1.
At our meeting some weeks ago, we concentrated our attention on
the passage in the First Letter to the Corinthians in which St.
Paul calls the human body "a temple of the Holy Spirit." He
writes: "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy
Spirit within you, which you have from God? You are not your
own; you were bought with a price" (1 Cor 6:19-20). "Do you not
know that your bodies are members of Christ?" (1 Cor 6:15). The
Apostle points out the mystery of the redemption of the body,
carried out by Christ, as a source of a special moral duty which
commits the Christian to purity. This is what Paul himself
defines elsewhere as the necessity of "controlling his own body
in holiness and honor" (1 Thess 4:4).
Piety serves purity
2. However, we would not completely discover the riches of the
thought contained in the Pauline texts, if we did not note that
the mystery of redemption bears fruit in man also in a
charismatic way. According to the Apostle's words, the Holy
Spirit enters the human body as his own "temple," dwells there
and operates together with his spiritual gifts. Among these
gifts, known in the history of spirituality as the seven gifts
of the Holy Spirit (cf. Is 11:2, according to the Septuagint and
the Vulgate), the one most congenial to the virtue of purity
seems to be the gift of piety (eusebeia, donum pietatis).(1) If
purity prepares man to "control his own body in holiness and
honor" (1 Th 4:3-5), piety, which is a gift of the Holy Spirit,
seems to serve purity in a particular way. It makes the human
subject sensitive to that dignity which is characteristic of the
human body by virtue of the mystery of creation and redemption.
"Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit
within you.... You are not your own" (1 Cor 6:19). Thanks to the
gift of piety, Paul's words acquire the eloquence of an
experience of the nuptial meaning of the body and of the freedom
of the gift connected with it, in which the profound aspect of
purity and its organic link with love is revealed.
Fruit of the Spirit's indwelling
3. Although control of one's body in holiness and honor is
acquired through abstention from immorality—and this way is
indispensable—yet it always bears fruit in deeper experience of
that love, which was inscribed from the beginning, according to
the image and likeness of God himself, in the whole human being
and so also in his body. Therefore, St. Paul ends his
argumentation in chapter six of the First Letter to the
Corinthians with a significant exhortation: "So glorify God in
your body" (v. 20). Purity as the virtue is the capacity of
controlling one's body in holiness and honor. Together with the
gift of piety, as the fruit of the dwelling of the Holy Spirit
in the temple of the body, purity brings about in the body such
a fullness of dignity in interpersonal relations that God
himself is thereby glorified. Purity is the glory of the human
body before God. It is God's glory in the human body, through
which masculinity and femininity are manifested. From purity
springs that extraordinary beauty which permeates every sphere
of men's common life and makes it possible to express in it
simplicity and depth, cordiality and the unrepeatable
authenticity of personal trust. (There will perhaps be an
opportunity later to deal with this subject more fully. The
connection of purity with love and also the connection of purity
in love with that gift of the Holy Spirit, piety, is a part of
the theology of the body which is little known, but which
deserves particular study. That will be possible in the course
of the analysis concerning the sacramentality of marriage.)
In the Old Testament
4. And now a brief reference to the Old Testament. The Pauline
doctrine about purity, understood as life according to the
Spirit, seems to indicate a certain continuity with regard to
the Wisdom books of the Old Testament. For example, we find
there the following prayer to obtain purity in thought, word and
deed: "O Lord, Father and God of my life...remove from me evil
desire, let neither gluttony nor lust overcome me" (Sir 23:4-6).
Purity is, in fact, the condition for finding wisdom and
following it, as we read in the same book: "I directed my soul
to her [that is, to Wisdom], and through purification I found
her" (Sir 51:20). We could also consider the text of the Book of
Wisdom (8:21), known by the liturgy in the Vulgate version: "Scivi
quoniam aliter non possum esse continens, nisi Deus det; et hoc
ipsum erat sapientiae, scire, cuius esset hoc donum."(2)
According to this concept, it is not so much purity that is a
condition for wisdom, but wisdom that is a condition for purity,
as for a special gift of God. It seems that already in the
above-mentioned Wisdom texts the double meaning of purity takes
shape: as a virtue and as a gift. The virtue is in the service
of wisdom, and wisdom is a preparation to receive the gift that
comes from God. This gift strengthens the virtue and makes it
possible to enjoy, in wisdom, the fruits of a behavior and life
that are pure.
The sight of God
5. Just as Christ, in his beatitude in the Sermon on the Mount
which referred to the "pure in heart," highlights the "sight of
God," the fruit of purity, and in an eschatological perspective,
so Paul in his turn sheds light on its diffusion in the
dimensions of temporality, when he writes: "To the pure all
things are pure, but to the corrupt and unbelieving nothing is
pure; their very minds and consciences are corrupted. They
profess to know God, but they deny him by their deeds..." (Tit
1:15f.). These words can also refer both to the general and to
the specific meaning of purity, as to the characteristic note of
all moral good. For the Pauline concept of purity, in the sense
spoken of in the First Letter to the Thessalonians (4:3-5) and
the First Letter to the Corinthians (6:13-20), that is, in the
sense of life according to the Spirit, the anthropology of
rebirth in the Holy Spirit (cf. also Jn 3:5ff.) seems to be
fundamental—as can be seen from these considerations of ours as
a whole. It grows from roots set in the reality of the
redemption of the body, carried out by Christ—redemption, whose
ultimate expression is the resurrection. There are profound
reasons for connecting the whole theme of purity with the words
of the Gospel, in which Christ referred to the resurrection (and
that will be the subject of the further stage of our
considerations). Here we have mainly linked it with the ethos of
the redemption of the body.
Appeal to the heart
6. The way of understanding and presenting purity—inherited from
the tradition of the Old Testament and characteristic of the
Wisdom Books—was certainly an indirect, but nonetheless real,
preparation for the Pauline doctrine about purity understood as
life according to the Spirit. That way unquestionably helped
many listeners of the Sermon on the Mount to understand Christ's
words when, explaining the commandment, "You shall not commit
adultery," he appealed to the human heart. In this way our
reflections as a whole have been able to show, at least to a
certain extent, how rich and profound the doctrine on purity is
in its biblical and evangelical sources themselves.
NOTES
1) In the Greco-Roman period eusebeia or pietas generally
referred to the veneration of the gods (as "devotion"), but it
still kept its broader original meaning of respect for vital
structures.
Eusebeia defined the mutual behavior of relatives, relations
between husband and wife, and also the attitude due by the
legions toward Caesar or by slaves to their masters.
In the New Testament, only the later writings apply eusebeia to
Christians; in the older writings this term characterizes "good
pagans" (Acts 10:2, 7; 17:23).
And so the Greek eusebeia, as also the donum pietatis, while
they certainly refer to divine veneration, have a wide basis in
the connotation of interpersonal relations (cf. W. Foerster,
art. eusebeia, "Theological Dictionary of the New Testament",
Vol. 7, ed. G. Kittel, G. Bromley [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1971], pp. 177-182).
2) This version of the Vulgate, retained by the Neo-Vulgate and
by the liturgy, quoted several times by Augustine (De S. Virg.,
par. 43; Confess. VI, 11; X, 29; Serm. CLX, 7), changes,
however, the meaning of the original Greek, which can be
translated as follows: "Knowing that I would not have obtained
it [Wisdom] otherwise, if God had not granted it to me....
Taken from: L'Osservatore Romano Weekly Edition in English 23
March 1981, page 9
Return to the Theology of the Body Main
Page...