Early on in Jesus public ministry he went with his mother and
his disciples to a wedding in Cana. Here we see that Jesus is
blessing marriage, and reinforcing it with his presence at the
wedding of Cana. It is here that he performs his first miracle. He
changed (you could say “transubstantiated”) six containers of water,
each holding twenty or thirty gallons, into choice wine. 120
gallons of choice wine! That is a lot of spirit! The wedding
reception must have been a lively one!
God designed marriage and spousal love. He has a definite plan for
marriage and spousal love. Since marriage is so important to each one
of us, and to the human race, we need to reflect upon it. When God
created the human race, he designed us to be bodied persons, male and
female. The first man, Adam, isolated and left to himself, was
incomplete. Adam yearned for a soul mate, a person who could fulfill
his yearnings for companionship, love and intimacy. Then God created
the first woman, Eve, to be the perfect complement to Adam. “Male and
female He created them in His own image and likeness.” As persons,
both Adam and Eve had the ability to make the total, personal gift of
self to the other. That is the distinctive quality of a human
person: the ability to make the total, unconditional, without any
reservations, total self surrender to another.
Genesis teaches “male and female He
made them, in His own image and likeness” (Gen 1:27). A man and a woman
reflect God, image God, by their ability to make the total personal gift
of self to the other, just as the three persons of God totally give of
themselves in the Blessed Trinity. In Isaiah 62 we read: “For the Lord
delights in you, and your land shall be called married … And as the
bridegroom rejoices over the bride, so shall your God rejoice over you”
(Is 62:5). Here we see that God uses the image of marriage to express
his great love for us.
This total and personal gift of self
is most clearly seen in the marital act, the great spousal act. “For
this reason a man shall leave his parents and cleave to his wife, the
two shall become one flesh” (Gen 2:24). Our God is a God of both
love and life. When He designed marriage, He made it to be an
intimate communion of love and life between a husband and wife. And
when God designed the marital act, He designed it to have two
inseparable dimensions: a unitive, or love-giving dimension, and a
procreative, or life-giving dimension. Love and life: they always go
together. All love is life giving. Real love is never intentionally
made sterile. Sterilized love is completely unnatural and dehumanizing.
Marriage, in God’s plan, has still
other dimensions. It is free, total, faithful and open to life.
Love, and married love, cannot be forced. It must be freely given.
Married love is the total, unreserved gift of self. As God
designed it, marriage vows endure until the death of one of the
spouses. It is “until death do us part.” It calls for absolute
fidelity. And marriage is always open to the goodness of life:
a happy, healthy family is the fulfillment of a marriage.
Sadly, we have strayed a long way from
God’s plan for marriage, spousal love and family. The situation of
today makes a mockery of God’s plan. Today we find that one out of
two marriages end up in a divorce. This includes Catholics. Today we
live in a fault free divorce society, where either one of the spouses
can initiate a divorce, and the law will accept that, regardless of the
wishes of the other spouse who wants to save the marriage. Today the
prevailing attitude is: “If major problems appear, we split.”
Think of what this attitude does to
any sense of commitment to marriage vows and permanency. Consider the
pain and damage done to the children of a divorce. Perhaps this is why
so many young couples put off marriage and simply cohabitate. Today,
nationwide, there is an 80% cohabitation rate among young Catholic
couples. Easy divorce and lack of commitment has led to many single
parent families, usually with single moms. It should be easy to see
the devastation that contraception and sterilization are wrecking upon
our marriages today.
New research reports that the
percentage of United States’ adults who are married has dropped from 78%
in 1970 to 57% in 2008, according to the recently released report, “The
Marriage Index.” Even more concerning, 40% of all American children
today are born out-of-wedlock and 71% of African American children are
born without married parents. Research also shows that single mothers
have only one-third the financial assets as married mothers. Children
not brought up by both a mother and father have lower graduation rates,
higher incidence of incarceration, and lower performance in school.
Jesus does not bless this state of
marriage. Jesus does not give his approval to this abandonment of God’s
plan for marriage and spousal love. Jesus wants his plan for marriage
and spousal love to be taught from the pulpits, and shouted from the
rooftops. He wants it to be part of the new evangelization for the 21st
century. He wants people to understand the beauty and goodness of
mature spousal love and a total commitment to marriage. He wants us to
understand that it takes a lifetime to live and develop a spousal
relationship. You can’t do this in ten or fifteen years. Jesus wants
us to understand that the child is the greatest gift God can send to
married couples. Children are their greatest treasure.
This is why we must all return to
God’s plan for marriage, spousal love and family. Whenever I meet
couples celebrating their 50th golden anniversaries, I always
ask them: “What is the secret to your staying married?” Their answer is
always the same. They say, “Well don’t think that we didn’t have our
share of problems. We had just as many problems as anyone else. But we
made the decision to face our problems together and work them out. Our
problems did not break us. Rather, working with our problems in the
marriage and family helped us to mature and discover what real love
is.” Then they add, “And we are still working at it.”
Last November, the American Bishops
released their pastoral letter, “Marriage: Love and Life in the
Divine Plan.” It is very readable, and very good teaching. I
encourage you to read it. Just go to your computer and type on your
search engine “Marriage: Love and Life in the Divine Plan.” Our
bishops understand the seriousness of the present state of marriage.
Following closely the teaching of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church, the pastoral letter first
discusses marriage as a natural institution essentially linked to
male-female complementarity and ordered to the good of the spouses and
the procreation of children. The letter views marriage as an
institution facing “fundamental challenges” from contraception,
homosexual unions, divorce and cohabitation.
On contraception the bishops
teach: “Deliberately intervening, by the use of contraceptive practices,
to close off an act of intercourse to the possibility of procreation is
a way of separating the unitive meaning of marriage from the procreative
meaning. This is objectively wrong in and of itself and is essentially
opposed to God’s plan for marriage and proper human development.”
On same-sex unions the bishops
teach: “The legal recognition of same-sex unions poses a multifaceted
threat to the very fabric of society, striking at the source from which
society and culture come and which they are meant to serve. Such
recognition affects all people, married and non-married: not only at the
fundamental levels of the good of the spouses, the good of children, the
intrinsic dignity of every human person and the common good, but also at
the levels of education, cultural imagination and influence, and
religious freedom.”
On cohabitation the bishops
teach: “Social science research finds that cohabitation has no positive
effects on a marriage. In some cases, cohabitation can in fact harm a
couple’s chances for a stable marriage. More importantly, though,
cohabitation involves the serious sin of fornication. It does not
conform to God’s plan for marriage and is always wrong and objectively
sinful.”
The bishops’ letter then turns to
“Marriage in the order of the new creation.” Here it discusses marriage
as a sacrament, as a reflection of the life of the Blessed Trinity, as
the foundation of the domestic church (which is the family), and as a
vocation in which spouses are called to grow in chastity and gratitude.
The American bishops help us to
retrieve a clear picture of God’s plan for the beauty of marriage and
spousal love and family. They point to the many helps and tools we can
use to strengthen our marriages, and how we can encourage other couples
experiencing problems with their marriage. I encourage you to read the
pastoral letter “Marriage: Love and Life in God’s Plan.”
Meditate upon it!
When Jesus appeared on Earth, and
began teaching and performing his great miracles, he went to the wedding
feast at Cana. Here he elevated marriage, from simply a natural
institution to the dignity of a divine sacrament. A sacrament is an
outpouring of divine life and grace. Why is the Church so confident
that all married couples can measure up to the standards of God’s plan
for their marriage and spousal love? Because with God’s grace
everything is possible; nothing is impossible. If a couple will draw
upon the grace of their sacrament, and cooperate with it, they can
overcome any difficulty, any disappoint, and any hurt feelings.
May the healing of our marriages
begin! May Jesus, the divine Bridegroom, help us to revitalize our
marriages, spousal love and families.