2022/11/07
64. Paul and Cognitive Distortions Part 2
Let
us continue our discussion by examining the following expression from one of
the Second Vatican Council texts: "In this way they [priests] profess
themselves before men as willing to be dedicated to the office committed to
them – namely, to commit themselves faithfully to one man and to show
themselves as a chaste virgin for Christ and thus to evoke the mysterious
marriage established by Christ, and fully to be manifested in the future, in
which the Church has Christ as her only Spouse" (Decree on the Ministry
and Life of Priests, par. 16). This statement is taken from Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, where he
wrote: "I betrothed you to one husband to present you as a chaste
virgin to Christ"(2 Corinthians 11:2). These words are a parable used
by Paul to admonish the Corinthian community, wary of those whom he called
"false apostles" (cf. 2 Corinthians 11:1-15). Behind his concern was
his desire to manage to make them fulfil their promise to raise money for
Jerusalem. He was clearly preoccupied with the issue. So, first of all, we need
to consider Paul's peculiar situation when he wrote these words. Also, the
bizarre expression, "betrothed you to one husband to present you as a
chaste virgin," is based on the patriarchal thinking of the time, making
no sense at all in the present day. It was too easy a choice to incorporate
such an expression directly into the most authoritative church documents of the
second half of the 20th century bringing the conjugal image into the
relationship between Christ and the Church. Marriage is essentially moving
towards sexual union for the bridegroom and bride. If we take marriage into the
Church teachings as a metaphor for the relationship between Christ and the
Church, a sexual bias is inevitable in crucial situations. That is evident from
the fact that, regarding the cases of sexual abuse by the priests, the bishops
and the fellow priests concerned downplayed the seriousness of the situation
and did not take decisive actions even when they became aware of the facts. In
addition, the following expressions in the Vatican II documents show that the
above-mentioned patriarchal ideology is being carried over even to the present
day in the relationship between priests and the laity: "Let them, as
fathers in Christ, take care of the faithful whom they have begotten by baptism
and their teaching" (Lumen Gentium, par. 28); "The Christian
faithful, for their part, should realize their obligations to their priests,
and with filial love they should follow them as their pastors and fathers" (Decree on the Ministry and Life of Priests,
par.9); "Thus they [priests] are apt to accept, in a broad sense,
paternity in Christ" (Ibid., par. 16). Jesus, who gave Christians the
"Lord's Prayer," admonished them saying, "And call no man
your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven"
(Matthew 23:9). Even though born as a man to fulfil the prophecy as Christ,
Jesus came to the earth carrying the divine motherhood (cf. blog № 29, № 43).
When Jesus compared himself just once to a "bridegroom," he likened
his disciples to "wedding guests" (cf. Matthew
9:15). And Jesus specified who the disciples, the "wedding
guests," were (cf. Matthew 12:49-50). In the scene of the wedding at Cana,
Jesus himself was there as a wedding guest, along with his mother, brothers,
and disciples (cf. John 2:1-12). The sign that Jesus performed here, turning
water into fine wine, was fulfilled by Mary and Jesus precisely because of
their mother-son relationship.
Maria
K. M.
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