____________________________________________________________ GENERAL AUDIENCES: JOHN PAUL II'S        THEOLOGY OF THE BODY |                   Pope John Paul II         |                                                1.       Of the Unity and Indissolubility of Marriage        On 5        September 1979, in the first of his General Audiences on the Theology of        the Body, the Holy Father expounded the words of Christ, "In the beginning        the Creator made them male and female."       2.        Biblical Account of Creation Analysed               In his General Audience of 12 September 1979,        the Holy Father compared two accounts of man's creation from Genesis,        establishing basic principles for his study of the Theology of the Body.        3. The Second        Account of Creation: The Subjective Definition of Man        In his General Audience of 19 September 1979, the Holy Father        examined the account of man's creation in the second chapter of Genesis,        observing its profundity in revealing the subjective side of creation in        the image of God.        4. Boundary        Between Original Innocence and Redemption        In his General Audience on 26 September 1979, the Holy Father        considered a continuity between man's state of original innocence and the        state of original sin, which left him open to the grace of redemption.        5.        Meaning of Man's        Original Solitude        In his General Audience on 10 October 1979, the Holy Father        examined man's solitude, not as male, distinct from female, but in his        nature as distinct from other living things, his difference in        superiority, revealed to him in his self-consciousness.        6.        Man's Awareness        of Being a Person        In his General Audience on 24 October 1979, the Holy Father        linked "man's original solitude," as different from and superior to other        living creatures, with consciousness of his body.        7.        In the Very        Definition of Man, the Alternative Between Death and Immortality        In his General Audience on 31 October 1979, the Holy Father        addressed again the solitude in which man was created, in relation to        other creatures, but also with regard to his freedom of moral choice. The        alternatives of death and immortality lay with him.               8.        Original Unity of Man and Woman        In his General Audience of 7 November 1979, the Holy Father        continued to lay groundwork for his Theology of the Body, meditating on        Adam's "sleep" from which the division of the sexes emerged.               9.        Man Becomes the Image of God by Communion of Persons        In his General Audience of 14 November 1979, the Holy Father        located the image of God, in which man was created, not only in the        solitude of his humanity, but also in the communion of persons, in the        creation of the first man and woman in relation to each other.               10.        Marriage One and Indissoluble in First Chapters of        Genesis        In his General Audience of 21 November 1979, the Holy Father        spoke on the communion of the first man and woman, how it renewed their        original unity before separation in creation, and revealed the meaning of        their bodies by their complementarity.        11.        Meaning of        Original Human Experiences        In his General Audience of 12 December 1979, the Holy Father        observed that, in the Genesis account, the shame at their nakedness,        experienced by the first man and woman after the Fall, contrasts with        their original innocence, which invites further study of their original        consciousness of their bodies.        12. Fullness of        Interpersonal Communication        In his General Audience of 19 December 1979, the Holy Father continued his        series on the Theology of the Body, analyzing the absence of shame in our        first parents, despite their nakedness, and its bearing on their        communication.        13. Creation as a        Fundamental and Original Gift        In his General Audience of 2 January 1980, the Holy Father continued        his study of the Theology of the Body, analyzing the consciousness of our        first parents, in how they perceived each other, without shame in their        nakedness, as good, and a mutual gift, part of the good gift of God's        creation.  		14.  		Revelation and Discovery of the Nuptial Meaning of the Body  		In his General Audience of 9 January 1980, the Holy Father  		explained the "nuptial meaning" of the body as first experienced by Adam  		and Eve. Man, both male and female, realizes his essence only in living  		with and for someone else. The possibility of this mutual self-gift is  		manifested in the bodies of male and female, which gives them their  		nuptial meaning.        15. The        Man-Person Becomes a Gift in the Freedom of Love        In his General Audience of 16 January 1980, the Holy Father        continued his series on the Theology of the Body, by examining the        "nuptial meaning of the body." Through self-mastery, by which the purely        physical side of sex was restrained, the first man and woman were free to        give themselves totally to each other, and thereby discovered their true        selves.        16.        Mystery of Man's Original Innocence        In his General Audience of 30 January 1980,        the Holy Father pursued his examination of the Theology of the Body by        dwelling on the mystery of man's original innocence, that purity of heart        which enabled Adam and Eve to give themselves to each other in love, as        the effect of grace.        17.        Man and Woman: A Mutual        Gift for Each Other        In his General Audience of 6        February 1980, the Holy Father reexamined the nuptial meaning of the body,        in the mutual gift of self by our first parents, in the context of their        original innocence.        18. Original        Innocence and Man's Historical State        In his General Audience of 13 February 1980, the Holy Father        reexamined our first parents' original innocence, as their nature was        originally graced, how it affected their relationship to each other and        the nuptial meaning of their bodies as male and female.        19. Man        Enters the World as a Subject of Truth and Love        In his General Audience of 20 February 1980, the Holy Father        continued his series on the Theology of the Body. Created in the image of        God, man (Adam and Eve) entered the world as a primordial sacrament, a        sign to the visible world of the invisible mystery hidden in God, the        mystery of truth and love, the mystery of divine life, in which man really        participates.        20.        Analysis of Knowledge        and of Procreation        In his General Audience of 5        March 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on the Theology of the        Body, by examining the meaning of the biblical statement that "Adam knew        Eve his wife" (Gn 4:1-2).         21.        Mystery of Woman        Revealed in Motherhood        In his General Audience of 12        March 1980, the Holy Father further examined the concept of mutual        "knowledge" between the first man and woman. The woman is brought to full        awareness of the mystery of creation, in its renewal in human generation.        22.        Knowledge-Generation        Cycle and Perspective of Death        In his General Audience of 26        March 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. He further examined biblical "knowledge," as the nuptial        relationship before the fall, a mutual, disinterested gift of self between        spouses, contrasting it with the same relationship as a remedy for death        after the fall.        23.        Marriage in the Integral        Vision of Man        In his General Audience of 2        April 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on Theology of the Body.        Only by going back to the "beginning," as Christ did in answering the        Pharisees on divorce, can we get a total vision of man, male and female,        and only so can we adequately understand marriage and procreation.         24. Christ        Appeals to Man's Heart        In his General Audience of 16 April 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by turning to Christ's        teaching, in the Sermon on the Mount, on adultery in the heart.        25.        Ethical and        Anthropological Content of the Commandment: You Shall Not Commit Adultery        At his General Audience of 23        April 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on Theology of the Body.        He examined the meaning of adultery, which is a breach in the unity of        husband and wife, even if only by an interior act ("adultery in the        heart"). He cited the case of David and Bathsheba.        26.        Lust is the Fruit of the        Breach of the Covenant With God        In his General Audience of 30        April 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. He examined the three-fold lust, of the flesh, of the eyes, and the        pride of life, by which man broke God's original covenant.        27.        Real Significance of        Original Nakedness        In his General Audience of 14        May 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on Theology of the Body,        explaining the nakedness of man after the fall as not merely physical.        "...this man was deprived of the supernatural and preternatural gifts        which were part of his endowment before sin. Furthermore, he suffered a        loss in what belongs to his nature itself, to humanity in the original        fullness of the image of God."        28.        A Fundamental Disquiet        in All Human Existence        In his General Audience of 2        June 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. The shame experienced by man after his fall expressed a deeper        shame, called "cosmic," reflecting a new disorder in his nature, by which        not only was the relationship between man and woman affected, but the        relationship between body and spirit.        29.        Relationship of Lust to        Communion of Persons        In his General Audience of 4        June 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. He examined the radical transformation wrought by lust and shame in        the original relationship between the first man and woman.        30.        Dominion Over the Other        in the Interpersonal Relation        In his General Audience of 18        June 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on Theology of the Body.        Because of their sin, the man and woman feel shame toward each other,        their communion is weakened, and he will exercise dominion over her.        31.        Lust Limits Nuptial        Meaning of the Body        In his General Audience of 25        June 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. The sin of Adam and Eve distorted the "nuptial meaning of the body,"        its masculinity/femininity, which was meant to shape their communion.        Their relationship was corrupted by lust, which includes the desire to        possess the other, rather than receive him/her as a free gift.        32.        The Heart a Battlefield        Between Love and Lust        In his General Audience of 23        July 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body. After the fall, human sexuality was marked by a certain "coercion of        the body," which subverts the expression of the spirit seeking the        communion of persons, male and female, through a mutual gift of self. "The        more lust dominates the heart, the less the heart experiences the nuptial        meaning of the body."         33.        Opposition in the Human Heart between the Spirit and the Body        In his General Audience of 30 July 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. The nuptial meaning of        the body is destroyed when man or woman seeks to possess the other as an        object, but not when each belongs to the other through self-giving.        34.        Sermon on the Mount to        the Men of Our Day        In his General Audience of 6        August 1980, the Holy Father, continuing his catechesis on Theology of the        Body, examined the the "hardness of heart," which all men share with Our        Lord's auditors, and its connection with the three-fold lust which is our        heritage from Adam.        35.        Content of the Commandment: You Shall        Not Commit Adultery        In his General Audience of 13 August 1980,        the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. He        presented Our Lord's teaching against adultery "in the heart" as a return        to the spirit of the law, whose letter had been stretched to allow        polygamy.        36. Adultery        According to the Law and as Spoken by the Prophets        In his General Audience of 20 August 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. He examines the emphasis        of the matrimonial law on the "procreative end of marriage," and of the        prophets on the uniqueness of the spousal relationship between God and        Israel, contrary to the prevailing polygamy.        37. Adultery:        A Breakdown of the Personal Covenant        In his General Audience of 27 August 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechetical cycle on Theology of the Body, on the subject        of adultery. Adultery is a sin of the body, violating exclusive        matrimonial rights between a man and a woman, which constitutes a        breakdown of the personal covenant between them.        38.        Meaning of Adultery        Transferred from the Body to the Heart        In his General Audience of 3        September 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of        the Body, focusing on adultery, its place in the Wisdom tradition, and the        change in emphasis introduced by Christ.         39.        Concupiscence as a        Separation From Matrimonial Significance of the Body        In his General Audience of 10        September 1980, the Holy Father continued his series on Theology of the        Body. He gave a description of the inner effects of lust from the Wisdom        tradition and then compared it with the teaching of Christ on "adultery in        the heart."         40. Mutual        Attraction Differs from Lust        In his General Audience of 17 September 1980, the Holy Father        continued his analysis of adultery in his series on Theology of the Body.        The mutual attraction between a man and a woman, encompassing a "gamut of        spiritual-corporal desires," to which a "proportionate pyramid of values"        corresponds, differs from lust, in that the latter reduces the pyramid to        one level, sex, as an object of gratification.        41.        Depersonalizing Effect of Concupiscence        In his General Audience of 24 September 1980, the Holy Father        further examined "adultery in the heart," spoken of by Our Lord in His        Sermon on the Mount. When a woman is looked at lustfully by a man, she        ceases to be regarded as a subject of personal attraction or communion,        but only as an object of sexual satisfaction. And when this "intention"        reaches the will, the man himself becomes enslaved.        42.        Establishing the Ethical        Sense        In his General Audience of 1        October 1980, the Holy Father continued his analysis of the words of Our        Lord, in His Sermon on the Mount, concerning adultery in the heart. It is        not merely a matter of lusting after a woman who is not one's wife, but of        looking at her in a way dismissive of her dignity as well as of one's own.        43.        Interpreting the Concept of Concupiscence        In his General Audience of 8 October 1980, the Holy Father        concluded his analysis of adultery in the heart, by observing that it is        an attitude of a man toward a woman (or vice versa) which reduces the        communion of persons to satisfaction of an instinct. One may be guilty of        this attitude towards one's own spouse.        44.        Gospel Values and Duties        of the Human Heart        In his General Audience of 15        October 1980, the Holy Father continued his analysis of "adultery in the        heart" by distinguishing condemnation of lust from a condemnation of the        body.        45.        Realization of the Value        of the Body According to the Plan of the Creator        In his General Audience of 22        October 1980, the Holy Father clarified the meaning of lust, in his        catechesis on Theology of the Body. Christ warned against lusting after a        woman, not to condemn the body as evil (Manichaeism), but to condemn the        devaluation of the body in its nuptial meaning, i.e., the manifestation of        communion in spirit.        46. Power of        Redeeming Completes Power of Creating        In his General Audience of 29 October 1980, the Holy Father continued his        catechesis on "adultery in the heart" by examining the three forms of lust        ("of the flesh," "of the eyes," and the "pride of life") spoken of by St.        John (1 Jn 2:15-16), in relation to the skewed pictures of man presented        by Freud, Marx and Nietzsche. The truth of his humanity, the ability to        love, is deeper than the three lusts.        47. Eros and        Ethos Meet and Bear Fruit in the Human Heart        In his General Audience of 5 November 2004, the Holy Father        explained that the warning of Christ against looking lustfully at a woman        is less an accusation than an appeal, that what the heart desires (eros)        should also be what is right (ethos).         48.        Spontaneity: The Mature Result of Conscience        In his General Audience of 12 November 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by examining the notion        that subjection of an erotic attraction to an ethical form deprives it of        its spontaneity.        49. Christ        Calls Us to Rediscover the Living Forms of the New Man        In his General Audience of 3 December 1980, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, with regard to adultery        in the heart, by focusing on the ethos of redemption, which calls for        temperance in the natural erotic attraction between a man and a woman.                50. Purity of        Heart        In his General Audience of 10 December 1980, the Holy Father        completed his study of adultery in the heart with a consideration of        purity of heart, and how the Lord distinguished this from mere ritual        purity.          51.        Justification in Christ        In his General Audience of 17        December 1980, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body by examining the conflict between "flesh" and "spirit" in the        teaching of St. Paul. The lusts of the worldly man can be overcome by his        spirit when empowered by the Holy Spirit.        52.        Opposition Between the        Flesh and the Spirit        In his General Audience of 7        January 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body by examining St. Paul's doctrine of justification, and in particular        the opposition between life according to the flesh and life according to        the Spirit (of God).         53.        Life in the Spirit Based        on True Freedom        In his General Audience of 14        January 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body by further examination of St. Paul's teaching on life according to        the Spirit. It is purity of heart, which is the necessary condition for        charity and true freedom.         54. St.        Paul's Teaching on the Sanctity and Respect of the Human Body        In his General Audience of 28 January 1981, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by examining St. Paul's        teaching on purity, in 1 Thessalonians 4, that we should control our        bodies in holiness and honor.        55.        St. Paul's Description of the Body        and Teaching on Purity        In his General Audience of 4 February 1981,        the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by        examining St. Paul's teaching on the body from 1 Corinthians 12. The human        body is more than the sum of its biological characteristics. It is        permeated by the "whole reality of the person and of his dignity."                56. The        Virtue of Purity Is the Expression and Fruit of Life According to the        Spirit                In his General Audience of 11 February 1981, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by further examining St.        Paul's teaching on purity. It is identifiable as the virtue of temperance,        but includes an element of respect for the body, as a temple of the Holy        Spirit.        57.        The Pauline Doctrine of        Purity as Life According to the Spirit        In his General Audience of 18        March 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of the        Body by further examination of St. Paul's teaching on purity. This virtue        is reinforced by piety, a gift of the indwelling Holy Spirit, by which God        is glorified.                  58.        Positive Function of        Purity of Heart        In his General Audience 1        April 1981, the Holy Father gathered the main threads of his teaching on        Theology of the Body, as based on the words of Christ on man's creation as        male and female, and his warning against adultery in the heart. Lust can        be displaced only by purity of heart, which, in the teaching of St. Paul,        is a gift of the Holy Spirit.        59.        Pronouncements of Magisterium Apply Christ's Words Today        In his General Audience of 8 April 1981, the Holy Father        concluded his reflections on the words of Christ, in the Sermon on the        Mount, on adultery in the heart. These words are key to the Theology of        the Body, which underlies the thinking of many recent magisterial        pronouncements.        60. The Human        Body, Subject of Works of Art        In his General Audience of 15 April 1981, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, laying groundwork for a        consideration of the human body in aesthetic experience, and how it        relates to Our Lord's warning against looking with lust.        61.        Reflections on the Ethos of the Human Body in Works of Artistic Culture        In his General Audience of 22 April 1981, the Holy Father        continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, examining the        implications of exposure of the human body in artistic culture for the        mutual donation of husband and wife.        62.        Art Must Not Violate the        Right to Privacy        In his General Audience of 29 April 1981, the Holy Father continued his        catechesis on Theology of the Body by examining the limits beyond which        art must not go in depicting masculinity or femininity.        63.        Ethical Responsibilities        in Art        In his General Audience of 6        May 1981, the Holy Father concluded his reflections on the Sermon on the        Mount, concerning adultery in the heart, with respect to artistic        depictions of the human body.        64.        Marriage and Celibacy in        the Light of the Resurrection of the Body        In his General Audience of 11        November 1981, the Holy Father began a new segment of his catechesis on        theology of the body, basing his talk on the words of Christ to the        Sadducees on the general resurrection. "These words are of fundamental        importance for understanding marriage in the Christian sense and also the        renunciation of conjugal life for the kingdom of heaven."          65.                   The Living God          Continually Renews the Very Reality of Life          In his General Audience          of 18 November 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on          theology of the body, by returning to the words of Christ to the          Sadducees on the general resurrection. They deny the resurrection          because they doubt the power of God.          66. The          Resurrection and Theological Anthropology          In his General Audience of 2          December 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of          the Body, by addressing the teaching of Christ on the relationship          between male and female after the general resurrection.          67.          The Resurrection          Perfects the Person          In his General Audience of 9          December 1981, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on Theology of          the Body, with particular regard for the general resurrection, in which          the body will be spiritualized, and both body and spirit divinized, in          the vision of God.          68. Christ's          Words on the Resurrection Complete the Revelation of the          Body           In his General Audience of 16 December 1981, the Holy Father continued          his focus on Christ's words about our condition after the general          resurrection in his catechesis on theology of the body. Each person          sharing in the beatific vision will have his own subjectivity perfected,          and yet, in view of the Communion of the Trinity, experience a new depth          of intersubjectivity which is the Communion of Saints. It will be          virginal, and yet reveal the full nuptial meaning of the body, as a gift          to God first, and through Him to others.          69. New          Threshold of Complete Truth About Man          In his General Audience of 13 January 1982, the Holy Father          continued his exposition of the words of Christ on the general          resurrection, as applied to Theology of the Body. In some way difficult          to imagine, the meaning of the human body will be revealed as the means          of mutual self-giving in the communion of Saints.          70.          Doctrine of the Resurrection according to St. Paul          In his General Audience of 27 January 1982, the Holy Father continued          his catechesis on Theology of the Body by further examining St. Paul's          teaching, in 1 Corinthians 15, on the general resurrection. The          resurrection of the body completes man's redemption from the effects of          sin.          71. The          Risen Body Will Be Incorruptible, Glorious, Dynamic, and Spiritual          In his General Audience of 3 February 1982, the Holy Father          continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by describing the          body, at the general resurrection, as the fulfillment of the human          aspiration to glory. This aspiration reflects the potentiality with          which we were created to become conformed to the risen Christ.          72. Body's          Spiritualization Will Be Source of Its Power and Incorruptibility          In his General Audience of 10 February 1982, the Holy Father          continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by concluding his study          of St. Paul's teaching on the general resurrection. Resurrected man, no          longer weakened through his resistance to the Spirit, will be fully          vivified, attaining the fullness for which he was created.          73.          Virginity or Celibacy for the Sake of the Kingdom          In his General Audience of 10 March 1982, the Holy Father began          a new series on virginity/celibacy for the kingdom of heaven, in          furtherance of his catechesis on theology of the body. A vocation to          celibacy is an anticipation of that eschatological state when men          "neither marry nor are given in marriage."           74. The          Vocation to Continence in This Earthly Life          In his General Audience of 17 March 1982, the Holy Father          continued his talks on celibacy/virginity for the sake of the kingdom of          heaven. This new ideal, though a departure from the Old Testament          tradition of marriage, shed light on the theology of the body.          75.          Continence for the Sake of the Kingdom Meant to Have Spiritual          Fulfillment          In his General Audience of 24 March 1982, the Holy Father          continued his talks on celibacy/virginity for the sake of the kingdom of          heaven. It is a charismatic sign that in heaven people will no longer          marry, because God will be everything to everyone. Departure from the          Old Testament tradition of marriage and procreation was effected          especially by the example of Christ himself.           76.                  The Effective and Privileged Way of          Continence          In his General Audience of 31 March 1982, the Holy Father          continued his talks on celibacy/virginity for the sake of the kingdom of          heaven. Marriage is not depreciated, but continence has an exceptional          value, when chosen with a supernatural motive.          77.          Superiority of          Continence Does Not Devalue Marriage          In his General Audience of 7          April 1982, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on theology of the          body, addressing the superiority of continence. It is superior to          marriage, not based not on any devaluation of sexuality or of the human          body, but on the motive for which continence is chosen, viz., the          kingdom of heaven.          78.          Marriage and Continence Complement Each Other          In his General Audience of 14 April 1982, the Holy Father          continued his instruction on the relationship between marriage and          continence. Those called to either state fulfill their calling in a          spiritual paternity or maternity toward those in their care. And the          nature of both is conjugal, being expressed in the total gift of          oneself.          79. The          Value of Continence Is Found in Love          In his General Audience of 21 April 1982, the Holy Father          continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, with regard to the          choice of virginity or celibacy. Continence for the sake of the Kingdom          of Heaven is the nuptial gift of self to Christ, the Spouse of the soul.          80.          Celibacy Is a Particular Response to the Love of the Divine Spouse          In his General Audience of 28 April 1982, the Holy Father          continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body by further explaining          continence for the sake of the Kingdom of Heaven as the particular          response of virginity/celibacy to the self-gift of the divine Spouse in          the Paschal and Eucharistic Mystery.   		81.  		Celibacy for the Kingdom Affirms Marriage  		In his General Audience of 5 May 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by concluding his  		considerations on Christ's words recommending continence for the sake of  		the Kingdom of Heaven. Renunciation of marriage for the sake of the  		Kingdom affirms the value of what is renounced, in the gift of self to  		God.  		82.  		Voluntary Continence Derives From a Counsel, Not From a Command  		In his General Audience of 23 June 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by addressing St.  		Paul's treatment of virginity and marriage. Consecrated virginity is a  		matter of counsel, not command, so that marriage is no sin, though  		voluntary virginity is better.  		83. The  		Unmarried Person Is Anxious to Please the Lord  		In his General Audience of 30 June 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by examining St.  		Paul's statement in 1 Corinthians 7, that one who marries does well, but  		one who chooses continence or virginity does better. Continence makes  		more room to be anxious for "the things of the Lord," to please the Lord  		and work for the growth of His Church.  		84.  		Everyone Has His Own Gift from God, Suited to His Vocation  		In his General Audience of 7 July 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body, by further examination  		of St. Paul's statement that it is better to choose continence than to  		marry. While the gift of continence allows an undivided love for God,  		the grace of marriage is a true gift, suited to that state in life.  		85. The  		Kingdom of God, Not the World, Is Man's Eternal Destiny  		In his General Audience of 14 July 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. He further examined  		St. Paul's teaching on the complementarity of continence and marriage,  		both vocations having in view the future life.  		86. Mystery  		of the Body's Redemption Basis of Teaching on Marriage and Voluntary  		Continence  		In his General Audience of 21 July 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. The eschatological  		redemption of the body, in victory over death, is the inspiration for  		man's victory over sin in daily life, whether in marriage or in  		celibacy.  		87. 		Marital Love Reflects  		God's Love for His People  		In his General Audience of  		28 July 1982, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on theology of  		the body by laying the groundwork for an examination of St. Paul's  		teaching on marriage in the fifth chapter of Ephesians. Marriage, as a  		sacrament, signifies the relationship between Christ and His Church, and  		before that, the spousal love between God and his chosen people.  		88. The  		Call to Be Imitators of God and to Walk in Love  		In his General Audience of 4 August 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his examination of the fifth chapter of Ephesians as part of  		his ongoing catechesis on theology of the body. The prescriptions for  		family relationships should be understood in light of the Apostle's  		teaching on the Christian vocation.  		89.  		Reverence for Christ the Basis of Relationship Between Spouses  		In his General Audience of 11 August 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on theology of the body, by examining more  		closely the right relationship between husband and wife as described in  		the fifth chapter of the Letter to the Ephesians.  		90. A  		Deeper Understanding of the Church and Marriage  		In his General Audience of 18 August 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on theology of the body, looking more closely  		at the two-way analogy found in Ephesians 5, between the relationship of  		husband and wife and the relationship of Christ and His Church.  		91. St  		Paul's Analogy of the Union of Head and Body  		In his General Audience of 25 August 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on theology of the body, by further examination  		of Ephesians 5. He focussed attention on the analogy of head and body,  		as analogous to both the Christ-Church relationship and the husband-wife  		relationship.   		92.  		Sacredness of the Human Body and Marriage  		In his General Audience of 1 September 1982, the Holy Father  		infers the sacredness of the human body from the analogy of love in  		Ephesians 5, between Christ for His Church and a husband for his wife. 		  		93.  		Christ's Redemptive Love Has Spousal Nature   		In his General Audience of 8 September 1982, the Holy Father continued  		his exposition of the fifth chapter of Ephesians, focusing on the  		meaning of the word "mystery," as it applies to God's plan, its  		revelation in Christ, Christ's relationship to the Church, and the  		sacraments of the Church.   		94. Moral  		Aspects of the Christian's Vocation  		In his General Audience of 15 September 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of the fifth chapter of Ephesians, by showing  		how the mystery of God's love, hidden for ages, was revealed in Jesus  		Christ, with an emphasis on his spousal donation of Himself to the  		Church and His members' participation in the mystery.  		95.  		Relationship of Christ to the  		Church Connected With the Tradition of the Prophets 		  		In his General Audience of 22 September 1982, the Holy Father, in light  		of Ephesians 5, compared the relationship of Christ with His Church to  		the relationship, described by the Old Testament Prophets, of God with  		Israel. Whereas, in Isaiah, God is Israel's spouse as her Maker, in  		Ephesians, Christ is the Church's spouse as her Redeemer.   		96. Analogy  		of Spousal Love Indicates the Radical Character of Grace  		  		In his General Audience of 29 September 1982, the Holy Father continued  		his catechesis on theology of the body by further examination of the  		spousal relationship between Christ and His Church in Ephesians 5. Of  		the various biblical analogies of the mystery of God's love, the  		marriage analogy most emphasizes God's gift of Himself to His people. 		  		97.  		Marriage Is the Central Point of the Sacrament of Creation  		In his General Audience of 6 October 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of fifth chapter of the Letter to the  		Ephesians, for the light it sheds on marriage as the "primordial"  		sacrament in the state of man's original innocence.  		98. Loss of  		Original Sacrament Restored with Redemption in Marriage-Sacrament  		In his General Audience of 13 October 1982, Pope John Paul II  		continued his exposition of the fifth chapter of the Letter to the  		Ephesians, by relating Christ's redemptive love to marriage as  		instituted in the beginning, when it was a sacrament of God's gift of  		Himself to man and woman at their creation.   		99.  		Marriage an Integral Part of New Sacramental Economy  		In his General Audience of 20 October 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his commentary on Ephesians 5, to give further insights into  		his Theology of the Body. Marriage is so fundamental to the order of  		redemption established by Christ that "all the sacraments of the new  		covenant find their prototype in marriage as the primordial sacrament." 		  		100.  		Indissolubility of Sacrament of Marriage in Mystery of the Redemption of  		the Body  		In his General Audience of 27 October 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on marriage in light of Ephesians 5. Man and  		woman becoming one flesh in marriage, as signifying the relationship  		between Christ and His Church, is a sign of the redemption of the body  		at the end of time.  		101.  		Christ Opened Marriage to the Saving Action of God   		In his General Audience of 24 November 1982, the Holy Father reexamined  		Ephesians 5 in light of the words of the Gospel, in which Christ,  		speaking to the Pharisees and in the Sermon on the Mount, confirmed  		marriage as a sacrament instituted by the Creator at the beginning. It  		is the sign of God's original covenant, according to which man, both  		male and female, would be sanctified and adopted by God.   		102.  		Marriage Sacrament an Effective Sign of God's Saving Power  		In his General Audience of 1 December 1982, the Holy Father  		drew together texts from the Gospel, Romans, and I Corinthians to shed  		further light on marriage as presented in Ephesians 5. This primordial  		sacrament prepares for the eschatological hope of the general  		resurrection in procreating sons and daughters who are to participate in  		the resurrection, and thus experience the redemption of the body.  		103. The  		Redemptive and Spousal Dimensions of Love  		In his general audience of 15 December 1982, the Holy Father  		continued his commentary on Ephesians 5, for further insights into  		marriage and the Theology of the Body. The original structure of  		marriage, as a sacrament of creation, "is renewed in the mystery of the  		redemption, when that mystery assumes the aspect of the spousal love of  		the Church on the part of Christ."   		104. The  		Substratum and Content of the Sacramental Sign of Spousal Communion 		  		In his General Audience of 5 January 1983, the Holy Father continued his  		catechesis on Theology of the Body by analyzing the sign (form) of the  		sacrament of marriage into two aspects: the expression of the will to be  		united (the wedding vows), and the actual union when the marriage is  		consummated.   		105. The  		Language of the Body in the Structure of Marriage  		In his General Audience of 12 January 1983, the Holy Father  		analyzed the sacramentality of marriage under the aspect of a sign. The  		sign is expressed in the language of the body, in its masculinity or  		femininity, as a personal gift to its spouse.  		106. The  		Sacramental Covenant in the Dimension of Sign  		In his General Audience of 19 January 1983, the Holy Father  		explains that the sign of the Sacrament of Marriage is constituted by  		the words of matrimonial consent, "because the spousal significance of  		the body in its masculinity and femininity is found expressed in them."  		In giving their consent, the spouses confirm their participation in the  		"prophetic mission of the Church received from Christ."   		107.  		Language of the Body Strengthens the Marriage Covenant  		In his General Audience of 26 January 1983, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of the "language of the body" as expressed in the  		marriage covenant between spouses. They "reread" the language of the  		body in their living together as a communion of persons.  		108. Man  		Called to Overcome Concupiscence  		In his General Audience of 9 February 1983, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of the "language of the body," expressed in the  		marriage covenant, but now with consideration of its misreading in the  		man of concupiscence. He/she is called by Christ to return from sin to  		chastity in rereading the truth of the body in the mystery of  		redemption.  		109.  		Return to the Subject of Human Love in the Divine Plan  		In his General Audience of 23 May 1984, the Holy Father (after  		a hiatus devoted to reflections on the Holy Year) resumed his treatment  		of the topic of human love in the divine plan. He began an analysis of  		the Song of Songs, situating it within the tradition of marital love  		reaching back to Genesis. It is the sign of the covenant made by God  		with man in the beginning.   		110. Truth  		and Freedom the Foundation of True Love  		In his General Audience of 30 May 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of the Song of Songs for further examination of  		the sacramental sign of marriage. It is expressed in the "language of  		the body," which begins in the heart. It reflects the familiarity of  		friendship, but also the mystery of a woman's interior inviolability,  		which is freely given to the man.  		111. Love  		Is Ever Seeking and Never Satisfied  		In his General Audience of 6 June 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of the Song of Songs in connection with his  		catechesis on Theology of the Body. On the basis of a love which is both  		spiritual and sensual, the significance of the body is reread, and their  		union becomes the sign of the mutual gift of self.  		112. Love  		Is Victorious in the Struggle Between Good and Evil  		In his General Audience of 27 June 1984, the Holy Father  		examined the Book of Tobit for the light it sheds on Theology of the  		Body. Here the devotion of the spouses is expressed not in words of  		loving transport, as in the Song of Songs, but in the "choices and the  		actions that take on all the weight of human existence in the union of  		the two."  		113. The  		Language of the Body: Actions and Duties Forming the Spirituality of  		Marriage  		In his General Audience of 4 July 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his catechesis on Theology of the Body. He returned to the  		fifth chapter of Ephesians to examine how the "language of the body" is  		elevated by the language of liturgy to a "great mystery," the Sacrament  		of Matrimony.  		114.  		Morality of Marriage Act Determined by Nature of the Act and of the  		Subjects  		In his General Audience of 11 July 1984, the Holy Father turned  		to reflections on Paul VI's Humanae Vitae as an application of  		his catechesis on the theology of human love in God's plan. He spoke on  		the inseparable connection "between the unitive significance and the  		procreative significance which are both inherent to the marriage act." 		  		115. The  		Norm of Humanae Vitae Arises from the Natural Law and the Revealed Order  		In his General Audience of 18 July 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of the Encyclical, Humanae Vitae,  		observing that its moral norm--marital openness to procreation--not only  		accords with natural law (reason) and the revealed moral law, but finds  		support in the Theology of the Body.  		116.  		Importance of Harmonizing Human Love with Respect for Life  		In his General Audience of 25 July 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his reflections, linking Humanae Vitae with the  		theology of human love in God's plan. The Theology of the Body, offering  		confirmation of the moral norm in the Encyclical, prepares us to  		consider more deeply, from a pastoral perspective, the difficulty of  		complying with the norm.  		117.  		Responsible Parenthood  		In his general audience of 1 August 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of Humanae Vitae in light of Gaudium et  		Spes, underlining the principle that, while responsible parenthood  		follows the dictates of conscience, conscience must conform to the  		"objective moral order instituted by God."   		118.  		Faithfulness to the Divine Plan in the Transmission of Life  		In his general audience of 8 August 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his analysis of Humanae Vitae, in comparing natural  		regulation of fertility with contraception. There is an essential  		difference between the two, the former following the lead of nature, the  		latter obstructing it.  		119.  		Church's Position on Transmission of Life  		At his General Audience of 22 August 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his reflections on Humanae Vitae, by focussing on the  		"essence of the Church's doctrine on the transmission of life." The  		language of the body, in order to be true, as conforming to the moral  		order, should signify not only the unitive aspect, but the procreative  		aspect, of marriage.  		120. A  		Discipline That Ennobles Human Love   		In his General Audience of 28 August 1984, the Holy Father continued his  		reflections on Humanae Vitae, turning his attention to natural  		regulation of fertility, which is consistent with responsible  		parenthood, though artificial contraception is not.   		121.  		Responsible Parenthood Linked to Moral Maturity  		In his general audience of 5 September 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of the Church's teaching on natural regulation  		of fertility, in light of Humanae Vitae and Familiaris  		Consortio. It is the ethical dimension, in the virtue of temperance,  		that prevents this method from becoming just another form of  		contraception.  		122.  		Prayer, Penance and the Eucharist: Principal Sources of Spirituality for  		Married Couples  		In his General Audience of 3 October 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of Humanae Vitae, showing the  		relationship between the "honest practice of fertility regulation" and  		the "Christian spirituality of the conjugal vocation and life."  		123. The  		Power of Love Is Given to Man and Woman as a Share in God's Love  		In his General Audience of 10 October 1984, the Holy Father continued  		his exposition of Humanae Vitae, as it bore on his Theology of  		the Body. The love that God gives to husband and wife is a supernatural  		power enabling them to coordinate their actions toward the good of  		marriage, a communion of persons, while safeguarding the connection  		between the "two meanings of the conjugal act," the unitive and the  		procreative.   		124.  		Continence Protects  		the Dignity of the Conjugal Act  		In his General Audience of 24  		October 1984, the Holy Father gave close examination to the virtue of  		continence, in light of the teaching of Humanae Vitae. Continence  		in marriage not only resists concupiscence, but enlarges the capacity of  		husband and wife to love each other.   		125.  		Continence Frees One from Inner Tension  		In his General Audience of 31 October 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his treatment of the virtue of continence in light of the  		teaching of Humanae Vitae. He distinguished between excitement,  		which tends toward the conjugal act, and emotion which is an  		affectionate response to the masculinity or femininity of the marital  		partner. Continence gives direction to both.  		126.  		Continence Deepens Personal Communion  		At the General Audience on 7 November 1984, Pope John Paul II  		continued his analysis of the virtue of continence in light of  		Humanae Vitae. The virtue of continence has "not only the capacity  		to contain bodily and sensual reactions, but even more the capacity to  		control and guide man's whole sensual and emotive sphere."   		127.  		Christian Spirituality of Marriage by Living According to the Spirit  		In his General Audience of 14 November 1984, the Holy Father  		continued his exposition of Humanae Vitae for the light it sheds on the  		role of chastity in married life. The virtue of chastity not only  		regulates manifestations of affection, but opens the couple to the gifts  		of the Holy Spirit, by which they are enabled to achieve a communion of  		persons.  		128.  		Respect for the Work of God  		In his General Audience of 21 November 1984, the Holy Father  		traced an outline of conjugal spirituality, based on the teaching of  		Humanae Vitae. He explained the gift of piety, respect for the work  		of God, with particular reference to the significance of the conjugal  		act, "its dignity and the consequent serious responsibility connected  		with it."  		129.  		Conclusion to the Series: Redemption of the Body and Sacramentality of  		Marriage  		In his General Audience of 28 November 1984, the Holy Father  		concluded his four-year catechesis on Theology of the Body with a  		summary of his conclusions. His catechesis was divided into two parts:  		the first was a study of Christ's words on marriage and their  		implications for the redemption of the body, and the second, an analysis  		of the sacramentality of marriage as presented in Ephesians 5, with  		added insights from Humanae Vitae.                            |                   |           Provided Courtesy of:          Eternal Word Television Network          5817 Old Leeds Road          Irondale, AL 35210          www.ewtn.com                  |                   |