I
According to contemporary scientific research, the
human person is so profoundly affected by sexuality that it must be
considered as one of the factors which give to each individual's
life the principal traits that distinguish it. In fact it is from
sex that the human person receives the characteristics which, on the
biological, psychological and spiritual levels, make that person a
man or a woman, and thereby largely condition his or her progress
towards maturity and insertion into society. Hence sexual matters,
as is obvious to everyone, today constitute a theme frequently and
openly dealt with in books, reviews, magazines and other means of
social communication.
In the present period, the corruption of morals has
increased, and one of the most serious indications of this
corruption is the unbridled exaltation of sex. Moreover, through the
means of social communication and through public entertainment this
corruption has reached the point of invading the field of education
and of infecting the general mentality.
In this context certain educators, teachers and
moralists have been able to contribute to a better understanding and
integration into life of the values proper to each of the sexes; on
the other hand there are those who have put forward concepts and
modes of behavior which are contrary to the true moral exigencies of
the human person. Some members of the latter group have even gone so
far as to favor a licentious hedonism.
As a result, in the course of a few years,
teachings, moral criteria and modes of living hitherto faithfully
preserved have been very much unsettled, even among Christians.
There are many people today who, being confronted with widespread
opinions opposed to the teaching which they received from the
Church, have come to wonder what must still hold as true.
II
The Church cannot remain indifferent to this
confusion of minds and relaxation of morals. It is a question, in
fact, of a matter which is of the utmost importance both for the
personal lives of Christians and for the social life of our time.[1]
The Bishops are daily led to note the growing
difficulties experienced by the faithful in obtaining knowledge of
wholesome moral teaching, especially in sexual matters, and of the
growing difficulties experienced by pastors in expounding this
teaching effectively. The Bishops know that by their pastoral charge
they are called upon to meet the needs of their faithful in this
very serious matter, and important documents dealing with it have
already been published by some of them or by episcopal conferences.
Nevertheless, since the erroneous opinions and resulting deviations
are continuing to spread everywhere, the Sacred Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, by virtue of its function in the universal
Church[2] and by a mandate of the Supreme Pontiff, has judged it
necessary to publish the present Declaration.
III
The people of our time are more and more convinced
that the human person's dignity and vocation demand that they should
discover, by the light of their own intelligence, the values innate
in their nature, that they should ceaselessly develop these values
and realize them in their lives, in order to achieve an ever greater
development.
In moral matters man cannot make value judgments
according to his personal whim: "In the depths of his conscience,
man detects a law which he does not impose on himself, but which
holds him to obedience. . . . For man has in his heart a law written
by God. To obey it is the very dignity of man; according to it he
will be judged."[3]
Moreover, through His revelation God has made known
to us Christians His plan of salvation, and He has held up to us
Christ, the Savior and Sanctifier, in His teaching and example, as
the supreme and immutable Law of life: "I am the light of the world;
anyone who follows Me will not be walking in the dark, he will have
the light of life."[4]
Therefore there can be no true promotion of man's
dignity unless the essential order of his nature is respected. Of
course, in the history of civilization many of the concrete
conditions and needs of human life have changed and will continue to
change. But all evolution of morals and every type of life must be
kept within the limits imposed by the immutable principles based
upon every human person's constitutive elements and essential
relations - elements and relations which transcend historical
contingency.
These fundamental principles, which can be grasped
by reason, are contained in "the Divine Law - eternal, objective and
universal - whereby God orders, directs and governs the entire
universe and all the ways of the human community, by a plan
conceived in wisdom and love. Man has been made by God to
participate in this law, with the result that, under the gentle
disposition of Divine Providence, he can come to perceive ever
increasingly the unchanging truth."[5] This Divine Law is accessible
to our minds.
IV
Hence, those many people are in error who today
assert that one can find neither in human nature nor in the revealed
law any absolute and immutable norm to serve for particular actions
other than the one which expresses itself in the general law of
charity and respect for human dignity. As a proof of their assertion
they put forward the view that so-called norms of the natural law or
precepts of Sacred Scripture are to be regarded only as given
expressions of a form of particular culture at a certain moment of
history.
But in fact, Divine Revelation and, in its own
proper order, philosophical wisdom, emphasize the authentic
exigencies of human nature. They thereby necessarily manifest the
existence of immutable laws inscribed in the constitutive elements
of human nature and which are revealed to be identical in all beings
endowed with reason.
Furthermore, Christ instituted His Church as "the
pillar and bulwark of truth."[6] With the Holy Spirit's assistance,
she ceaselessly preserves and transmits without error the truths of
the moral order, and she authentically interprets not only the
revealed positive law but "also . . . those principles of the moral
order which have their origin in human nature itself"[7] and which
concern man's full development and sanctification. Now in fact the
Church throughout her history has always considered a certain number
of precepts of the natural law as having an absolute and immutable
value, and in their transgression she has seen a contradiction of
the teaching and spirit of the Gospel.
V
Since sexual ethics concern fundamental values of
human and Christian life, this general teaching equally applies to
sexual ethics. In this domain there exist principles and norms which
the Church has always unhesitatingly transmitted as part of her
teaching, however much the opinions and morals of the world may have
been opposed to them. These principles and norms in no way owe their
origin to a certain type of culture, but rather to knowledge of the
Divine Law and of human nature. They therefore cannot be considered
as having become out of date or doubtful under the pretext that a
new cultural situation has arisen.
It is these principles which inspired the
exhortations and directives given by the Second Vatican Council for
an education and an organization of social life taking account of
the equal dignity of man and woman while respecting their
difference.[8]
Speaking of "the sexual nature of man and the human
faculty of procreation," the Council noted that they "wonderfully
exceed the dispositions of lower forms of life."[9] It then took
particular care to expound the principles and criteria which concern
human sexuality in marriage, and which are based upon the finality
of the specific function of sexuality.
In this regard the Council declares that the moral
goodness of the acts proper to conjugal life, acts which are ordered
according to true human dignity, "does not depend solely on sincere
intentions or on an evaluation of motives. It must be determined by
objective standards. These, based on the nature of the human person
and his acts, preserve the full sense of mutual self-giving and
human procreation in the context of true love."[10]
These final words briefly sum up the Council's
teaching - more fully expounded in an earlier part of the same
Constitution[11] - on the finality of the sexual act and on the
principal criterion of its morality: it is respect for its finality
that ensures the moral goodness of this act.
This same principle, which the Church holds from
Divine Revelation and from her authentic interpretation of the
natural law, is also the basis of her traditional doctrine, which
states that the use of the sexual function has its true meaning and
moral rectitude only in true marriage.[12]
VI
It is not the purpose of the present Declaration to
deal with all the abuses of the sexual faculty, nor with all the
elements involved in the practice of chastity. Its object is rather
to repeat the Church's doctrine on certain particular points, in
view of the urgent need to oppose serious errors and widespread
aberrant modes of behavior.
VII
Today there are many who vindicate the right to
sexual union before marriage, at least in those cases where a firm
intention to marry and an affection which is already in some way
conjugal in the psychology of the subjects require this completion,
which they judge to be connatural. This is especially the case when
the celebration of the marriage is impeded by circumstances or when
this intimate relationship seems necessary in order for love to be
preserved.
This opinion is contrary to Christian doctrine,
which states that every genital act must be within the framework of
marriage. However firm the intention of those who practice such
premature sexual relations may be, the fact remains that these
relations cannot ensure, in sincerity and fidelity, the
interpersonal relationship between a man and a woman, nor especially
can they protect this relationship from whims and caprices. Now it
is a stable union that Jesus willed, and He restored its original
requirement, beginning with the sexual difference. "Have you not
read that the Creator from the beginning made them male and female
and that He said: This is why a man must leave father and mother,
and cling to his wife, and the two become one body? They are no
longer two, therefore, but one body. So then, what God has united,
man must not divide."[13] St. Paul will be even more explicit when
he shows that if unmarried people or widows cannot live chastely
they have no other alternative than the stable union of marriage: ".
. .it is better to marry than to be aflame with passion."[14]
Through marriage, in fact, the love of married people is taken up
into that love which Christ irrevocably has for the Church,[15]
while dissolute sexual union[16] defiles the temple of the Holy
Spirit which the Christian has become. Sexual union therefore is
only legitimate if a definitive community of life has been
established between the man and the woman.
This is what the Church has always understood and
taught,[17] and she finds a profound agreement with her doctrine in
men's reflection and in the lessons of history.
Experience teaches us that love must find its
safeguard in the stability of marriage, if sexual intercourse is
truly to respond to the requirements of its own finality and to
those of human dignity. These requirements call for a conjugal
contract sanctioned and guaranteed by society - a contract which
establishes a state of life of capital importance both for the
exclusive union of the man and the woman and for the good of their
family and of the human community. Most often, in fact, premarital
relations exclude the possibility of children. What is represented
to be conjugal love is not able, as it absolutely should be, to
develop into paternal and maternal love. Or, if it does happen to do
so, this will be to the detriment of the children, who will be
deprived of the stable environment in which they ought to develop in
order to find in it the way and the means of their insertion into
society as a whole.
The consent given by people who wish to be united in
marriage must therefore be manifested externally and in a manner
which makes it valid in the eyes of society. As far as the faithful
are concerned, their consent to the setting up of a community of
conjugal life must be expressed according to the laws of the Church.
It is a consent which makes their marriage a Sacrament of Christ.
VIII
At the present time there are those who, basing
themselves on observations in the psychological order, have begun to
judge indulgently, and even to excuse completely, homosexual
relations between certain people. This they do in opposition to the
constant teaching of the Magisterium and to the moral sense of the
Christian people.
A distinction is drawn, and it seems with some
reason, between homosexuals whose tendency comes from a false
education, from a lack of normal sexual development, from habit,
from bad example, or from other similar causes, and is transitory or
at least not incurable; and homosexuals who are definitively such
because of some kind of innate instinct or a pathological
constitution judged to be incurable.
In regard to this second category of subjects, some
people conclude that their tendency is so natural that it justifies
in their case homosexual relations within a sincere communion of
life and love analogous to marriage, in so far as such homosexuals
feel incapable of enduring a solitary life.
In the pastoral field, these homosexuals must
certainly be treated with understanding and sustained in the hope of
overcoming their personal difficulties and their inability to fit
into society. Their culpability will be judged with prudence. But no
pastoral method can be employed which would give moral justification
to these acts on the grounds that they would be consonant with the
condition of such people. For according to the objective moral
order, homosexual relations are acts which lack an essential and
indispensable finality. In Sacred Scripture they are condemned as a
serious depravity and even presented as the sad consequence of
rejecting God.[18] This judgment of Scripture does not of course
permit us to conclude that all those who suffer from this anomaly
are personally responsible for it, but it does attest to the fact
that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered and can in no case
be approved of.
IX
The traditional Catholic doctrine that masturbation
constitutes a grave moral disorder is often called into doubt or
expressly denied today. It is said that psychology and sociology
show that it is a normal phenomenon of sexual development,
especially among the young. It is stated that there is real and
serious fault only in the measure that the subject deliberately
indulges in solitary pleasure closed in on self ("ipsation"),
because in this case the act would indeed be radically opposed to
the loving communion between persons of different sex which some
hold is what is principally sought in the use of the sexual faculty.
This opinion is contradictory to the teaching and
pastoral practice of the Catholic Church. Whatever the force of
certain arguments of a biological and philosophical nature, which
have sometimes been used by theologians, in fact both the
Magisterium of the Church - in the course of a constant tradition -
and the moral sense of the faithful have declared without hesitation
that masturbation is an intrinsically and seriously disordered
act.[19] The main reason is that, whatever the motive for acting
this way, the deliberate use of the sexual faculty outside normal
conjugal relations essentially contradicts the finality of the
faculty. For it lacks the sexual relationship called for by the
moral order, namely the relationship which realizes "the full sense
of mutual self-giving and human procreation in the context of true
love."[20] All deliberate exercise of sexuality must be reserved to
this regular relationship. Even if it cannot be proved that
Scripture condemns this sin by name, the tradition of the Church has
rightly understood it to be condemned in the New Testament when the
latter speaks of "impurity," "unchasteness" and other vices contrary
to chastity and continence.
Sociological surveys are able to show the frequency
of this disorder according to the places, populations or
circumstances studied. In this way facts are discovered, but facts
do not constitute a criterion for judging the moral value of human
acts.[21] The frequency of the phenomenon in question is certainly
to be linked with man's innate weakness following original sin; but
it is also to be linked with the loss of a sense of God, with the
corruption of morals engendered by the commercialization of vice,
with the unrestrained licentiousness of so many public
entertainments and publications, as well as with the neglect of
modesty, which is the guardian of chastity.
On the subject of masturbation modern psychology
provides much valid and useful information for formulating a more
equitable judgment on moral responsibility and for orienting
pastoral action. Psychology helps one to see how the immaturity of
adolescence (which can sometimes persist after that age),
psychological imbalance or habit can influence behavior, diminishing
the deliberate character of the act and bringing about a situation
whereby subjectively there may not always be serious fault. But in
general, the absence of serious responsibility must not be presumed;
this would be to misunderstand people's moral capacity.
In the pastoral ministry, in order to form an
adequate judgment in concrete cases, the habitual behavior of people
will be considered in its totality, not only with regard to the
individual's practice of charity and of justice but also with regard
to the individual's care in observing the particular precepts of
chastity. In particular, one will have to examine whether the
individual is using the necessary means, both natural and
supernatural, which Christian asceticism from its long experience
recommends for overcoming the passions and progressing in virtue.
X
The observance of the moral law in the field of
sexuality and the practice of chastity have been considerably
endangered, especially among less fervent Christians, by the current
tendency to minimize as far as possible, when not denying outright,
the reality of grave sin, at least in people's actual lives.
There are those who go as far as to affirm that
mortal sin, which causes separation from God, only exists in the
formal refusal directly opposed to God's call, or in that
selfishness which completely and deliberately closes itself to the
love of neighbor. They say that it is only then that there comes
into play the fundamental option, that is to say the decision which
totally commits the person and which is necessary if mortal sin is
to exist; by this option the person, from the depths of the
personality, takes up or ratifies a fundamental attitude towards God
or people. On the contrary, so-called "peripheral" actions (which,
it is said, usually do not involve decisive choice), do not go so
far as to change the fundamental option, the less so since they
often come, as is observed, from habit. Thus such actions can weaken
the fundamental option, but not to such a degree as to change it
completely. Now according to these authors, a change of the
fundamental option towards God less easily comes about in the field
of sexual activity, where a person generally does not transgress the
moral order in a fully deliberate and responsible manner but rather
under the influence of passion, weakness, immaturity, sometimes even
through the illusion of thus showing love for someone else. To these
causes there is often added the pressure of the social environment.
In reality, it is precisely the fundamental option
which in the last resort defines a person's moral disposition. But
it can be completely changed by particular acts, especially when, as
often happens, these have been prepared for by previous more
superficial acts. Whatever the case, it is wrong to say that
particular acts are not enough to constitute mortal sin.
According to the Church's teaching, mortal sin,
which is opposed to God, does not consist only in formal and direct
resistance to the commandment of charity. It is equally to be found
in this opposition to authentic love which is included in every
deliberate transgression, in serious matter, of each of the moral
laws.
Christ Himself has indicated the double commandment
of love as the basis of the moral life. But on this commandment
depends "the whole Law, and the Prophets also."[22] It therefore
includes the other particular precepts. In fact, to the young man
who asked, ". . . what good deed must I do to possess eternal life?"
Jesus replied: ". . . if you wish to enter into life, keep the
commandments . . . . You must not kill. You must not commit
adultery. You must not steal. You must not bring false witness.
Honor your father and mother, and: you must love your neighbor as
yourself."[23]
A person therefore sins mortally not only when his
action comes from direct contempt for love of God and neighbor, but
also when he consciously and freely, for whatever reason, chooses
something which is seriously disordered. For in this choice, as has
been said above, there is already included contempt for the Divine
commandment: the person turns himself away from God and loses
charity. Now according to Christian tradition and the Church's
teaching, and as right reason also recognizes, the moral order of
sexuality involves such high values of human life that every direct
violation of this order is objectively serious.[24]
It is true that in sins of the sexual order, in view
of their kind and their causes, it more easily happens that free
consent is not fully given; this is a fact which calls for caution
in all judgment as to the subject's responsibility. In this matter
it is particularly opportune to recall the following words of
Scripture: "Man looks at appearances but God looks at the
heart."[25] However, although prudence is recommended in judging the
subjective seriousness of a particular sinful act, it in no way
follows that one can hold the view that in the sexual field mortal
sins are not committed.
Pastors of souls must therefore exercise patience
and goodness; but they are not allowed to render God's commandments
null, nor to reduce unreasonably people's responsibility. "To
diminish in no way the saving teaching of Christ constitutes an
eminent form of charity for souls. But this must ever be accompanied
by patience and goodness, such as the Lord Himself gave example of
in dealing with people. Having come not to condemn but to save, He
was indeed intransigent with evil, but merciful towards
individuals."[26]
XI
As has been said above, the purpose of this
Declaration is to draw the attention of the faithful in present-day
circumstances to certain errors and modes of behavior which they
must guard against. The virtue of chastity, however, is in no way
confined solely to avoiding the faults already listed. It is aimed
at attaining higher and more positive goals. It is a virtue which
concerns the whole personality, as regards both interior and outward
behavior.
Individuals should be endowed with this virtue
according to their state in life: for some it will mean virginity or
celibacy consecrated to God, which is an eminent way of giving
oneself more easily to God alone with an undivided heart.[27] For
others it will take the form determined by the moral law, according
to whether they are married or single. But whatever the state of
life, chastity is not simply an external state; it must make a
person's heart pure in accordance with Christ's words: "You have
learned how it was said: You must not commit adultery. But I say
this to you: if a man looks at a woman lustfully, he has already
committed adultery with her in his heart."[28]
Chastity is included in that continence which St.
Paul numbers among the gifts of the Holy Spirit, while he condemns
sensuality as a vice particularly unworthy of the Christian and one
which precludes entry into the Kingdom of Heaven.[29] "What God
wants is for all to be holy. He wants you to keep away from
fornication, and each one of you know how to use the body that
belongs to him in a way that is holy and honorable, not giving way
to selfish lust like the pagans who do not know God. He wants nobody
at all ever to sin by taking advantage of a brother in these
matters. . . . We have been called by God to be holy, not to be
immoral. In other words, anyone who objects is not objecting to a
human authority, but to God, Who gives you His Holy Spirit."[30]
"Among you there must not be even a mention of fornication or
impurity in any of its forms, or promiscuity: this would hardly
become the saints! For you can be quite certain that nobody who
actually indulges in fornication or impurity or promiscuity - which
is worshipping a false god - can inherit anything of the Kingdom of
God. Do not let anyone deceive you with empty arguments: it is for
this loose living that God's anger comes down on those who rebel
against Him. Make sure that you are not included with them. You were
darkness once, but now you are light in the Lord; be like children
of light, for the effects of the light are seen in complete goodness
and right living and truth."[31]
In addition, the Apostle points out the specifically
Christian motive for practising chastity when he condemns the sin of
fornication not only in the measure that this action is injurious to
one's neighbor or to the social order but because the fornicator
offends against Christ Who has redeemed him with His blood and of
Whom he is a member, and against the Holy Spirit of Whom he is the
temple. "You know, surely, that your bodies are members making up
the body of Christ. . . . All the other sins are committed outside
the body; but to fornicate is to sin against your own body. Your
body, you know, is the temple of the Holy Spirit, Who is in you
since you received Him from God. You are not your own property; you
have been bought and paid for. That is why you should use your body
for the glory of God."[32]
The more the faithful appreciate the value of
chastity and its necessary role in their lives as men and women, the
better they will understand, by a kind of spiritual instinct, its
moral requirements and counsels. In the same way they will know
better how to accept and carry out, in a spirit of docility to the
Church's teaching, what an upright conscience dictates in concrete
cases.
XII
The Apostle St. Paul describes in vivid terms the
painful interior conflict of the person enslaved to sin: the
conflict between "the law of his mind" and the "law of sin which
dwells in his members" and which holds him captive.[33] But man can
achieve liberation from his "body doomed to death" through the grace
of Jesus Christ.[34] This grace is enjoyed by those who have been
justified by it and whom "the law of the spirit of life in Christ
Jesus has set free from the law of sin and death."[35] It is for
this reason that the Apostle adjures them: "That is why you must not
let sin reign in your mortal bodies or command your obedience to
bodily passions."[36]
This liberation, which fits one to serve God in
newness of life, does not however suppress the concupiscence
deriving from original sin, nor the promptings to evil in this
world, which is "in the power of the evil one."[37] This is why the
Apostle exhorts the faithful to overcome temptations by the power of
God[38] and to "stand against the wiles of the Devil"[39] by faith,
watchful prayer[40] and an austerity of life that brings the body
into subjection to the Spirit.[41]
Living the Christian life by following in the
footsteps of Christ requires that everyone should "deny himself and
take up his cross daily,"[42] sustained by the hope of reward, for
"if we have died with Him, we shall also reign with Him."[43] In
accordance with these pressing exhortations, the faithful of the
present time, and indeed today more than ever, must use the means
which have always been recommended by the Church for living a chaste
life. These means are: discipline of the senses and the mind,
watchfulness and prudence in avoiding occasions of sin, the
observance of modesty, moderation in recreation, wholesome pursuits,
assiduous prayer and frequent reception of the Sacraments of Penance
and the Eucharist. Young people especially should earnestly foster
devotion to the Immaculate Mother of God, and take as examples the
lives of saints and other faithful people, especially young ones,
who excelled in the practice of chastity.
It is important in particular that everyone should
have a high esteem for the virtue of chastity, its beauty and its
power of attraction. This virtue increases the human person's
dignity and enables him to love truly, disinterestedly, unselfishly
and with respect for others.
XIII
It is up to the Bishops to instruct the faithful in
the moral teaching concerning sexual morality, however great may be
the difficulties in carrying out this work in the face of ideas and
practices generally prevailing today. This traditional doctrine must
be studied more deeply. It must be handed on in a way capable of
properly enlightening the consciences of those confronted with new
situations and it must be enriched with a discernment of all the
elements that can truthfully and usefully be brought forward about
the meaning and value of human sexuality. But the principles and
norms of moral living reaffirmed in this Declaration must be
faithfully held and taught. It will especially be necessary to bring
the faithful to understand that the Church holds these principles
not as old and inviolable superstitions, nor out of some Manichaean
prejudice, as is often alleged, but rather because she knows with
certainty that they are in complete harmony with the Divine order of
creation and with the spirit of Christ, and therefore also with
human dignity.
It is likewise the Bishops' mission to see that a
sound doctrine enlightened by faith and directed by the Magisterium
of the Church is taught in faculties of theology and in seminaries.
Bishops must also ensure that confessors enlighten people's
consciences and that catechetical instruction is given in perfect
fidelity to Catholic doctrine.
It rests with the Bishops, the priests and their
collaborators to alert the faithful against the erroneous opinions
often expressed in books, reviews and public meetings.
Parents, in the first place, and also teachers of
the young must endeavor to lead their children and their pupils, by
way of a complete education, to the psychological, emotional and
moral maturity befitting their age. They will therefore prudently
give them information suited to their age; and they will assiduously
form their wills in accordance with Christian morals, not only by
advice but above all by the example of their own lives, relying on
God's help, which they will obtain in prayer. They will likewise
protect the young from the many dangers of which they are quite
unaware.
Artists, writers and all those who use the means of
social communication should exercise their profession in accordance
with their Christian faith and with a clear awareness of the
enormous influence which they can have. They should remember that
"the primacy of the objective moral order must be regarded as
absolute by all,"[44] and that it is wrong for them to give priority
above it to any so-called aesthetic purpose, or to material
advantage or to success. Whether it be a question of artistic or
literary works, public entertainment or providing information, each
individual in his or her own domain must show tact, discretion,
moderation and a true sense of values. In this way, far from adding
to the growing permissiveness of behavior, each individual will
contribute towards controlling it and even towards making the moral
climate of society more wholesome.
All lay people, for their part, by virtue of their
rights and duties in the work of the apostolate, should endeavor to
act in the same way.
Finally, it is necessary to remind everyone of the
words of the Second Vatican Council: "This Holy Synod likewise
affirms that children and young people have a right to be encouraged
to weigh moral values with an upright conscience, and to embrace
them by personal choice, to know and love more adequately. Hence, it
earnestly entreats all who exercise government over people or
preside over the work of education to see that youth is never
deprived of this sacred right."[45]
At the audience granted on November 7, 1975, to
the undersigned Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, the Sovereign Pontiff by Divine Providence Pope Paul
VI approved this Declaration "On certain questions concerning sexual
ethics," confirmed it and ordered its publication.
Given in Rome, at the Sacred Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, on December 29th, 1975.
Franjo Cardinal Seper
Prefect
Most Rev. Jerome Hamer, O.P.
Titular Archbishop of Lorium
Secretary
1. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World "Gaudium et Spes,"
47 AAS 58 (1966), p. 1067.
2. Cf. Apostolic Constitution "Regimini Ecclesiae
Universae," 29 (Aug 15th, 1967) AAS 89 (1967), p. 1067.
3. "Gaudium et Spes," 16 AAS 58 (1966), p.
1037.
4. Jn 8:12.
5. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Declaration "Dignitatis
Humanae," 3 AAS 58 (1966), p. 931.
6. I Tim 3:15
7. "Dignitatis Humanae," 14 AAS 58 (1966), p.
940; cf Pius XI, encyclical letter "Casti Connubii," Dec
31st, 1930 AAS 22 (1930), pp 579-580; Pius XII, allocution of Nov.
2nd, 1954 AAS 46 (1954), pp 671-672; John XXIII, encyclical letter "Mater
et Magistra," May 15th, 1961 AAS 53 (1961), p. 457; Paul VI,
encyclical letter "Humanae Vitae," 4, July 25th, 1968 AAS 60
(1968) p. 483.
8. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council,
Declaration "Gravissimum Educationis," 1, 8: AAS 58 (1966),
pp. 729-730; 734-736 "Gaudium et Spes," 29, 60, 67 AAS 58
(1966), pp. 1048 1049, 1080-1081, 1088-1089.
9. "Gaudium et Spes," 51 AAS 58 (1966), pp.
1072.
10. Ibid; cf also 49 loc cit, pp. 1069-1070.
11. Ibid, 49, 50 loc cit, pp. 1069-1072.
12. The present Declaration does not go into further
detail regarding the norms of sexual life within marriage; these
norms have been clearly taught in the encyclical letter "Casti
Connubii" and "Humanae Vitae."
13. Cf. Mt 19:4-6.
14. I Cor 7:9.
15. Cf. Eph 5:25-32.
16. Sexual intercourse outside marriage is formally
condemned I Cor 5:1; 6:9; 7:2; 10:8 Eph. 5:5; I Tim
1:10; Heb 13:4; and with explicit reasons I Cor
6:12-20.
17. Cf. Innocent IV, letter "Sub catholica
professione," March 6th, 1254, DS 835; Pius II, "Propos damn
in Ep Cum sicut accepimus." Nov 13th, 1459, DS 1367; decrees of
the Holy Office, Sept 24th, 1665, DS 2045; March 2nd, 1679, DS 2148
Pius XI, encyclical letter "Casti Connubii," Dec 31st, 1930
AAS 22 (1930), pp. 558 559.
18. Rom 1:24-27 "That is why God left them to
their filthy enjoyments and the practices with which they dishonor
their own bodies since they have given up Divine truth for a lie and
have worshipped and served creatures instead of the Creator, Who is
blessed forever. Amen! That is why God has abandoned them to
degrading passions; why their women have turned from natural
intercourse to unnatural practices and why their menfolk have given
up natural intercourse to be consumed with passion for each other,
men doing shameless things with men and getting an appropriate
reward for their perversion" See also what St. Paul says of
"masculorum concubitores" in I Cor 6:10; I Tim 1:10.
19. Cf. Leo IX, letter "Ad splendidum nitentis,"
in the year 1054 DS 687-688, decree of the Holy Office, March 2nd,
1679: DS 2149; Pius XII, "Allocutio," Oct 8th, 1953 AAS 45
(1953), pp. 677-678; May 19th, 1956 AAS 48 (1956), pp. 472-473.
20. "Gaudium et Spes," 51 AAS 58 (1966), p.
1072.
21. ". . . it sociological surveys are useful for
better discovering the thought patterns of the people of a
particular place, the anxieties and needs of those to whom we
proclaim the word of God, and also the opposition made to it by
modern reasoning through the widespread notion that outside science
there exists no legitimate form of knowledge, still the conclusions
drawn from such surveys could not of themselves constitute a
determining criterion of truth," Paul VI, apostolic exhortation "Quinque
iam anni." Dec 8th 1970, AAS 63 (1971), p. 102.
22. Mt 22:38, 40.
23. Mt 19:16-19.
24. Cf. note 17 and 19 above Decree of the Holy
Office, March 18th, 1666, DS 2060; Paul VI, encyclical letter "Humanae
Vitae," 13, 14 AAS 60 (1968), pp. 489-496.
25. Sam 16:7.
26. Paul VI, encyclical letter "Humanae Vitae,"
29 AAS 60 (1968), p. 501.
27. Cf. I Cor 7:7, 34; Council of Trent, Session
XXIV, can 10 DS 1810; Second Vatican Council, Constitution "Lumen
Gentium," 42 43, 44 AAS 57 (1965), pp. 47-51 Synod of Bishops, "De
Sacerdotio Ministeriali," part II, 4, b: AAS 63 (1971), pp.
915-916.
28. Mt 5:28.
29. Cf. Gal 5:19-23; I Cor 6:9-11.
30. I Thess 4:3-8; cf. Col 3:5-7; I
Tim 1:10.
31. Eph 5:3-8; cf. 4:18-19.
32. I Cor 6:15, 18-20.
33. Cf. Rom 7:23.
34. Cf. Rom 7:24-25.
35. Cf. Rom 8:2.
36. Rom 6:12.
37. I Jn 5:19.
38. Cf. I Cor 10:13.
39. Eph 6:11.
40. Ct Eph 6:16, 18.
41. Ct I Cor 9:27.
42. Lk 9:23.
43. II Tim 2:11-12.
44. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council decree "Inter
Mirifica," 6 AAS 56 (1964), p. 147.
45. "Gravissimum Educationis," 1: AAS 58
(1966), p. 730.