MOSAIC Fall 2014 | Page 10

What does it mean to be “Male and Female He Created Them” The absolute equality of men and women—and why they are fundamentally different—is revealed in the “powerful metaphysical content” of the Genesis creation accounts. Dr. Deborah Savage “S o God created man in his own image, in the image decades of misunderstanding concerning the nature of God he created him; male and female he created of love and the authentic meaning of human sexuality. them” Genesis 1:27. C Though both women and men have come ontemporary culture is undeniably to regard the use of contraceptives as essential characterized by a profound confusion to the exercise of their “freedom,” the result has about the nature of the human person actually been a kind of progressive slavery that has and of what constitutes right relationships between manifested itself in the on-going horror of abortion, men and women. This is due in no small part to the the insidious spread of pornography, failed introduction of the birth control pill in 1965, which marriages, loneliness, and despair. But the sexual held out the promise of sex without consequences; revolution’s most significant impact has been the its advent created a fissure between the unitive and damage it has caused to our understanding of the procreative dimensions of the sexual act and led to proper relationship between men and women. Complementary By Nature Instead of regarding one another as persons, deserving of love and ordered toward the total gift of self, it is now an acceptable social norm for men and women to view each other merely as objects, to be used as instruments of pleasure and discarded when “used up.” Absent from our collective consciousness is a recognition of something that, though unspoken, used to be taken for granted: Men and women are complements of one another, both in the design of their bodies and in 8 their ways of being in the world. It is this theory of “complementarity” that MOSAIC Pope St. John Paul II considers in the teaching that became the Theology of the Body (TOB). In the thought of St. John Paul, this very complementarity, which is both physical and ontological—in our very natures—is what gives us our mission: to create, not only human families, but human history itself. Return to the Beginning The late Holy Father’s stated aim in the text of the TOB is to understand the sacramental meaning of the human body. Following Jesus’s own instruction to the Pharisees, he returns to the “beginning,” to the creation accounts in the first two chapters of Genesis, deriving from those texts a profound account of the real meaning of human love. And he provides us with the signposts of a theory of the complementarity of man and woman. The aim of this essay is to provide a sketch of such a theory; it is intended to point more properly toward a theology of complementarity, an investigation that might do much