A version of this appeared on Catholic Exchange a few weeks after Luke and I married. Read the article here. It originally appeared on Inspired Saturday, March 17, a few months before our wedding.
So
your old roommate’s in seminary and your sister just made first vows,
and you’re feeling a little guilty getting excited for your wedding.
Marriage isn’t exactly a straightforward regimen toward holiness (you do get
to have sex, after all) and isn’t it the default life plan for the
leftover people, the ones who didn’t make the vocational cut?
Not
at all. If God has called you to the married life, he’s entrusted you
with a serious mission. With one foot in the natural world and one in
the supernatural – for Christian marriage is a natural state made
supernatural by the grace of the sacrament – Christian married couples
have a unique means to evangelization. Today’s world needs marriage –
needs good Christian marriage – to stand as a sign of contradiction to
the world and show the truth and beauty of the faith.
First,
love. Everything is about love. Why did God create the world? Why did
Christ die on the cross? Why did the martyrs suffer? What makes people
saints? What is the greatest and most fundamental desire of the human
heart? What is the whole point of everything? Love. Not the warm, fuzzy
“luv” rooted in fickle hormones, but the hardcore, disciplined,
self-sacrificing love that God is and asks of us. When people seek love,
they naturally look to the opposite sex; often, they snuggle close and
are left unfulfilled. Christian married couples give the world a
concrete example of what real love looks like in a context where the
world expects to find love: a relationship between a man and a woman.
Our
world is obsessed with sex, and Christian married couples show that
people are happier and more fulfilled with a sexually ordered life. The
world says sex is a great means of exchanging pleasure (in which you
hope not to exchange diseases). Christian marriage says sex is a great
gift from God and has a purpose: to express a love deeper than any
pleasure, and, if God wills, to let that love become incarnate in a
child. Celibate religious show by their lives that joy doesn’t depend on
sexual activity. Christian married couples show by their lives what
sexual activity is for. Our world needs to see that, too.
Our
world doesn’t like to be constrained by commitments; it considers them
impediments to freedom. Christian married couples find freedom in
commitment. Christian spouses don’t worry that the back door may still
be open; they are free to be themselves entirely and to give themselves
completely to each other without worrying that the other might leave.
Christian married couples show that commitment is a source of a deeper
freedom: a freedom for excellence, a freedom from one’s own whims and
inconstancies – and those of one’s spouse. Commitment prohibits sexual
flings with the attractive co-worker. Commitment requires that spouses
work out their disagreements. The sacrifice required to turn back to
one’s spouse in love during times of temptation is tiny compared to the
deep pain many spouses know from regret, betrayed trust, and divorce.
Our
world assaults motherhood and children. The world speaks of pregnancy
as a disease and a hormonally manipulated and malfunctioning
reproductive system as a healthy one. Children are burdens and
motherhood is a hassle you try to fit around your important work, the
world says. Christian families affirm the value of motherhood and
children. The Christian ethic that proclaims the sanctity of all human
life, from conception till natural death, doesn’t stop at mere existence
but proceeds to sanctity. Christian married couples welcome children
and refuse contraception and abortion, but they don’t stop there.
Christian parents devote their lives to the good of their children,
attending to their physical, spiritual, emotional, and psychological
needs. Christian parents love. They don’t merely want their children to
survive to adulthood and hold a job but to grow to adulthood as whole
persons willing to give their whole selves when they find their
vocation. Christian parents who are dedicated to their children work to
fill the world with loving adults and, eventually, to fill heaven with
saints. Christian parents show the world that children are gifts, not
burdens.
Christian married couples can’t give the
witness of wearing a cassock or habit in public. They can’t say Mass or
hear confessions. They can’t spend all day feeding the poor, or studying
and writing, or praying in a chapel. Priests and religious live another
form of that hardcore, disciplined, self-sacrificing love – work
essential to the life of the Church and the world, but work married
couples can’t do. We need priests and religious to commit their lives to
that work. But we need Christian married couples, too. A Christian
marriage isn’t the same as everyone else’s marriage. Infused with the
grace of the sacrament, Christian married couples can evangelize in a
way that priests and religious can’t, giving a powerful example of
authentic love exactly where the world expects to see it. In a unique
and necessary way, Christian marriage affirms the existence of real
love.
And isn’t love exactly what our world needs?
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