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GENERAL AUDIENCE
Wednesday 16 January 1980
The Human Person Becomes a Gift in the Freedom of Love
Let us continue today with the analysis of the texts of
Genesis, which we have undertaken according to Christ's line of teaching. Let
us recall that in the talk about marriage he referred to the
"beginning."
The revelation, and at the same time the original discovery
of the nuptial meaning of the body, consists in this: it presents man, male
and female, in the whole reality and truth of his body and sex ("they
were naked") and at the same time in full freedom from any constraint of
the body and of sex. The nakedness of our progenitors, interiorly free from
shame, seems to bear witness to this. It can be said that, created by Love,
endowed in their being with masculinity and femininity, they are both
"naked" because they are free with the freedom of the gift.
This freedom lies at the basis of the nuptial meaning of
the body. The human body, with its sex, and its masculinity and femininity
seen in the very mystery of creation, is not only a source of fruitfulness and
procreation, as in the whole natural order. It 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 -
fulfills the meaning of his being and existence. Let us recall here the text
of the last Council which declared that man is the only creature in the
visible world that God willed "for its own sake." It then added that
man "can fully discover his true self only in a sincere giving of
himself" (GS 24).
The root of that original nakedness free from shame, which
Genesis 2:25 speaks of, must be sought in that complete truth about man. Man
or woman, in the context of their beatifying beginning, are free with the
freedom of the gift. To remain in the relationship of the "sincere gift
of themselves" and to become such a gift for each other, through the
whole of their humanity made of femininity and masculinity (also in relation
to that perspective which Genesis 2:24 speaks of), they must be free precisely
in this way.
We mean here freedom especially as mastery of oneself (self
control). From this aspect, it is indispensable that man may be able to
"give himself," that he may become a gift, that he will be able to
"fully discover his true self " in "a sincere giving of himself
" (referring to the words of the Council). Thus the words, "They
were naked and were not ashamed" can and must be understood as the
revelation - and at the same time rediscovery - of freedom. This freedom makes
possible and qualifies the nuptial sense of the body.
Genesis 2:25 says even more, however. It indicates the
possibility and the characteristic of this mutual "experience of the
body." It enables us also to identify that nuptial meaning of the body in
actu. When we read: "They were naked and were not ashamed," we
directly touch its fruits and indirectly touch almost the root of it. Free
interiorly from the constraint of their own bodies and sex, free with the
freedom of the gift, man and woman could enjoy the whole truth, the whole
self-evidence of man, just as God-Yahweh had revealed these things to them in
the mystery of creation.
This truth about man, which the conciliar text states
precisely in the words quoted above, has two main emphases. The first affirms
that man is the only creature in the world that the Creator willed "for
its own sake." The second consists in saying that this same mm, willed by
the Creator in this way right from "the beginning," can find himself
only in the disinterested giving of himself. Now, this truth about man, which
seems in particular to grasp the original condition connected with the very
beginning of man in the mystery of creation, can be reread in both directions,
on the basis of the conciliar text. This rereading helps us to understand even
more the nuptial meaning of the body. This meaning seems inscribed in the
original condition of man and woman (according to Genesis 2:23-25) and in
particular in the meaning of their original nakedness.
As we have noted, at the root of their nakedness is the
interior freedom of the gift - the disinterested gift of oneself. This gift
enables them both, man and woman, to find one another, since the Creator
willed each of them "for his (her) own sake" (cf. GS 24).
Thus man, in the first beatifying meeting, finds the woman, and she finds him.
In this way he accepts her interiorly. He accepts her as she is willed
"for her own sake" by the Creator, as she is constituted in the
mystery of the image of God through her femininity. Reciprocally, she accepts
him in the same way, as he is willed "for his own sake" by the
Creator, and constituted by him by means of his masculinity. The revelation
and the discovery of the nuptial meaning of the body consists in this. The
Yahwist narrative, and in particular Genesis 2:25, enables us to deduce that
man, as male and female, enters the world precisely with this awareness of the
meaning of the body, of masculinity and femininity.
The human body, oriented interiorly by the sincere gift of
the person, reveals not only its masculinity or femininity on the physical
plane, but reveals also such a value and such a beauty as to go beyond the
purely physical dimension of sexuality. In this manner awareness of the
nuptial meaning of the body, connected with man's masculinity-femininity, is
in a way completed. On the one hand, this meaning indicates a particular
capacity of expressing love, in which man becomes a gift. On the other hand,
the capacity and deep availability for the affirmation of the person
corresponds to it. This is, literally, the capacity of living the fact that
the other - the woman for the man and the man for the woman - is, by means of
the body, someone willed by the Creator for his or her own sake. The person is
unique and unrepeatable, someone chosen by eternal Love.
The affirmation of the person is nothing but acceptance of
the gift, which, by means of reciprocity, creates the communion of persons.
This communion is constructed from within. It comprises also the whole
"exteriority" of man, that is, everything that constitutes the pure
and simple nakedness of the body in its masculinity and femininity. Then, as
we read in Genesis 2:25, man and woman were not ashamed. The biblical
expression "were not ashamed" directly indicates "the
experience" as a subjective dimension.
Precisely in this subjective dimension, as two human
"egos" determined by their masculinity and femininity, both of them,
man - and woman, appear in the mystery of their beatifying
"beginning." (We are in the state of man's original innocence and at
the same time, original happiness.) This is a short appearance, comprising
only a few verses in Genesis. However it is full of a surprising content,
theological and anthropological at the same time. The revelation and discovery
of the nuptial meaning of the body explain man's original happiness. At the
same time, it opens the perspective of his earthly history, in which he will
never avoid this indispensable "theme" of his own existence.
The following verses of Genesis, according to the Yahwist
text of chapter 3, show actually that this historical perspective will be
constructed differently from the beatifying beginning (after original sin). It
is all the more necessary, however, to penetrate deeply into the mysterious
structure, theological and at the same time anthropological, of this
beginning. In the whole perspective of his own history, man will not fail to
confer a nuptial meaning on his own body. Even if this meaning will undergo
many distortions, it will always remain the deepest level. It demands to be
revealed in all its simplicity and purity, and to be shown in its whole truth,
as a sign of the image of God. The way that goes from the mystery of creation
to the "redemption of the body" also passes here (cf. Rom 8).
For the present we are remaining on the threshold of this
historical perspective. On the basis of Genesis 2:23-25, we clearly realize
the connection that exists between the revelation and the discovery of the
nuptial meaning of the body, and man's original happiness. This nuptial
meaning is also beatifying. As such, it manifests in a word the whole reality
of that donation which the first pages of Genesis speak to us of. Reading
them, we are convinced of the fact that the awareness of the meaning of the
body that is derived from them - in particular of its nuptial meaning - is the
fundamental element of human existence in the world.
This nuptial meaning of the human body can be understood
only in the context of the person. The body has a nuptial meaning because the
human person, as the Council says, is a creature that God willed for his own
sake. At the same time, he can fully discover his true self only in a sincere
giving of himself.
Christ revealed to man and woman, over and above the
vocation to marriage, another vocation namely, that of renouncing marriage, in
view of the kingdom of heaven. With this vocation, he highlighted the same
truth about the human person. If a man or a woman is capable of making a gift
of himself for the kingdom of heaven, this proves in its turn (and perhaps
even more) that there is the freedom of the gift in the human body. It means
that this body possesses a full nuptial meaning.
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