: "For you were called to
freedom, brethren; only do not use your freedom as an
opportunity for the flesh, but through love be servants of one
another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word, 'You shall
love your neighbor as yourself'" (Gal 5:13-14). As we have
already pointed out, the opposition body/Spirit, life according
to the flesh/ life according to the Spirit, deeply permeates the
whole Pauline doctrine on justification. With exceptional force
of conviction, the Apostle of the Gentiles proclaims that
justification is carried out in Christ and through Christ. Man
obtains justification in "faith working through love" (Gal 5:6),
and not only by means of the observance of the individual
prescriptions of Old Testament law (in particular, that of
circumcision). Justification comes therefore "from the Spirit"
(of God) and not "from the flesh." Paul exhorts the recipients
of his letter to free themselves from the erroneous carnal
concept of justification, to follow the true one, that is, the
spiritual one. In this sense he exhorts them to consider
themselves free from the law, and even more to be free with the
freedom for which Christ "has set us free."
In this way,
following the Apostle's thought, we should consider and above
all realize evangelical purity, that is, the purity of the
heart, according to the measure of that freedom for which Christ
"has set us free."
Taken from:
L'Osservatore Romano Weekly Edition in English 12 January
198,page 3
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