MOSAIC Fall 2014 | Page 7

being created for community—for communion (on both the natural and supernatural levels of existence). Man and woman were made “for each other”—not that God left them half-made and incomplete: he created them to be a communion of persons, in which each can be “helpmate” to the other, for they are equal as persons (“bone of my bones”) and complementary as masculine and feminine. In marriage God unites them in such a way that, by forming “one flesh” (Gn 2:24), they can transmit human life: “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth” (Gn 1:28). By transmitting human life to their descendants, man and woman as spouses and parents cooperate in a unique way in the Creator’s work. (Catechism, no. 372) Theologian Fr. Paul Haffner in his book, Mystery of Creation, further points out that a proper and profound understanding of the relation between man and woman is necessary in order fully to understand the mystery of the Church as the bride of Christ, the true nature of the married state, and why the ministerial priesthood presupposes a male subject of ordination. Man and woman are created in view of the coming of Christ, born of the Virgin Mary, and this anchors the difference between the sexes in a Christological setting. The relation between man and woman reflects in some way the mystery of the Holy Trinity. The Apostle states that: “there are no more distinctions between Jew and Greek, slave and free, male and female, but all . . . are one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:28). Aid to Evangelization By way of conclusion, Christian Anthropology is important for evangelization because many contemporary philosophies obscure or deny the human need for God, redemption, and grace. They also hold that there is no meaning or purpose beyond the present life. Theologian Karl Rahner famously stated that “dogmatic theology today must be theological anthropology” for the purpose of launching an effective new evangelization of the world. For we must first engage people where they are at, showing how the Gospel addresses and answers the very questions they have been asking themselves: Where do I come M from? Where am I going? What is my purpose? Who am I? n “The Nuptial Meaning of the Body” John Paul II thinks [the human person] cannot be adequately understood apart from the way in which it is embodied. He has something to say about how we experience our selfhood through the body, and it would belong to the theology of the body to say more about it. . . . This concern leads him beyond the general fact of our embodiment, to the more particular fact that we are embodied as man and woman. That it is not good for us to be alone, that we can find ourselves only through a sincere gift of ourselves, has its first fundamental bodily expression in our existing as man and woman; and in fact it cannot really be understood apart from the difference and complementarity of the sexes. It is as man and woman that we are first raised out of our solitude, and ordered one to another, and called to self-donation. The capacity of the masculine body and of the feminine body to serve selfdonation is called by John Paul the “nuptial meaning” of the human body, a concept that stands at the heart of his theology of the body. On this basis John Paul is led to break new ground in the theology of the Image of God in man. Traditionally, one said that this image lies primarily in the rationality of man, which belongs to the soul; one left the body entirely out of that which images God. But John Paul . . . says . . . that man and woman, taken in their unity-in-difference, also image God, and in particular image the inner-Trinitarian communion of the Divine Persons. Since the man-woman distinction is by its very nature also a bodily distinction, it follows that it is not the soul alone but the body-soul union that constitutes the image of God in man. John Paul is the first pope to teach that the body, too, shares in the image of God in man. (An excerpt from John F. Crosby’s “Theology of the Body” entry in Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Catholic Doctrine.) FAll 2014 SAcred HeArt MAjor SeminAry 5