|
JOHN PAUL II
Letter to the
Bishops of the Catholic Church on
the collaboration of men and women
in the Church and in the World
Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith
"The
obscuring of the difference or
duality of the sexes has enormous
consequences on a variety of levels.
This theory of the human person,
intended to promote prospects for
equality of women through liberation
from biological determinism, has in
reality inspired ideologies which,
for example, call into question the
family, in its natural two-parent
structure of mother and father, and
make homosexuality and
heterosexuality virtually
equivalent, in a new model of
polymorphous sexuality."
INTRODUCTION
1.
The Church, expert in humanity, has
a perennial interest in whatever
concerns men and women. In recent
times, much reflection has been
given to the question of the dignity
of women and to women's rights and
duties in the different areas of
civil society and the Church. Having
contributed to a deeper
understanding of this fundamental
question, in particular through the
teaching of John Paul II,1
the Church is called today to
address certain currents of thought
which are often at variance with the
authentic advancement of women.
After
a brief presentation and critical
evaluation of some current
conceptions of human nature, this
document will offer reflections –
inspired by the doctrinal elements
of the biblical vision of the human
person that are indispensable for
safeguarding his or her identity –
on some of the essentials of a
correct understanding of active
collaboration, in recognition of the
difference between men and women in
the Church and in the world. These
reflections are meant as a starting
point for further examination in the
Church, as well as an impetus for
dialogue with all men and women of
good will, in a sincere search for
the truth and in a common commitment
to the development of ever more
authentic relationships.
I.
THE QUESTION
2.
Recent years have seen new
approaches to women's issues. A
first tendency is to emphasize
strongly conditions of subordination
in order to give rise to antagonism:
women, in order to be themselves,
must make themselves the adversaries
of men. Faced with the abuse of
power, the answer for women is to
seek power. This process leads to
opposition between men and women, in
which the identity and role of one
are emphasized to the disadvantage
of the other, leading to harmful
confusion regarding the human
person, which has its most immediate
and lethal effects in the structure
of the family.
A
second tendency emerges in the wake
of the first. In order to avoid the
domination of one sex or the other,
their differences tend to be denied,
viewed as mere effects of historical
and cultural conditioning. In this
perspective, physical difference,
termed sex, is minimized,
while the purely cultural element,
termed gender, is emphasized
to the maximum and held to be
primary. The obscuring of the
difference or duality of the sexes
has enormous consequences on a
variety of levels. This theory of
the human person, intended to
promote prospects for equality of
women through liberation from
biological determinism, has in
reality inspired ideologies which,
for example, call into question the
family, in its natural two-parent
structure of mother and father, and
make homosexuality and
heterosexuality virtually
equivalent, in a new model of
polymorphous sexuality.
3.
While the immediate roots of this
second tendency are found in the
context of reflection on women's
roles, its deeper motivation must be
sought in the human attempt to be
freed from one's biological
conditioning.2 According
to this perspective, human nature in
itself does not possess
characteristics in an absolute
manner: all persons can and ought to
constitute themselves as they like,
since they are free from every
predetermination linked to their
essential constitution.
This
perspective has many consequences.
Above all it strengthens the idea
that the liberation of women entails
criticism of Sacred Scripture, which
would be seen as handing on a
patriarchal conception of God
nourished by an essentially
male-dominated culture. Second, this
tendency would consider as lacking
in importance and relevance the fact
that the Son of God assumed human
nature in its male form.
4.
In the face of these currents of
thought, the Church, enlightened by
faith in Jesus Christ, speaks
instead of active collaboration between
the sexes precisely in the
recognition of the difference
between man and woman.
To
understand better the basis, meaning
and consequences of this response it
is helpful to turn briefly to the
Sacred Scriptures, rich also in
human wisdom, in which this response
is progressively manifested thanks
to God's intervention on behalf of
humanity.3
II.
BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE BIBLICAL
VISION OF THE HUMAN PERSON
5.
The first biblical texts to examine
are the first three chapters of
Genesis. Here we “enter into the
setting of the biblical
‘beginning'. In it the revealed
truth concerning the human person as
‘the image and likeness' of God
constitutes the immutable basis
of all Christian anthropology”.4
The
first text (Gn 1:1-2:4)
describes the creative power of the
Word of God, which makes
distinctions in the original chaos.
Light and darkness appear, sea and
dry land, day and night, grass and
trees, fish and birds, “each
according to its kind”. An ordered
world is born out of differences,
carrying with them also the promise
of relationships. Here we see a
sketch of the framework in which the
creation of the human race takes
place: “God said ‘Let us make
man in our image, after our
likeness'” (Gn 1:26). And
then: “God created man in his own
image, in the image of God he
created him; male and female he
created them” (Gn1:27).
From the very beginning therefore,
humanity is described as articulated
in the male-female relationship.
This is the humanity, sexually
differentiated, which is explicitly
declared “the image of
God”.
6.
The second creation account (Gn
2:4-25) confirms in a definitive way
the importance of sexual difference.
Formed by God and placed in the
garden which he was to cultivate,
the man, who is still referred to
with the generic expression Adam,
experienced a loneliness which
the presence of the animals is not
able to overcome. He needs a helpmate
who will be his partner. The
term here does not refer to an
inferior, but to a vital helper.5
This is so that Adam's life
does not sink into a sterile and, in
the end, baneful encounter with
himself. It is necessary that he
enter into relationship with another
being on his own level. Only the
woman, created from the same
“flesh” and cloaked in the same
mystery, can give a future to the
life of the man. It is therefore
above all on the ontological level
that this takes place, in the sense
that God's creation of woman
characterizes humanity as a
relational reality. In this
encounter, the man speaks words for
the first time, expressive of his
wonderment: “This at last is bone
of my bones and flesh of my flesh”
(Gn 2:23).
As
the Holy Father has written with
regard to this text from Genesis,
“...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' (Gn
2:20). Is it only a question here of
a ‘helper' in activity, in
‘subduing the earth' (cf. Gn 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. Gn 2:24)”.6
This
vital difference is oriented toward
communion and was lived in peace,
expressed by their nakedness: “And
the man and his wife were both
naked, yet they felt no shame” (Gn
2:25). In this way, the human body,
marked with the sign of masculinity
or femininity, “includes right
from the beginning the nuptial
attribute, that is, the capacity
of expressing love, that love in
which the person becomes a gift and
– by means of this gift –
fulfils the meaning of his being and
his existence”.7
Continuing his commentary on these
verses of Genesis, the Holy Father
writes: “In this peculiarity, the
body is the expression of the spirit
and is called, in the mystery of
creation, to exist in the communion
of persons in the image of God”.8
Through
this same spousal perspective, the
ancient Genesis narrative allows us
to understand how woman, in her
deepest and original being, exists
“for the other” (cf. 1 Cor 11:9):
this is a statement which, far from
any sense of alienation, expresses a
fundamental aspect of the similarity
with the Triune God, whose Persons,
with the coming of Christ, are
revealed as being in a communion of
love, each for the others. “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'... 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'”.9
The
peaceful vision which concludes the
second creation account recalls the
“indeed it was very good” (Gn
1:31) at the end of the first
account. Here we find the heart of
God's original plan and the deepest
truth about man and woman, as willed
and created by him. Although God's
original plan for man and woman will
later be upset and darkened by sin,
it can never be abrogated.
7.
Original sin changes the way in
which the man and the woman receive
and live the Word of God as well as
their relationship with the Creator.
Immediately after having given them
the gift of the garden, God gives
them a positive command (cf. Gn
2:16), followed by a negative one
(cf. Gn 2:17), in which the
essential difference between God and
humanity is implicitly expressed.
Following enticement by the serpent,
the man and the woman deny this
difference. As a consequence, the
way in which they live their sexual
difference is also upset. In this
way, the Genesis account establishes
a relationship of cause and effect
between the two differences: when
humanity considers God its enemy,
the relationship between man and
woman becomes distorted. When this
relationship is damaged, their
access to the face of God risks
being compromised in turn.
God's
decisive words to the woman after
the first sin express the kind of
relationship which has now been
introduced between man and woman:
“your desire shall be for your
husband, and he shall rule over
you” (Gn 3:16). It will be
a relationship in which love will
frequently be debased into pure
self-seeking, in a relationship
which ignores and kills love and
replaces it with the yoke of
domination of one sex over the
other. Indeed the story of humanity
is continuously marked by this
situation, which recalls the
three-fold concupiscence mentioned
by Saint John: the concupiscence of
the flesh, the concupiscence of the
eyes and the pride of life (cf. 1
Jn 2:16). In this tragic
situation, the equality, respect and
love that are required in the
relationship of man and woman
according to God's original plan,
are lost.
8.
Reviewing these fundamental texts
allows us to formulate some of the
principal elements of the biblical
vision of the human person.
Above
all, the fact that human beings are
persons needs to be underscored: “Man
is a person, man and woman equally
so, since both were created in
the image and likeness of the
personal God”.10 Their
equal dignity as persons is realized
as physical, psychological and
ontological complementarity, giving
rise to a harmonious relationship of
“uni-duality”, which only sin
and “the structures of sin”
inscribed in culture render
potentially conflictual. The
biblical vision of the human person
suggests that problems related to
sexual difference, whether on the
public or private level, should be
addressed by a relational approach
and not by competition or
retaliation.
Furthermore,
the importance and the meaning of
sexual difference, as a reality
deeply inscribed in man and woman,
needs to be noted. “Sexuality
characterizes man and woman not only
on the physical level, but also on
the psychological and spiritual,
making its mark on each of their
expressions”.11 It
cannot be reduced to a pure and
insignificant biological fact, but
rather “is a fundamental component
of personality, one of its modes of
being, of manifestation, of
communicating with others, of
feeling, of expressing and of living
human love”.12 This
capacity to love – reflection and
image of God who is Love – is
disclosed in the spousal character
of the body, in which the
masculinity or femininity of the
person is expressed.
The
human dimension of sexuality is
inseparable from the theological
dimension. The human creature, in
its unity of soul and body, is
characterized therefore, from the
very beginning, by the relationship
with the other-beyond-the-self. This
relationship is presented as still
good and yet, at the same time,
changed. It is good from its
original goodness, declared by God
from the first moment of creation.
It has been changed however by the
disharmony between God and humanity
introduced by sin. This alteration
does not correspond to the initial
plan of God for man and woman, nor
to the truth of the relationship
between the sexes. It follows then
that the relationship is good, but
wounded and in need of healing.
What
might be the ways of this healing?
Considering and analyzing the
problems in the relationship between
the sexes solely from the standpoint
of the situation marked by sin would
lead to a return to the errors
mentioned above. The logic of sin
needs to be broken and a way forward
needs to be found that is capable of
banishing it from the hearts of
sinful humanity. A clear orientation
in this sense is provided in the
third chapter of Genesis by God's
promise of a Saviour, involving the
“woman” and her “offspring”
(cf. Gn 3:15). It is a
promise which will be preceded by a
long preparation in history before
it is realized.
9.
An early victory over evil is seen
in the story of Noah, the just man,
who guided by God, avoids the flood
with his family and the various
species of animals (cf. Gn
6-9). But it is above all in God's
choice of Abraham and his
descendants (cf. Gn 12:1ff)
that the hope of salvation is
confirmed. God begins in this way to
unveil his countenance so that,
through the chosen people, humanity
will learn the path of divine
likeness, that is, the way of
holiness, and thus of transformation
of heart. Among the many ways in
which God reveals himself to his
people (cf. Heb 1:1), in
keeping with a long and patient
pedagogy, there is the recurring
theme of the covenant between man
and woman. This is paradoxical if we
consider the drama recounted in
Genesis and its concrete repetition
in the time of the prophets, as well
as the mixing of the sacred and the
sexual found in the religions which
surrounded Israel. And yet this
symbolism is indispensable for
understanding the way in which God
loves his people: God makes himself
known as the Bridegroom who loves
Israel his Bride.
If,
in this relationship, God can be
described as a “jealous God”
(cf. Ex 20:5; Nah 1:2)
and Israel denounced as an
“adulterous” bride or
“prostitute” (cf. Hos 2:4-15;
Ez 16:15-34), it is because
of the hope, reinforced by the
prophets, of seeing Jerusalem become
the perfect bride: “For as a young
man marries a virgin so shall your
creator marry you, and as the
bridegroom rejoices over the bride,
so shall your God rejoice over
you” (Is 62:5). Recreated
“in righteousness and in justice,
in steadfast love and in mercy” (Hos
2:21), she who had wandered far
away to search for life and
happiness in false gods will return,
and “shall respond as in the days
of her youth” (Hos 2:17) to
him who will speak to her heart; she
will hear it said: “Your
bridegroom is your Creator” (Is54:5).
It is substantially the same reality
which is expressed when, parallel to
the mystery of God's action through
the male figure of the suffering
Servant, the Book of the prophet
Isaiah evokes the feminine figure of
Zion, adorned with a transcendence
and a sanctity which prefigure the
gift of salvation destined for
Israel.
The
Song of Songs is an important moment
in the use of this form of
revelation. In the words of a most
human love, which celebrate the
beauty of the human body and the joy
of mutual seeking, God's love for
his people is also expressed. The
Church's recognition of her
relationship to Christ in this
audacious conjunction of language
about what is most human with
language about what is most divine,
cannot be said to be mistaken.
In
the course of the Old Testament, a
story of salvation takes shape which
involves the simultaneous
participation of male and female.
While having an evident metaphorical
dimension, the terms bridegroom and
bride – and covenant as well –
which characterize the dynamic of
salvation, are much more than simple
metaphors. This spousal language
touches on the very nature of the
relationship which God establishes
with his people, even though that
relationship is more expansive than
human spousal experience. Likewise,
the same concrete conditions of
redemption are at play in the way in
which prophetic statements, such as
those of Isaiah, associate masculine
and feminine roles in proclaiming
and prefiguring the work of
salvation which God is about to
undertake. This salvation orients
the reader both toward the male
figure of the suffering Servant as
well as to the female figure of
Zion. The prophetic utterances of
Isaiah in fact alternate between
this figure and the Servant of God,
before culminating at the end of the
book with the mystical vision of
Jerusalem, which gives birth to a
people in a single day (cf. Is 66:
7-14), a prophecy of the great new
things which God is about to do (cf.
Is 48: 6-8).
10.
All these prefigurations find their
fulfillment in the New Testament. On
the one hand, Mary, the chosen
daughter of Zion, in her femininity,
sums up and transfigures the
condition of Israel/Bride waiting
for the day of her salvation. On the
other hand, the masculinity of the
Son shows how Jesus assumes in his
person all that the Old Testament
symbolism had applied to the love of
God for his people, described as the
love of a bridegroom for his bride.
The figures of Jesus and Mary his
mother not only assure the
continuity of the New Testament with
the Old, but go beyond it, since –
as Saint Irenaeus wrote – with
Jesus Christ “all newness”
appears.13
This
aspect is particularly evident in
the Gospel of John. In the scene of
the wedding feast at Cana, for
example, Jesus is asked by his
mother, who is called “woman”,
to offer, as a sign, the new wine of
the future wedding with humanity
(cf. Jn 2:1-12). This
messianic wedding is accomplished on
the Cross when, again in the
presence of his mother, once again
called “woman”, the blood/wine
of the New Covenant pours forth from
the open heart of the crucified
Christ (cf. Jn 19:25-27, 34).14
It is therefore not at all
surprising that John the Baptist,
when asked who he is, describes
himself as “the friend of the
bridegroom”, who rejoices to hear
the bridegroom's voice and must be
eclipsed by his coming: “He who
has the bride is the bridegroom; the
friend of the bridegroom, who stands
and hears him, rejoices greatly at
the bridegroom's voice; therefore
this joy of mine is now full. He
must increase, but I must
decrease” (Jn3:29-30).15
In
his apostolic activity, Paul
develops the whole nuptial
significance of the redemption by
seeing Christian life as a nuptial
mystery. He writes to the Church in
Corinth, which he had founded: “I
feel a divine jealousy for you, for
I betrothed you to Christ to present
you as a chaste virgin to her one
husband” (2 Cor 11:2).
In
the Letter to the Ephesians, the
spousal relationship between Christ
and the Church is taken up again and
deepened in its implications. In the
New Covenant, the beloved bride is
the Church, and as the Holy Father
teaches in his Letter to
Families: “This bride, of whom
the Letter to the Ephesians speaks,
is present in each of the baptized
and is like one who presents herself
before her Bridegroom: ‘Christ
loved the Church and gave himself up
for her..., 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' (Eph
5:25-27)”. 16
Reflecting
on the unity of man and woman as
described at the moment of the
world's creation (cf. Gn
2:24), the Apostle exclaims: “this
mystery is a profound one, and I am
saying that it refers to Christ and
the Church” (Eph 5:32). The
love of a man and a woman, lived out
in the power of baptismal life, now
becomes the sacrament of the love
between Christ and his Church, and a
witness to the mystery of fidelity
and unity from which the “New
Eve” is born and by which she
lives in her earthly pilgrimage
toward the fullness of the eternal
wedding.
11.
Drawn into the Paschal mystery and
made living signs of the love of
Christ and his Church, the hearts of
Christian spouses are renewed and
they are able to avoid elements of
concupiscence in their relationship,
as well as the subjugation
introduced into the life of the
first married couple by the break
with God caused by sin. For
Christian spouses, the goodness of
love, for which the wounded human
heart has continued to long, is
revealed with new accents and
possibilities. It is in this light
that Jesus, faced with the question
about divorce (cf. Mt
19:3-9), recalls the demands of the
covenant between man and woman as
willed by God at the beginning, that
is, before the eruption of sin which
had justified the later
accommodations found in the Mosaic
Law. Far from being the imposition
of a hard and inflexible order,
these words of Jesus are actually
the proclamation of the “good
news” of that faithfulness which
is stronger than sin. The power of
the resurrection makes possible the
victory of faithfulness over
weakness, over injuries and over the
couple's sins. In the grace of
Christ which renews their hearts,
man and woman become capable of
being freed from sin and of knowing
the joy of mutual giving.
12.
“For all of you who have been
baptized into Christ have put on
Christ... there is neither male nor
female”, writes Saint Paul to the
Galatians (3:27-28). The Apostle
Paul does not say that the
distinction between man and woman,
which in other places is referred to
the plan of God, has been erased. He
means rather that in Christ the
rivalry, enmity and violence which
disfigured the relationship between
men and women can be overcome and
have been overcome. In this sense,
the distinction between man and
woman is reaffirmed more than ever;
indeed, it is present in biblical
revelation up to the very end. In
the final hour of present history,
the Book of Revelation of Saint
John, speaking of “a new heaven
and a new earth” (Rev 21:1),
presents the vision of a feminine
Jerusalem “prepared as a bride
adorned for her husband” (Rev
21:2). Revelation concludes with the
words of the Bride and the Spirit
who beseech the coming of the
Bridegroom, “Come, Lord Jesus!”
(Rev22:20).
Male
and female are thus revealed as belonging
ontologically to creation and
destined therefore to outlast the
present time, evidently in a
transfigured form. In this way, they
characterize the “love that never
ends” (1Cor 13:8), although
the temporal and earthly expression
of sexuality is transient and
ordered to a phase of life marked by
procreation and death. Celibacy for
the sake of the Kingdom seeks to be
the prophecy of this form of future
existence of male and female. For
those who live it, it is an
anticipation of the reality of a
life which, while remaining that of
a man and a woman, will no longer be
subject to the present limitations
of the marriage relationship (cf.
Mt22:30). For those in married
life, celibacy becomes the reminder
and prophecy of the completion which
their own relationship will find in
the face-to-face encounter with
God.
From
the first moment of their creation,
man and woman are distinct, and will
remain so for all eternity. Placed
within Christ's Paschal mystery,
they no longer see their difference
as a source of discord to be
overcome by denial or eradication,
but rather as the possibility for
collaboration, to be cultivated with
mutual respect for their difference.
From here, new perspectives open up
for a deeper understanding of the
dignity of women and their role in
human society and in the Church.
III.
THE IMPORTANCE OF FEMININE VALUES IN
THE LIFE OF SOCIETY
13.
Among the fundamental values linked
to women's actual lives is what has
been called a “capacity for the
other”. Although a certain type of
feminist rhetoric makes demands
“for ourselves”, women preserve
the deep intuition of the goodness
in their lives of those actions
which elicit life, and contribute to
the growth and protection of the
other.
This
intuition is linked to women's
physical capacity to give life.
Whether lived out or remaining
potential, this capacity is a
reality that structures the female
personality in a profound way. It
allows her to acquire maturity very
quickly, and gives a sense of the
seriousness of life and of its
responsibilities. A sense and a
respect for what is concrete develop
in her, opposed to abstractions
which are so often fatal for the
existence of individuals and
society. It is women, in the end,
who even in very desperate
situations, as attested by history
past and present, possess a singular
capacity to persevere in adversity,
to keep life going even in extreme
situations, to hold tenaciously to
the future, and finally to remember
with tears the value of every human
life.
Although
motherhood is a key element of
women's identity, this does not mean
that women should be considered from
the sole perspective of physical
procreation. In this area, there can
be serious distortions, which extol
biological fecundity in purely
quantitative terms and are often
accompanied by dangerous disrespect
for women. The existence of the
Christian vocation of virginity,
radical with regard to both the Old
Testament tradition and the demands
made by many societies, is of the
greatest importance in this regard.17
Virginity refutes any attempt to
enclose women in mere biological
destiny. Just as virginity receives
from physical motherhood the insight
that there is no Christian vocation
except in the concrete gift of
oneself to the other, so physical
motherhood receives from virginity
an insight into its fundamentally
spiritual dimension: it is in not
being content only to give physical
life that the other truly comes into
existence. This means that
motherhood can find forms of full
realization also where there is no
physical procreation.18
In
this perspective, one understands
the irreplaceable role of women in
all aspects of family and social
life involving human relationships
and caring for others. Here what
John Paul II has termed the
genius of women becomes very
clear.19 It implies first
of all that women be significantly
and actively present in the family,
“the primordial and, in a certain
sense sovereign society”,20
since it is here above all that the
features of a people take shape; it
is here that its members acquire
basic teachings. They learn to love
inasmuch as they are unconditionally
loved, they learn respect for others
inasmuch as they are respected, they
learn to know the face of God
inasmuch as they receive a first
revelation of it from a father and a
mother full of attention in their
regard. Whenever these fundamental
experiences are lacking, society as
a whole suffers violence and becomes
in turn the progenitor of more
violence. It means also that women
should be present in the world of
work and in the organization of
society, and that women should have
access to positions of
responsibility which allow them to
inspire the policies of nations and
to promote innovative solutions to
economic and social problems.
In
this regard, it cannot be forgotten
that the interrelationship between
these two activities – family and
work – has, for women,
characteristics different from those
in the case of men. The
harmonization of the organization of
work and laws governing work with
the demands stemming from the
mission of women within the family
is a challenge. The question is not
only legal, economic and
organizational; it is above all a
question of mentality, culture, and
respect. Indeed, a just valuing of
the work of women within the family
is required. In this way, women who
freely desire will be able to devote
the totality of their time to the
work of the household without being
stigmatized by society or penalized
financially, while those who wish
also to engage in other work may be
able to do so with an appropriate
work-schedule, and not have to
choose between relinquishing their
family life or enduring continual
stress, with negative consequences
for one's own equilibrium and the
harmony of the family. As John Paul
II has written, “it will redound
to the credit of society to make it
possible for a mother – without
inhibiting her freedom, without
psychological or practical
discrimination and without
penalizing her as compared with
other women – to devote herself to
taking care of her children and
educating them in accordance with
their needs, which vary with age”.21
14.
It is appropriate however to recall
that the feminine values mentioned
here are above all human values: the
human condition of man and woman
created in the image of God is one
and indivisible. It is only because
women are more immediately attuned
to these values that they are the
reminder and the privileged sign of
such values. But, in the final
analysis, every human being, man or
woman, is destined to be “for the
other”. In this perspective, that
which is called “femininity” is
more than simply an attribute of the
female sex. The word designates
indeed the fundamental human
capacity to live for the other and
because of the other.
Therefore,
the promotion of women within
society must be understood and
desired as a humanization
accomplished through those values,
rediscovered thanks to women. Every
outlook which presents itself as a
conflict between the sexes is only
an illusion and a danger: it would
end in segregation and competition
between men and women, and would
promote a solipsism nourished by a
false conception of freedom.
Without
prejudice to the advancement of
women's rights in society and the
family, these observations seek to
correct the perspective which views
men as enemies to be overcome. The
proper condition of the male-female
relationship cannot be a kind of
mistrustful and defensive
opposition. Their relationship needs
to be lived in peace and in the
happiness of shared love.
On
a more concrete level, if social
policies – in the areas of
education, work, family, access to
services and civic participation –
must combat all unjust sexual
discrimination, they must also
listen to the aspirations and
identify the needs of all. The
defence and promotion of equal
dignity and common personal values
must be harmonized with attentive
recognition of the difference and
reciprocity between the sexes where
this is relevant to the realization
of one's humanity, whether male or
female.
IV.
THE IMPORTANCE
OF FEMININE VALUES
IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH
15.
In the Church, woman as “sign”
is more than ever central and
fruitful, following as it does from
the very identity of the Church, as
received from God and accepted in
faith. It is this “mystical”
identity, profound and essential,
which needs to be kept in mind when
reflecting on the respective roles
of men and women in the Church.
From
the beginning of Christianity, the
Church has understood herself to be
a community, brought into existence
by Christ and joined to him by a
relationship of love, of which the
nuptial experience is the privileged
expression. From this it follows
that the Church's first task is to
remain in the presence of this
mystery of God's love, manifested in
Jesus Christ, to contemplate and to
celebrate it. In this regard, the
figure of Mary constitutes the
fundamental reference in the Church.
One could say metaphorically that
Mary is a mirror placed before the
Church, in which the Church is
invited to recognize her own
identity as well as the dispositions
of the heart, the attitudes and the
actions which God expects from
her.
The
existence of Mary is an invitation
to the Church to root her very being
in listening and receiving the Word
of God, because faith is not so much
the search for God on the part of
human beings, as the recognition by
men and women that God comes to us;
he visits us and speaks to us. This
faith, which believes that
“nothing is impossible for God”
(cf. Gn18:14; Lk
1:37), lives and becomes deeper
through the humble and loving
obedience by which the Church can
say to the Father: “Let it be done
to me according to your word” (Lk
1:38). Faith continually makes
reference to Jesus: “Do whatever
he tells you” (Jn 2:5) and
accompanies Jesus on his way, even
to the foot of the Cross. Mary, in
the hour of darkness, perseveres
courageously in faithfulness, with
the sole certainty of trust in the
Word of God.
It
is from Mary that the Church always
learns the intimacy of Christ. Mary,
who carried the small child of
Bethlehem in her arms, teaches us to
recognize the infinite humility of
God. She who received the broken
body of Jesus from the Cross shows
the Church how to receive all those
in this world whose lives have been
wounded by violence and sin. From
Mary, the Church learns the meaning
of the power of love, as revealed by
God in the life of his beloved Son:
“he has scattered the proud in the
thoughts of their heart... he has
lifted up the lowly” (Lk 1:51-52).
From Mary, the disciples of Christ
continually receive the sense and
the delight of praise for the work
of God's hands: “The Almighty has
done great things for me” (Lk1:49).
They learn that they are in the
world to preserve the memory of
those “great things”, and to
keep vigil in expectation of the day
of the Lord.
16.
To look at Mary and imitate her does
not mean, however, that the Church
should adopt a passivity inspired by
an outdated conception of
femininity. Nor does it condemn the
Church to a dangerous vulnerability
in a world where what count above
all are domination and power. In
reality, the way of Christ is
neither one of domination (cf.
Phil 2:6) nor of power as
understood by the world (cf. Jn18:36).
From the Son of God one learns that
this “passivity” is in reality
the way of love; it is a royal power
which vanquishes all violence; it is
“passion” which saves the world
from sin and death and recreates
humanity. In entrusting his mother
to the Apostle John, Jesus on the
Cross invites his Church to learn
from Mary the secret of the love
that is victorious.
Far
from giving the Church an identity
based on an historically conditioned
model of femininity, the reference
to Mary, with her dispositions of
listening, welcoming, humility,
faithfulness, praise and waiting,
places the Church in continuity with
the spiritual history of Israel. In
Jesus and through him, these
attributes become the vocation of
every baptized Christian. Regardless
of conditions, states of life,
different vocations with or without
public responsibilities, they are an
essential aspect of Christian life.
While these traits should be
characteristic of every baptized
person, women in fact live them with
particular intensity and
naturalness. In this way, women play
a role of maximum importance in the
Church's life by recalling these
dispositions to all the baptized and
contributing in a unique way to
showing the true face of the Church,
spouse of Christ and mother of
believers.
In
this perspective one understands how
the reservation of priestly
ordination solely to men22
does not hamper in any way women's
access to the heart of Christian
life. Women are called to be unique
examples and witnesses for all
Christians of how the Bride is to
respond in love to the love of the
Bridegroom.
CONCLUSION
17.
In Jesus Christ all things have been
made new (cf. Rev 21:5).
Renewal in grace, however, cannot
take place without conversion of
heart. Gazing at Jesus and
confessing him as Lord means
recognizing the path of love,
triumphant over sin, which he sets
out for his disciples.
In
this way, man's relationship with
woman is transformed, and the
three-fold concupiscence described
in the First Letter of John (1 Jn
2:16) ceases to have the upper
hand. The witness of women's lives
must be received with respect and
appreciation, as revealing those
values without which humanity would
be closed in self-sufficiency,
dreams of power and the drama of
violence. Women too, for their part,
need to follow the path of
conversion and recognize the unique
values and great capacity for loving
others which their femininity bears.
In both cases, it is a question of
humanity's conversion to God, so
that both men and women may come to
know God as their “helper”, as
the Creator full of tenderness, as
the Redeemer who “so loved the
world that he gave his only begotten
Son” (Jn 3:16).
Such
a conversion cannot take place
without humble prayer to God for
that penetrating gaze which is able
to recognize one's own sin and also
the grace which heals it. In a
particular way, we need to ask this
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the
woman in accord with the heart of
God, she who is “blessed among
women” (cf. Lk 1:42),
chosen to reveal to men and women
the way of love. Only in this way,
can the “image of God”, the
sacred likeness inscribed in every
man and woman, emerge according to
the specific grace received by each
(cf. Gn 1:27). Only thus can
the path of peace and wonderment be
recovered, witnessed in the verses
of the Song of Songs, where bodies
and hearts celebrate the same
jubilee.
The
Church certainly knows the power of
sin at work in individuals and in
societies, which at times almost
leads one to despair of the goodness
of married couples. But through her
faith in Jesus crucified and risen,
the Church knows even more the power
of forgiveness and self-giving in
spite of any injury or injustice.
The peace and wonderment which she
trustfully proposes to men and women
today are the peace and wonderment
of the garden of the resurrection,
which have enlightened our world and
its history with the revelation that
“God is love” (1 Jn 4:8,16).
The
Sovereign Pontiff John Paul II, in
the Audience granted to the
undersigned Cardinal Prefect,
approved the present Letter, adopted
in the Ordinary Session of this
Congregation, and ordered its
publication.
Rome,
from the Offices of the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, May
31, 2004, the Feast of the
Visitation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
+
Joseph Card. Ratzinger
Prefect
+
Angelo Amato, SDB
Titular Archbishop of Sila
Secretary
[Back
to Top]
|