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GENERAL AUDIENCE
Wednesday 21 November
1979
In the First Chapters of Genesis, Marriage Is One and
Indissoluble
Let us recall that when questioned about the unity and
indissolubility of marriage, Christ referred to what was "in the
beginning." He quoted the words written in the first chapters of Genesis.
In the course of these reflections, we are trying to penetrate the specific
meaning of these words and these chapters.
The meaning of the original unity of man, whom God created
"male and female," is obtained (especially in the light of Genesis
2:23) by knowing man in the entire endowment of his being, that is, in all the
riches of that mystery of creation, on which theological anthropology is
based. This knowledge, that is, the study of the human identity of the one
who, at the beginning, is "alone," must always pass through duality,
"communion."
Let us recall the passage of Genesis 2:23: "Then the
man said, `This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall
be called woman, because she was taken out of man. "' In the light of
this text, we understand that knowledge of man passes through masculinity and
femininity. These are, as it were, two "incarnations" of the same
metaphysical solitude before God and the world. They are two ways of
"being a body" and at the same time a man, which complete each
other. They are two complementary dimensions of self-consciousness and
self-determination and, at the same time, two complementary ways of being
conscious of the meaning of the body.
As Genesis 2:23 already shows, femininity finds itself, in
a sense, in the presence of masculinity, while masculinity is confirmed
through femininity. Precisely the function of sex, which is in a sense,
"a constituent part of the person" (not just "an attribute of
the person"), proves how deeply man, with all his spiritual solitude,
with the never to be repeated uniqueness of his person, is constituted by the
body as "he" or "she." The presence of the feminine
element, alongside the male element and together with it, signifies an
enrichment for man in the whole perspective of his history, including the
history of salvation. All this teaching on unity has already been expressed
originally in Genesis 2:23.
The unity of which Genesis 2:24 speaks - "they become
one flesh" - is undoubtedly expressed and realized in the conjugal act.
The biblical formulation, extremely concise and simple, indicates sex,
femininity and masculinity, as that characteristic of man - male and female -
which permits them, when they become "one flesh," to submit their
whole humanity to the blessing of fertility. However, the whole context of the
lapidary formulation does not permit us to stop at the surface of human
sexuality. It does not allow us to deal with the body and sex outside the full
dimension of man and of the "communion of persons." Right from the
beginning it obliges us to see the fullness and depth which are characteristic
of this unity, which man and woman must constitute in the light of the
revelation of the body.
The perspective expression which says, "a man cleaves
to his wife" so intimately that "they become one flesh," always
induces us to refer to what the biblical text expresses previously with regard
to the union in humanity, which binds the woman and the man in the very
mystery of creation. The words of Genesis 2:23, just analyzed, explain this
concept in a particular way. Uniting with each other (in the conjugal act) so
closely as to become "one flesh," man and woman, rediscover, so to
speak, every time and in a special way, the mystery of creation. They return
in this way to that union in humanity ("bone of my bones and flesh of my
flesh") which allows them to recognize each other and, like the first
time, to call each other by name.
This means reliving, in a sense, the original virginal
value of man, which emerges from the mystery of his solitude before God and in
the midst of the world. The fact that they become one flesh is a powerful bond
established by the Creator. Through it they discover their own humanity, both
in its original unity, and in the duality of a mysterious mutual attraction.
However, sex is something more than the mysterious power of
human corporality, which acts almost by virtue of instinct. At the level of
man and in the mutual relationship of persons, sex expresses an ever new
surpassing of the limit of man's solitude that is inherent in the constitution
of his body, and determines its original meaning. This surpassing always
contains within it a certain assumption of the solitude of the body of the
second "self " as one's own.
Therefore, it is bound up with choice. The formulation of
Genesis 2:24 indicates that human beings, created as man and woman, were
created for unity. It also indicates that precisely this unity, through which
they become one flesh, has right from the beginning a character of union
derived from a choice. We read: "A man leaves his father and mother and
cleaves to his wife." If the man belongs "by nature" to his
father and mother, by virtue of procreation, on the other hand, he cleaves by
choice to his wife (or she to her husband).
The text of Genesis 2:24 defines this character of the
conjugal bond with reference to the first man and the first woman. At the same
time, it does so in the perspective of the whole earthly future of man.
Therefore, in his time, Christ will appeal to that text, as equally relevant
in his age. Formed in the image of God, also inasmuch as they form a true
communion of persons, the first man and the first woman must constitute the
beginning and the model of that communion for all men and women, who, in any
period, are united so intimately as to be one flesh.
The body, which through its own masculinity or femininity
right from the beginning helps both to find themselves in communion of
persons, becomes, in a particular way, the constituent element of their union,
when they become husband and wife. This takes place, however, through a mutual
choice. This choice establishes the conjugal pact between persons, who become
one flesh only on this basis.
That corresponds to the structure of man's solitude, and in
actual fact to the "twofold solitude." As the expression of
self-determination, choice rests on the foundation of his self-consciousness.
Only on the basis of the structure peculiar to man is he "a body"
and, through the body, also male and female. When they both unite so closely
as to become one flesh, their conjugal union presupposes a mature
consciousness of the body. In fact, it bears within it a particular
consciousness of the meaning of that body in the mutual self-giving of the
persons.
In this sense too, Genesis 2:24 is a perspective text. It
proves that in every conjugal union of man and woman, the same original
consciousness of the unifying significance of the body in its masculinity and
femininity is discovered again. At the same time, the biblical text indicates
that each of these unions renews, in a way, the mystery of creation in all its
original depth and vital power. "Taken out of man" as "flesh of
his flesh," woman subsequently becomes, as wife and through her
motherhood, mother of the living (cf. Gn 3:20), since her motherhood
also has its origin in him. Procreation is rooted in creation, and every time,
in a sense, reproduces its mystery.
A special reflection on "knowledge and
procreation" will be devoted to this subject. In it, it will be necessary
to refer further to other elements of the biblical text. The analysis made
hitherto of the meaning of the original unity proves in what way that unity of
man and woman, inherent in the mystery of creation, is "from the
beginning" also given as a commitment in the perspective of all following
times.
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