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Truth and Meaning of Human Sexuality
December 8, 1995
Pontifical Council for the Family
Introduction
The Situation and the Problem
1. Among the many difficulties parents encounter today, despite
different social contexts, one certainly stands out: giving children an adequate
preparation for adult life, particularly with regard to education in the true
meaning of sexuality. There are many reasons for this difficulty and not all of
them are new.
In the past, even when the family did not provide specific sexual
education, the general culture was permeated by respect for fundamental values
and hence served to protect and maintain them. In the greater part of society,
both in developed and developing countries, the decline of traditional models
has left children deprived of consistent and positive guidance, while parents
find themselves unprepared to provide adequate answers. This new context is made
worse by what we observe: an eclipse of the truth about man which, among other
things, exerts pressure to reduce sex to something commonplace. In this area,
society and the mass media most of the time provide depersonalized, recreational
and often pessimistic information. Moreover, this information does not take into
account the different stages of formation and development of children and young
people, and it is influenced by a distorted individualistic concept of freedom,
in an ambience lacking the basic values of life, human love and the family.
Then the school, making itself available to carry out programs of sex
education, has often done this by taking the place of the family and, most of
the time, with the aim of only providing information. Sometimes this really
leads to the deformation of consciences. In many cases parents have given up
their duty in this field or agreed to delegate it to others, because of the
difficulty and their own lack of preparation.
In such a situation, many Catholic parents turn to the Church to take up
the task of providing guidance and suggestions for educating their children,
especially in the phase of childhood and adolescence. At times, parents
themselves have brought up their difficulties when they are confronted by
teaching given at school and thus brought into the home by their children. The
Pontifical Council for the Family has received repeated and pressing requests to
provide guidelines in support of parents in this delicate area of education.
2. Aware of this family dimension of education for love and for living
one's own sexuality properly and conscious of the unique "experience of
humanity" of the community of believers, our Council wishes to put forward
pastoral guidelines, drawing on the wisdom which comes from the Word of the Lord
and the values which illuminate the teaching of the Church.
Therefore, above all, we wish to tie this help for parents to
fundamental content about the truth and meaning of sex, within the framework of
a genuine and rich anthropology. In offering this truth, we are aware that
"every one who is of the truth" (Jn 18:37) hears the word of the One who is the
truth in person (cf. Jn 14:6).
This guide is meant to be neither a treatise of moral theology nor a
compendium of psychology. But it does owe much to the gains of science, to the
sociocultural conditions of the family, and to the proclamation of gospel values
which are always new and can be incarnated in a concrete way in every age.
3. In this field, the Church is strengthened by some unquestionable
certainties that have also guided the preparation of this document.
Love is a gift of God, nourished by and expressed in the encounter of
man and woman. Love is thus a positive force directed toward their growth in
maturity as persons. In the plan of life which represents each person's
vocation, love is also a precious source for the self-giving which all men and
women are called to make for their own self-realization and happiness. In fact,
man is called to love as an incarnate spirit, that is soul and body in the unity
of the person. Human love hence embraces the body, and the body also expresses
spiritual love.(1) Therefore, sexuality is not something purely biological,
rather it concerns the intimate nucleus of the person. The use of sexuality as
physical giving has its own truth and reaches its full meaning when it expresses
the personal giving of man and woman even unto death. As with the whole of the
person's life, love is exposed to the frailty brought about by original sin, a
frailty experienced today in many sociocultural contexts marked by strong
negative influences, at times deviant and traumatic. Nevertheless, the Lord's
redemption has made the positive practice of chastity into something that is
really possible and a motive for joy, both for those who have the vocation to
marriage (before, in the time of preparation, and afterward, in the course of
married life) as well as for those who have the gift of a special calling to the
consecrated life.
4. In the light of the redemption and how adolescents and young people
are formed, the virtue of chastity is found within temperance—a cardinal virtue
elevated and enriched by grace in baptism. So chastity is not to be understood
as a repressive attitude. On the contrary, chastity should be understood rather
as the purity and temporary stewardship of a precious and rich gift of love, in
view of the self-giving realized in each person's specific vocation. Chastity is
thus that "spiritual energy capable of defending love from the perils of
selfishness and aggressiveness, and able to advance it toward its full
realization."(2)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes and in a sense defines
chastity in this way: "Chastity means the successful integration of sexuality
within the person and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual
being."(3)
5. In the framework of educating the young person for self-realization
and self-giving, formation for chastity implies the collaboration first and
foremost of the parents, as is the case with formation for the other virtues
such as temperance, fortitude and prudence. Chastity cannot exist as a virtue
without the capacity to renounce self, to make sacrifices and to wait.
In giving life, parents cooperate with the creative power of God and
receive the gift of a new responsibility—not only to feed their children and
satisfy their material and cultural needs, but above all to pass on to them the
lived truth of the faith and to educate them in love of God and neighbor. This
is the parents' first duty in the heart of the "domestic church."(4)
The Church has always affirmed that parents have the duty and the right
to be the first and the principal educators of their children.
Taking up the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, the Catechism of
the Catholic Church says: "It is imperative to give suitable and timely
instruction to young people, above all in the heart of their own families, about
the dignity of married love, its role and its exercise."(5)
6. The challenges raised today by the mentality and social environment
should not discourage parents. In fact it is worth recalling that Christians
have had to face up to similar challenges of materialistic hedonism from the
time of the first evangelization. Moreover, "This kind of critical reflection
should lead our society, which certainly contains many positive aspects on the
material and cultural level, to realize that, from various points of view, it is
a society which is sick and is creating profound distortions in man. Why is this
happening? The reason is that our society has broken away from the full truth
about man, from the truth about what man and woman really are as persons. Thus
it cannot adequately comprehend the real meaning of the gift of persons in
marriage, responsible love at the service of fatherhood and motherhood, and the
true grandeur of procreation and education."(6)
7. Therefore, the educative work of parents is indispensable for, "if it
is true that by giving life parents share in God's creative work, it is also
true that by raising their children they become sharers in his paternal and at
the same time maternal way of teaching.... Through Christ all education, within
the family, and outside of it, becomes part of God's own saving pedagogy, which
is addressed to individuals and families and culminates in the paschal mystery
of the Lord's death and resurrection."(7)
In their at times delicate and arduous task, parents must not let
themselves become discouraged; rather they should place their trust in the help
of God the Creator and Christ the Redeemer. They should remember that the Church
prays for them with the words that Pope St. Clement I raised to the Lord for all
who bear authority in his name: "Grant to them, Lord, health, peace, concord and
stability, so that they may exercise without offense the sovereignty that you
have given them. Master, heavenly king of the ages, you give glory, honor and
power over the things of the earth to the sons of men. Direct, Lord, their
counsel, following what is pleasing and acceptable in your sight, so that by
exercising with devotion and in peace and gentleness the power that you have
given to them, they may find favor with you."(8)
On the other hand, having given and welcomed life in an atmosphere of
love, parents are rich in an educative potential which no one else possesses. In
a unique way they know their own children; they know them in their unrepeatable
identity and by experience they possess the secrets and the resources of true
love.
I. Called to True Love
8. As the image of God, man is created for love. This truth was fully
revealed to us in the New Testament, together with the mystery of the inner life
of the Trinity: "God is love" (1 Jn 4:8) and in himself he lives a mystery of
personal loving communion. Creating the human race in his own image...God
inscribed in the humanity of man and woman the vocation, and thus the capacity
and responsibility, of love and communion. Love is therefore the fundamental and
innate vocation of every human being."(9) The whole meaning of true freedom, and
self-control which follows from it, is thus directed toward self-giving in
communion and friendship with God and with others.(10)
Human Love As Self-Giving
9. The person is thus capable of a higher kind of love than
concupiscence, which only sees objects as a means to satisfy one's appetites;
the person is capable rather of friendship and self-giving, with the capacity to
recognize and love persons for themselves. Like the love of God, this is a love
capable of generosity. One desires the good of the other because he or she is
recognized as worthy of being loved. This is a love which generates communion
between persons, because each considers the good of the other as his or her own
good. This is a self-giving made to one who loves us, a self-giving whose
inherent goodness is discovered and activated in the communion of persons and
where one learns the value of loving and of being loved.
Each person is called to love as friendship and self-giving. Each person
is freed from the tendency to selfishness by the love of others, in the first
place by parents or those who take their place and, definitively, by God, from
whom all true love proceeds and in whose love alone does man discover to what
extent he is loved. Here we find the root of the educative power of
Christianity: "Humanity is loved by God! This very simple yet profound
proclamation is owed to humanity by the Church."(11) In this way Christ has
revealed his true identity to man: "Christ the new Adam, in the very revelation
of the mystery of the Father and of his love, fully reveals man to himself and
brings to light his most high calling."(12)
The love revealed by Christ "which the Apostle Paul celebrates in the
First Letter to the Corinthians...is certainly a demanding love. But this is
precisely the source of its beauty: by the very fact that it is demanding, it
builds up the true good of man and allows it to radiate to others."(13)
Therefore it is a love which respects and builds up the person because "love is
true when it creates the good of persons and of communities; it creates that
good and gives it to others."(14)
Love and Human Sexuality
10. Man is called to love and to self-giving in the unity of body and
spirit. Femininity and masculinity are complementary gifts, through which human
sexuality is an integrating part of the concrete capacity for love which God has
inscribed in man and woman. "Sexuality is a fundamental component of
personality, one of its modes of being, of manifestation, of communicating with
others, of feeling, of expressing and of living human love."(15) This capacity
for love as self-giving is thus "incarnated" in the nuptial meaning of the body,
which bears the imprint of the person's masculinity and femininity. "The human
body, with its sex, and its masculinity and femininity, seen in the very mystery
of creation, is not only a source of fruitfulness and procreation, as in the
whole natural order, but includes right 'from the beginning' the 'nuptial'
attribute, that is, the capacity of expressing love: that love precisely in
which the man-person becomes a gift and—by means of this gift—fulfills the very
meaning of his being and existence."(16) Every form of love will always bear
this masculine and feminine character.
11. Human sexuality is thus a good, part of that created gift which God
saw as being "very good," when he created the human person in his image and
likeness, and "male and female he created them" (Gen 1:27). Insofar as it is a
way of relating and being open to others, sexuality has love as its intrinsic
end, more precisely, love as donation and acceptance, love as giving and
receiving. The relationship between a man and a woman is essentially a
relationship of love: "Sexuality, oriented, elevated and integrated by love
acquires a truly human quality."(17) When such love exists in marriage,
self-giving expresses, through the body, the complementarity and totality of the
gift. Married love thus becomes a power which enriches persons and makes them
grow and, at the same time, it contributes to building up the civilization of
love. But when the sense and meaning of gift is lacking in sexuality, a
"civilization of things and not of persons" takes over, "a civilization in which
persons are used in the same way as things are used. In the context of a
civilization of use, woman can become an object for man, children a hindrance to
parents...."(18)
12. The gift of God: this great truth and basic fact stands at the
center of the Christian conscience of parents and their children. Here we refer
to the gift which God has given us in calling us to life, to exist as man or
woman in an unrepeatable existence, full of endless possibilities for growing
spiritually and morally: "human life is a gift received in order then to be
given as a gift."(19) "In fact the gift reveals, so to speak, a particular
characteristic of human existence, or rather, of the very essence of the person.
When God Yahweh says that 'it is not good that man should be alone' (Gen 2:18),
he affirms that 'alone,' man does not completely realize his existence. He
realizes it only by existing 'with some one'—and even more deeply and
completely: by existing 'for some one.'"(20) Married love is fulfilled in
openness to the other person and in self-giving, taking the form of a total gift
that belongs to this state of life. Moreover, the vocation to the consecrated
life always finds its meaning in self-giving, sustained by a special grace, the
gift of oneself "to God alone with an undivided heart in a remarkable
manner,"(21) in order to serve him more fully in the Church. Therefore, in every
condition and state of life, this gift comes to be ever more wondrous by
redeeming grace, through which we become "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Pet
1:4) and are called to live the supernatural communion of love together with God
and with our brothers and sisters. Even in the most delicate situations,
Christian parents cannot forget that the gift of God is there, at the very basis
of all personal and family history.
13. "As an incarnate spirit, that is, a soul which expresses itself in a
body and a body informed by an immortal spirit, man is called to love in his
unified totality. Love includes the human body, and the body is made a sharer in
spiritual love."(22) The meaning of sexuality itself is to be understood in the
light of Christian revelation: "Sexuality characterizes man and woman not only
on the physical level, but also on the psychological and spiritual, making its
mark on each of their expressions. Such diversity, linked to the complementarity
of the two sexes, allows a thorough response to the design of God according to
the vocation to which each one is called."(23)
Married Love
14. When love is lived out in marriage, it includes and surpasses
friendship. Love between a man and woman is achieved when they give themselves
totally, each in turn according to their own masculinity and femininity,
founding on the marriage covenant that communion of persons where God has willed
that human life be conceived, grow and develop. To this married love, and to
this love alone, belongs sexual giving, "realized in a truly human way only if
it is an integral part of the love by which a man and a woman commit themselves
totally to one another until death."(24) The Catechism of the Catholic Church
recalls: "In marriage the physical intimacy of the spouses becomes a sign and
pledge of spiritual communion. Marriage bonds between baptized persons are
sanctified by the sacrament."(25)
Love Open to Life
15. The revealing sign of authentic married love is openness to life:
"In its most profound reality, love is essentially a gift; and conjugal love,
while leading the spouses to the reciprocal 'knowledge' which...does not end
with the couple, because it makes them capable of the greatest possible gift,
the gift by which they become cooperators with God for giving life to a new
human person. Thus the couple, while giving themselves to one another, give not
just themselves but also the reality of children, who are a living reflection of
their love, a permanent sign of conjugal unity and a living and inseparable
synthesis of their being a father and a mother."(26) From this communion of love
and life spouses draw that human and spiritual richness and that positive
atmosphere for offering their children the support of education for love and
chastity
II. True Love and Chastity
16. As we will later observe, virginal and married love are the two
forms in which the person's call to love is fulfilled. In order for both to
develop, they require the commitment to live chastity, in conformity with each
person's own state of life. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church says,
sexuality "becomes personal and truly human when it is integrated into the
relationship of one person to another, in the complete and mutual lifelong gift
of a man and a woman."(27) Insofar as it entails sincere self-giving, it is
obvious that growth in love is helped by that discipline of the feelings,
passions and emotions which leads us to self-mastery. One cannot give what one
does not possess. If the person is not master of self—through the virtues and,
in a concrete way, through chastity—he or she lacks that self-possession which
makes self-giving possible. Chastity is the spiritual power which frees love
from selfishness and aggression. To the degree that a person weakens chastity,
his or her love becomes more and more selfish, that is, satisfying a desire for
pleasure and no longer self-giving.
Chastity As Self-Giving
17. Chastity is the joyous affirmation of someone who knows how to live
self-giving, free from any form of self-centered slavery. This presupposes that
the person has learned how to accept other people, to relate with them, while
respecting their dignity in diversity. The chaste person is not self-centered,
not involved in selfish relationships with other people. Chastity makes the
personality harmonious. It matures it and fills it with inner peace. This purity
of mind and body helps develop true self-respect and at the same time makes one
capable of respecting others, because it makes one see in them persons to
reverence, insofar as they are created in the image of God and through grace are
children of God, re-created by Christ who "called you out of darkness into his
marvelous light" (1 Pet 2:9).
Self-Mastery
18. "Chastity includes an apprenticeship in self-mastery which is a
training in human freedom. The alternative is clear: either man governs his
passions and finds peace, or he lets himself be dominated by them and becomes
unhappy."(28) Every person knows by experience that chastity requires rejecting
certain thoughts, words and sinful actions, as St. Paul was careful to clarify
and point out (cf. Rom 1:18; 6:12-14; 1 Cor 6:9-11; 2 Cor 7:1; Gal 5:16-23; Eph
4:17-24; 5:3-13; Col 3:5-8; 1 Thes 4:1-18; 1 Tim 1:8-11; 4:12). To achieve this
requires ability and an attitude of self-mastery which are signs of inner
freedom, of responsibility toward oneself and others. At the same time, these
signs bear witness to a faithful conscience. Such self-mastery involves both
avoiding occasions which might provoke or encourage sin as well as knowing how
to overcome one's own natural instinctive impulses.
19. When the family is providing real educational support and
encouraging the exercise of all the virtues, education for chastity is made easy
and lacks inner conflicts, even if at certain times young people can experience
particularly delicate situations. For some who find themselves in situations
where chastity is offended against and not valued, living in a chaste way can
demand a hard or even a heroic struggle. Nonetheless, with the grace of Christ,
flowing from his spousal love for the Church, everyone can live chastely even if
they find themselves in unfavorable circumstances.
The very fact that all are called to holiness, as the Second Vatican
Council teaches, makes it easier to understand that everyone can be in
situations where heroic acts of virtue are indispensable, whether in celibate
life or marriage, and that in fact in one way or another this happens to
everyone for shorter or longer periods of time.(29) Therefore, married life also
entails a joyous and demanding path to holiness.
Chastity in Marriage
20. "Married people are called to live conjugal chastity; others
practice chastity in continence."(30) Parents are well aware that living
conjugal chastity themselves is the most valid premise for educating their
children in chaste love and in holiness of life. This means that parents should
be aware that God's love is present in their love, and hence that their sexual
giving should also be lived out in respect for God and for his plan of love,
with fidelity, honor and generosity toward one's spouse and toward the life
which can arise from their act of love. Only in this way can their love be an
expression of charity.(31) Therefore, in marriage Christians are called to live
this self-giving in a right personal relationship with God. This relationship is
thus an expression of their faith and love for God with the fidelity and
generous fruitfulness which distinguishes divine love.(32) Only in this way do
they respond to the love of God and fulfill his will, which the commandments
help us to know. There is no legitimate love, at its highest level, which is not
also love for God. To love the Lord implies responding positively to his
commandments: "If you love me, you will keep my commandments" (Jn 14:15).(33)
21. In order to live chastely, man and woman need the continuous
illumination of the Holy Spirit. "At the center of the spirituality of
marriage...lies chastity, not only as a moral virtue (formed by love), but
likewise as a virtue connected with the gifts of the Holy Spirit—above all the
gift of respect for what comes from God (donum pietatis).... So therefore, the
interior order of married life, which enables the 'manifestations of affection'
to develop according to their right proportion and meaning, is a fruit not only
of the virtue which the couple practice, but also of the gifts of the Holy
Spirit with which they cooperate."(34)
On the other hand, convinced that their own chaste life and the daily
effort of bearing witness are the premise and condition for their educational
task, parents should also consider any attack on the virtue and chastity of
their children as an offense against the life of faith itself that threatens and
impoverishes their own communion of life and grace (cf. Eph 6:12).
Education for Chastity
22. Educating children for chastity strives to achieve three objectives:
(a) to maintain in the family a positive atmosphere of love, virtue and respect
for the gifts of God, in particular the gift of life;(35) (b) to help children
to understand the value of sexuality and chastity in stages, sustaining their
growth through enlightening words, example and prayer; (c) to help them
understand and discover their own vocation to marriage or to consecrated
virginity for the sake of the kingdom of heaven in harmony with and respecting
their attitudes and inclinations and the gifts of the Spirit.
23. Other educators can assist in this task, but they can only take the
place of parents for serious reasons of physical or moral incapacity. On this
point the Magisterium of the Church has expressed itself clearly,(36) in
relation to the whole educative process of children: "The role of parents in
education is of such importance that it is almost impossible to find an adequate
substitute. It is therefore the duty of parents to create a family atmosphere
inspired by love and devotion to God and their fellow-men which will promote an
integrated, personal and social education of their children. The family is
therefore the principal school of the social virtues which are necessary to
every society."(37) In fact education is the parents' domain insofar as their
educational task continues the generation of life; moreover, it is an offering
of their humanity(38) to their children to which they are solemnly bound in the
very moment of celebrating their marriage. "Parents are the first and most
important educators of their children, and they also possess a fundamental
competency in this area: they are educators because they are parents. They share
their individual mission with other individuals or institutions, such as the
Church and the State. But the mission of education must always be carried out in
accordance with a proper application of the principle of subsidiarity. This
implies the legitimacy and indeed the need of giving assistance to the parents,
but finds its intrinsic and absolute limit in their prevailing right and their
actual capabilities. The principle of subsidiarity is thus at the service of
parental love, meeting the good of the family unit. For parents by themselves
are not capable of satisfying every requirement of the whole process of raising
children, especially in matters concerning their schooling and the entire gamut
of socialization. Subsidiarity thus complements paternal and maternal love and
confirms its fundamental nature, inasmuch as all other participants in the
process of education are only able to carry out their responsibilities in the
name of the parents, with their consent and, to a certain degree, with their
authorization."(39)
24. In particular, the project of education in sexuality and true love,
open to self-giving, is confronted today by a culture guided by positivism, as
the Holy Father notes in the Letter to Families: "The development of
contemporary civilization is linked to a scientific and technological progress
which is often achieved in a one-sided way, and thus appears purely
positivistic. Positivism, as we know, results in agnosticism in theory and
utilitarianism in practice and in ethics.... Utilitarianism is a civilization of
production and of use, a civilization of things and not of persons, a
civilization in which persons are used in the same way as things are used.... To
be convinced that this is the case, one need only to look at certain sexual
education programs introduced into the schools, often notwithstanding the
disagreement and even the protests of many parents...."(40)
In this context, based on the teaching of the Church and with her
support, parents must reclaim their own task. By associating together, wherever
this is necessary or useful, they should put into action an educational project
marked by the true values of the person and Christian love and taking a clear
position that surpasses ethical utilitarianism. For education to correspond to
the objective needs of true love, parents should provide this education within
their own autonomous responsibility.
25. Moreover, in relation to preparation for marriage the teaching of
the Church states that the family must remain the main protagonist in this
educational work.(41)
Certainly "the changes that have taken place within almost all modern
societies demand that not only the family but also society and the Church should
be involved in the effort of properly preparing young people for their future
responsibilities."(42) It is precisely with this end in view that the
educational task of the family takes on greater importance from the earliest
years: "Remote preparation begins in early childhood in that wise family
training which leads children to discover themselves as being endowed with a
rich and complex psychology and with a particular personality with its own
strengths and weaknesses."(43)
III. In the Light of Vocation
26. The family carries out a decisive role in cultivating and developing
all vocations, as the Second Vatican Council taught: "From the marriage of
Christians there comes the family in which new citizens of human society are
born and, by the grace of the Holy Spirit in Baptism, those are made children of
God so that the People of God may be perpetuated throughout the centuries. In
what might be regarded as the domestic church, the parents by word and example,
are the first heralds of the faith with regard to their children. They must
foster the vocation which is proper to each child, and this with special care if
it be to religion."(44) Yet the very fact that vocations flourish is the sign of
adequate pastoral care of the family: "where there is an effective and
enlightened family apostolate, just as it becomes normal to accept life as a
gift from God, so it is easier for God's voice to resound and to find a more
generous hearing."(45)
Here we are dealing with vocations to marriage or to virginity or
celibacy, but these are always vocations to holiness. Indeed, the document Lumen
Gentium presents the Second Vatican Council's teaching on the universal call to
holiness: "Strengthened by so many and such great means of salvation, all the
faithful, whatever their condition or state—though each in his own way—are
called by the Lord to that perfection of sanctity by which the Father himself is
perfect."(46)
1. The Vocation to Marriage
27. Formation for true love is always the best preparation for the
vocation to marriage. In the family, children and young people can learn to live
human sexuality within the solid context of Christian life. They can gradually
discover that a stable Christian marriage cannot be regarded as a matter of
convenience or mere sexual attraction. By the fact that it is a vocation,
marriage must involve a carefully considered choice, a mutual commitment before
God and the constant seeking of his help in prayer.
Called to Married Love
28. Committed to the task of educating their children for love,
Christian parents first of all can take awareness of their married love as a
reference point. As the encyclical Humanae Vitae states, such love "reveals its
true nature and nobility when it is considered in its supreme origin, God, who
is love (cf. 1 Jn 4:8), 'the Father from whom every family in heaven and on
earth is named' (Eph 3:15). Marriage is not, then, the effect of chance or the
product of evolution of unconscious natural forces; it is the wise institution
of the Creator to realize in mankind his design of love. By means of the
reciprocal personal gift of self, proper and exclusive to them, husband and wife
tend toward the communion of their beings in view of mutual personal perfection,
to collaborate with God in the generation and education of new lives. For
baptized persons, moreover, marriage invests the dignity of a sacramental sign
of grace, inasmuch as it represents the union of Christ and of the Church."(47)
The Holy Father's Letter to Families recalls that: "The family is in
fact a community of persons whose proper way of existing and living together is
communion: communio personarum."(48) Going back to the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council, the Holy Father teaches that such a communion involves "a
certain similarity between the union of the divine Persons and union of God's
children in truth and love."(49) "This rich and meaningful formulation first of
all confirms what is central to the identity of every man and every woman. This
identity consists in the capacity to live in truth and love; even more, it
consists in the need of truth and love as an essential dimension of the life of
the person. Man's need for truth and love opens him both to God and to
creatures: it opens him to other people, to life in communion, and in particular
to marriage and to the family."(50)
29. As the encyclical Humanae Vitae affirms, married love has four
characteristics: it is human love (physical and spiritual), it is total,
faithful and fruitful love.(51)
These characteristics are founded on the fact that "in marriage man and
woman are so firmly united as to become, to use the words of the Book of
Genesis—one flesh (Gen 2:24). Male and female in their physical constitution,
the two human subjects, even though physically different, share equally in the
capacity to live in truth and love. This capacity, characteristic of the human
being as a person, has at the same time both a spiritual and a bodily
dimension.... The family which results from this union draws its inner solidity
from the covenant between the spouses, which Christ raised to a sacrament. The
family draws its proper character as a community, its traits of communion, from
that fundamental communion of the spouses which is prolonged in their children.
Will you accept children lovingly from God, and bring them up according to the
law of Christ and his Church? the celebrant asks during the rite of marriage.
The answer given by the spouses reflects the most profound truth of the love
which unites them."(52) With the same formula, spouses commit themselves and
promise to be "faithful forever"(53) because their fidelity really flows from
this communion of persons which is rooted in the plan of the Creator, in
Trinitarian love and in the sacrament which expresses the faithful union between
Christ and the Church.
30. Christian marriage is a sacrament whereby sexuality is integrated
into a path to holiness, through a bond reinforced by the indissoluble unity of
the sacrament: "The gift of the sacrament is at the same time a vocation and
commandment for the Christian spouses, that they may remain faithful to each
other forever, beyond every trial and difficulty, in generous obedience to the
holy will of the Lord: 'What therefore God has joined together, let not man put
asunder.'"(54)
Parents Face a Current Concern
31. Unfortunately, even in Christian societies today, parents have
reason to be concerned about the stability of their children's future marriages.
Nevertheless, in spite of the rising number of divorces and the growing crisis
of the family, they should respond with optimism, committing themselves to give
their children a deep Christian formation to make them able to overcome various
difficulties. Actually, the love for chastity, which parents help to form,
favors mutual respect between man and woman and provides a capacity for
compassion, tolerance, generosity, and above all, a spirit of sacrifice, without
which love cannot endure. Children will thus come to marriage with that
realistic wisdom about which St. Paul speaks when he teaches that husband and
wife must continually give way to one another in love, cherishing one another
with mutual patience and affection (cf. 1 Cor 7:3-6; Eph 5:21-23).
32. Through this remote formation for chastity in the family,
adolescents and young people learn to live sexuality in its personal dimension,
rejecting any kind of separation of sexuality from love—understood as
self-giving—and any separation of the love between husband and wife from the
family.
Parental respect for life and the mystery of procreation will spare the
child or young person from the false idea that the two dimensions of the
conjugal act, unitive and procreative, can be separated at will. Thus the family
comes to be recognized as an inseparable part of the vocation to marriage.
A Christian education for chastity within the family cannot remain
silent about the moral gravity involved in separating the unitive dimension from
the procreative dimension within married life. This happens above all in
contraception and artificial procreation. In the first case, one intends to seek
sexual pleasure, intervening in the conjugal act to avoid conception; in the
second case, conception is sought by substituting the conjugal act with a
technique. These are actions contrary to the truth of married love and contrary
to full communion between husband and wife.
Forming young people for chastity should thus become a preparation for
responsible fatherhood and motherhood, which "directly concern the moment in
which a man and a woman, uniting themselves in one flesh, can become parents.
This is a moment of special value both for their interpersonal relationship and
for their service to life: they can become parents—father and mother—by
communicating life to a new human being. The two dimensions of conjugal union,
the unitive and the procreative, cannot be artificially separated without
damaging the deepest truth of the conjugal act itself."(55)
It is also necessary to put before young people the consequences, which
are always very serious, of separating sexuality from procreation when someone
reaches the stage of practicing sterilization and abortion or pursuing sexual
activity dissociated from married love, before and outside of marriage.
Much of the moral order and marital harmony of the family, hence also
the true good of society, depends on this timely education, which finds its
place in God's plan, in the very structure of sexuality and the intimate nature
of marriage.
33. Parents who carry out their own right and duty to form their
children for chastity can be certain that they are helping them in turn to build
stable and united families, thus anticipating, insofar as this is possible, the
joys of paradise: "How can I ever express the happiness of the marriage that is
joined together by the Church, strengthened by an offering, sealed by a
blessing, announced by angels and ratified by the Father.... They are both
brethren and both fellow servants; there is no separation between them in spirit
or flesh.... Christ rejoices in them and he sends them his peace; where the
couple is, there he is also to be found, and where he is, evil can no longer
abide."(56)
2. The Vocation to Virginity and Celibacy
34. Christian revelation presents the two vocations to love: marriage
and virginity. In some societies today, not only marriage and the family, but
also vocations to the priesthood and the religious life, are often in a state of
crisis. The two situations are inseparable: "When marriage is not esteemed,
neither can consecrated virginity or celibacy exist; when human sexuality is not
regarded as a great value given by the Creator, the renunciation of it for the
sake of the kingdom of heaven loses its meaning."(57) A lack of vocations
follows from the breakdown of the family, yet where parents are generous in
welcoming life, children will be more likely to be generous when it comes to the
question of offering themselves to God: "Families must once again express a
generous love for life and place themselves at its service above all by
accepting the children which the Lord wants to give them with a sense of
responsibility not detached from peaceful trust," and they may bring this
acceptance to fulfillment not only "through a continuing educational effort but
also through an obligatory commitment, at times perhaps neglected, to help
teenagers especially and young people to accept the vocational dimension of
every living being, within God's plan.... Human life acquires fullness when it
becomes a self-gift: a gift which can express itself in matrimony, in
consecrated virginity, in self-dedication to one's neighbor toward an ideal, or
in the choice of priestly ministry. Parents will truly serve the life of their
children if they help them make their own lives a gift, respecting their mature
choices and fostering joyfully each vocation, including the religious and
priestly one."(58)
When he deals with sexual education in Familiaris Consortio, this is why
Pope John Paul II affirms: "Indeed Christian parents, discerning the signs of
God's call, will devote special attention and care to education in virginity or
celibacy as the supreme form of that self-giving that constitutes the very
meaning of human sexuality."(59)
Parents and Priestly or Religious Vocations
35. Parents should therefore rejoice if they see in any of their
children the signs of God's call to the higher vocation of virginity or celibacy
for the love of the kingdom of heaven. They should accordingly adapt formation
for chaste love to the needs of those children, encouraging them on their own
path up to the time of entering the seminary or house of formation, or until
this specific call to self-giving with an undivided heart matures. They must
respect and appreciate the freedom of each of their children, encouraging their
personal vocation and without trying to impose a predetermined vocation on them.
The Second Vatican Council clearly set out this distinct and honorable
task of parents, who are supported in their work by teachers and priests:
"Parents should nurture and protect religious vocations in their children by
educating them in Christian virtues."(60) "The duty of fostering vocations falls
on the whole Christian community.... The greatest contribution is made by
families which are animated by a spirit of faith, charity and piety and which
provide, as it were, a first seminary, and by parishes in whose abundant life
the young people themselves take an active part."(61) "Parents, teachers and all
who are in any way concerned in the education of boys and young men ought to
train them in such a way that they will know the solicitude of the Lord for his
flock and be alive to the needs of the Church. In this way they will be prepared
when the Lord calls to answer generously with the prophet: 'Here am I! send me'
(Is 6:8)."(62)
This necessary family context for maturing religious and priestly
vocations brings to mind the serious situation of many families, especially in
certain countries, families with an impoverished life because they have chosen
to deprive themselves of children or where they have only one child, a situation
in which it is very difficult for vocations to arise and even difficult to
develop a full social education.
36. The truly Christian family will also be able to communicate an
understanding of the value of celibacy to unmarried children or those who are
incapable of marriage for reasons apart from their own will. If they are formed
well from childhood and during their youth, they will be equipped to face their
own situation more easily. Likewise, they will be able to discover the will of
God in such a situation and so find a sense of vocation and peace in their own
lives.(63) These persons, especially if they have some kind of physical
disability, need to be shown the great possibilities for self-realization and
spiritual fruitfulness which are open to those who make a commitment to help
their poorest and most needy brothers and sisters, sustained by faith and the
love of God.
IV. Father and Mother As Educators
37. In granting married persons the privilege and great responsibility
of becoming parents, God gives them the grace to carry out their mission
adequately. Moreover, in the task of educating their children, parents are
enlightened by "two fundamental truths...first, that man is called to live in
truth and love; and second, that everyone finds fulfillment through the sincere
gift of self."(64) As spouses, parents and ministers of the sacramental grace of
marriage, they are sustained from day to day by special spiritual energies,
received from Jesus Christ who loves and nurtures his Bride, the Church.
As husband and wife who have become "one flesh" through the bond of
marriage, they share the duty to educate their children through willing
collaboration nourished by vigorous mutual dialogue that "has a new specific
source in the sacrament of marriage, which consecrates them for the strictly
Christian education of their children: that is to say, it calls upon them to
share in the very authority and love of God the Father and Christ the shepherd,
and in the motherly love of the Church, and it enriches them with wisdom,
counsel, fortitude and all the other gifts of the Holy Spirit in order to help
the children in their growth as human beings and as Christians."(65)
38. In the context of formation in chastity, "fatherhood-motherhood"
also includes one parent who is left alone and adoptive parents. The task of a
single parent is certainly not easy because the support of the other spouse and
the role and example of a parent of the other sex is lacking. But God sustains
single parents with a special love and calls them to take on this task with the
same generosity and sensitivity with which they love and care for their children
in other areas of family life.
39. Some other persons are called upon in certain cases to take the
place of parents: those who take on the parental role in a permanent way, for
instance, for orphans or abandoned children. They, too, have the task of
educating children and young people in an overall sense, as well as in chastity,
and they will receive the grace of their state of life to do this according to
the same principles that guide Christian parents.
40. Parents must never feel alone in this task. The Church supports and
encourages them, confident that they can carry out this function better than
anyone else. She also encourages those men or women who, often with great
sacrifice, give children without parents a form of parental love and family
life. In any case, all of them must approach this duty in a spirit of prayer,
open and obedient to the moral truths of faith and reason that integrate the
teaching of the Church, and always seeing children and young people as persons,
children of God and heirs to the kingdom of heaven.
The Rights and Duties of Parents
41. Before going into the practical details of young people's formation
in chastity, it is extremely important for parents to be aware of their rights
and duties, particularly in the face of a State or a school that tends to take
up the initiative in the area of sex education.
The Holy Father John Paul II reaffirms this in Familiaris Consortio:
"The right and duty of parents to give education is essential since it is
connected with the transmission of human life; it is original and primary with
regard to the educational role of others, on account of the uniqueness of the
loving relationship between parents and children; and it is irreplaceable and
inalienable, and therefore incapable of being entirely delegated to others or
usurped by others,"(66) except in the case, as mentioned at the beginning, of
physical or psychological impossibility.
42. This doctrine is based on the teaching of the Second Vatican
Council,(67) and is also proclaimed by the Charter of the Rights of the Family:
"Since they have conferred life on their children, parents have the original,
primary and inalienable right to educate them; hence they...have the right to
educate their children in conformity with their moral and religious convictions,
taking into account the cultural traditions of the family which favor the good
and the dignity of the child; they should also receive from society the
necessary aid and assistance to perform their educational role properly."(68)
43. The Pope insists upon the fact that this holds especially with
regard to sexuality: "Sex education, which is a basic right and duty of parents,
must always be carried out under their attentive guidance, whether at home or in
educational centers chosen and controlled by them. In this regard, the Church
reaffirms the law of subsidiarity, which the school is bound to observe when it
cooperates in sex education, by entering into the same spirit that animates the
parents."(69)
The Holy Father adds, "In view of the close links between the sexual
dimension of the person and his or her ethical values, education must bring the
children to a knowledge of and respect for the moral norms as the necessary and
highly valuable guarantee for responsible personal growth in human
sexuality."(70) No one is capable of giving moral education in this delicate
area better than duly prepared parents.
The Meaning of the Parents' Duty
44. This right also implies an educational duty. If in fact parents do
not give adequate formation in chastity, they are failing in their precise duty.
Likewise, they would also be guilty were they to tolerate immoral or inadequate
formation being given to their children outside the home.
45. Today this task encounters a particular difficulty with regard to
the dissemination of pornography, through the means of social communication,
instigated by commercial motives and breaking down adolescent sensitivity. This
must call for two forms of concerned action on the part of parents: preventive
and critical education with regard to their children, and courageous
denunciation to the appropriate authorities. Parents, as individuals or in
associations, have the right and duty to promote the good of their children and
demand from the authorities laws that prevent and eliminate the exploitation of
the sensitivity of children and adolescents.(71)
46. The Holy Father stresses this parental task and outlines guidelines
and the objective in this regard: "Faced with a culture that largely reduces
human sexuality to the level of something commonplace, since it interprets and
lives it in a reductive and impoverished way by linking it solely with the body
and with selfish pleasure, the educational service of parents must aim firmly at
a training in the area of sex that is truly and fully personal: for sexuality is
an enrichment of the whole person—body, emotions and soul—and it manifests its
inmost meaning in leading the person to the gift of self in love."(72)
47. We cannot forget, however, that we are dealing with a right and duty
to educate which, in the past, Christian parents carried out or exercised
little. Perhaps this was because the problem was not as acute as it is today, or
because the parents' task was in part fulfilled by the strength of prevailing
social models and the role played by the Church and the Catholic school in this
area. It is not easy for parents to take on this educational commitment because
today it appears to be rather complex, and greater than what the family could
offer, also because, in most cases, it is not possible to refer to what one's
own parents did in this regard.
Therefore, through this document, the Church holds that it is her duty
to give parents back confidence in their own capabilities and help them to carry
out their task.
V. Paths of Formation Within the Family
48. The family environment is thus the normal and usual place for
forming children and young people to consolidate and exercise the virtues of
charity, temperance, fortitude and chastity. As the domestic church, the family
is the school of the richest humanity.(73) This is particularly true for the
moral and spiritual education on such a delicate matter as chastity. Physical,
psychological and spiritual aspects are involved in chastity, as well as the
first signs of freedom, the influence of social models, natural modesty and
strong tendencies inherent in a human being's bodily nature. All of these
aspects are connected to an awareness, albeit implicit, of the dignity of the
human person, called to collaborate with God and, at the same time, marked by
fragility. In a Christian home, parents have the strength to lead their children
to a real Christian maturation of their personalities, according to the measure
of Christ, in his Mystical Body, the Church.(74)
While the family is rich in these strengths, it also needs the support
of the State and society, according to the principle of subsidiarity: "It can
happen...that when a family does decide to live up fully to its vocation, it
finds itself without the necessary support from the State and without sufficient
resources. It is urgent therefore to promote not only family policies, but also
those social policies which have the family as their principle object, policies
which assist the family by providing adequate resources and efficient means of
support, both for bringing up children and for looking after the
elderly...."(75)
49. Aware of this and of the real difficulties that exist for young
people in many countries today, especially when social and moral deterioration
is present, parents are urged to dare to ask for more and to propose more. They
cannot be satisfied with avoiding the worst—that their children do not take
drugs or commit crimes. They will have to be committed to educating them in the
true values of the person, renewed by the virtues of faith, hope and love: the
values of freedom, responsibility, fatherhood and motherhood, service,
professional work, solidarity, honesty, art, sport, the joy of knowing they are
children of God, hence brothers and sisters of all human beings, etc.
The Essential Value of the Home
50. In their most recent findings, the psychological and pedagogical
sciences come together with human experience in emphasizing the decisive
importance of the affective atmosphere that reigns in the family for a
harmonious and valid sexual education, especially during the first years of
infancy and childhood, and perhaps also during the prenatal stage, because
children's deep emotional patterns are established in these phases. The
importance of the couple's balance, acceptance and understanding is stressed.
Furthermore, emphasis is placed on the value of a serene relationship between
husband and wife, on the value of their positive presence (both father and
mother) during these important years for the processes of identification, and on
the value of a relationship of reassuring affection toward their children.
51. Certain serious privations or imbalances between parents (for
example, one or both parents' absence from family life, a lack of interest in
the children's education or excessive severity) are factors that can cause
emotional and affective disturbances in children. These factors can seriously
upset their adolescence and sometimes mark them for life. Parents must find time
to be with their children and take time to talk with them. As a gift and a
commitment, children are their most important task, although seemingly not
always a very profitable one. Children are more important than work,
entertainment and social position. In these conversations—more and more as the
years pass—parents should learn how to listen carefully to their children, how
to make the effort to understand them, and how to recognize the fragment of
truth that may be present in some forms of rebellion. At the same time, parents
will have to be able to help their children to channel their anxieties and
aspirations correctly, and teach them to reflect on the reality of things and
how to reason. This does not mean imposing a certain line of behavior, but
rather showing both the supernatural and human motives that recommend such
behavior. Parents will succeed better if they are able to dedicate time to their
children and really place themselves at their level with love.
Formation in the Community of Life and Love
52. The Christian family is capable of offering an atmosphere permeated
with that love for God that makes an authentic reciprocal gift possible.(76)
Children who have this experience are better disposed to live according to those
moral truths that they see practiced in their parents' life. They will have
confidence in them and will learn about the love that overcomes fears—and
nothing moves us to love more than knowing that we are loved. In this way, the
bond of mutual love, to which parents bear witness before their children, will
safeguard their affective serenity. This bond will refine the intellect, the
will and the emotions by rejecting everything that could degrade or devalue the
gift of human sexuality. In a family where love reigns, this gift is always
understood as part of the call to self-giving in love for God and for others.
"The family is the first and fundamental school of social living: as a community
of love, it finds in self-giving the law that guides it and makes it grow. The
self-giving that inspires the love of husband and wife for each other is the
model and norm for the self-giving that must be practiced in the relationships
between brothers and sisters and the different generations living together in
the family. And the communion and sharing that are part of everyday life in the
home at times of joy and at times of difficulty are the most concrete and
effective pedagogy for the active, responsible and fruitful inclusion of the
children in the wider horizon of society."(77)
53. Basically, education for authentic love, authentic only if it
becomes kind, well-disposed love, involves accepting the person who is loved and
considering his or her good as one's own; hence this implies educating in right
relationships with others. Children, adolescents and young people should be
taught how to enter into healthy relationships with God, with their parents,
their brothers and sisters, with their companions of the same or the opposite
sex, and with adults.
54. It must also not be forgotten that education in love is an overall
reality. There will be no progress in setting up proper relationships with one
person if at the same time there are no proper relationships with other people.
As we have already mentioned, education in chastity, as education in love, is at
the same time education of one's spirit, one's sensitivity and one's feelings.
The attitude toward other persons depends largely on the way spontaneous
feelings for them are handled, the way some feelings are cultivated and others
are controlled. Chastity as a virtue is never reduced to merely being able to
perform acts conforming to a norm of external behavior. Chastity requires
activating and developing the dynamisms of nature and grace which make up the
principal and immanent element of our discovery of God's law as a guarantee of
growth and freedom.(78)
55. Therefore, it must be stressed that education for chastity is
inseparable from efforts to cultivate all the other virtues and, in a particular
way, Christian love, characterized by respect, altruism and service, which after
all is called charity. Sexuality is such an important good that it must be
protected by following the order of reason enlightened by faith: "The greater a
good, the more the order of reason must be observed in it."(79) From this it
follows that in order to educate in chastity, "self-control is necessary, which
presupposes such virtues as modesty, temperance, respect for self and for
others, openness to one's neighbor."(80)
Also of importance are what Christian tradition has called the younger
sisters of chastity (modesty, an attitude of sacrifice with regard to one's
whims), nourished by faith and a life of prayer.
Decency and Modesty
56. The practice of decency and modesty in speech, action and dress is
very important for creating an atmosphere suitable to the growth of chastity,
but this must be well motivated by respect for one's own body and the dignity of
others. Parents, as we have said, should be watchful so that certain immoral
fashions and attitudes do not violate the integrity of the home, especially
through misuse of the mass media.(81) In this regard, the Holy Father stressed
the need "to promote closer collaboration between parents, who have primary
responsibility for education, those in charge of the mass media at various
levels and the public authorities, so that families are not left without
guidance in such an important sector of their educational mission.... In fact
the presentations, content and programs of healthy entertainment, information
and education to complement that of the family and the school must be
recognized. Unfortunately this does not change the fact that in some countries
especially, there are many shows and publications abounding in all sorts of
violence with a kind of bombardment of messages that undermine moral principles
and make it impossible to achieve a serious climate in which values worthy of
the human person may be transmitted."(82)
In particular, with regard to use of television, the Holy Father
specified: "The lifestyle—especially in the more industrialized nations—all too
often causes families to abandon their responsibility to educate their children.
Evasion of this duty is made easy by the presence of television and of printed
materials in the home. These occupy the time for children and young people. No
one can deny the justification for this when the means are lacking, to develop
and use to advantage the free time of the young and to direct their
energies."(83) Another circumstance that facilitates this is the fact that both
parents are busy with their work, in and outside the home. "The result is that
these young people are in most need of help in developing their responsible
freedom. There is the duty—especially for believers, for men and women who love
freedom, to protect the young from the aggressions they are subjected to by the
media. May no one shirk from this duty by using the excuse that he or she is not
involved."(84) "Parents as recipients must actively ensure the moderate,
critical, watchful and prudent use of the media."(85)
Legitimate Privacy
57. Respect for privacy must be considered in close connection with
decency and modesty, which spontaneously defend a person who refuses to be
considered and treated like an object of pleasure instead of being respected and
loved for himself or herself. If children or young people see that their
legitimate privacy is respected, then they will know that they are expected to
show the same attitude toward others. This is how they learn to cultivate the
proper sense of responsibility before God by developing their interior life and
a taste for personal freedom, that makes them capable of loving God and others
better.
Self-Control
58. All of this reminds us more generally of self-control, a necessary
condition for being capable of self-giving. Children and young people should be
encouraged to have esteem for, and to practice self-control and restraint, to
live in an orderly way, to make personal sacrifices in a spirit of love for God,
self-respect, and generosity toward others, without stifling feelings and
tendencies, but channeling them into a virtuous life.
Parents As Models for Their Children
59. The good example and leadership of parents is essential in
strengthening the formation of young people in chastity. A mother who values her
maternal vocation and her place in the home greatly helps develop the qualities
of femininity and motherhood in her daughters, and sets a dear, strong and noble
example of womanhood for her sons.(86) A father, whose behavior is inspired by
masculine dignity without "machismo," will be an attractive model for his sons,
and inspire respect, admiration and security in his daughters.(87)
60. This is also true for education in a spirit of sacrifice in
families, subject more than ever today to the pressures of materialism and
consumerism. Only in this way will children grow up "with a correct attitude of
freedom with regard to material goods, by adopting a simple and austere
lifestyle and being fully convinced that 'man is more precious for what he is
than for what he has.' In a society shaken and split by tensions and conflicts
caused by the violent clash of various kinds of individualism and selfishness,
children must be enriched not only with a sense of true justice, which alone
leads to respect for the personal dignity of each individual, but also and more
powerfully by a sense of true love, understood as sincere solicitude and
disinterested service with regard to others, especially the poorest and those in
most need."(88) "This education is fully a part of the 'civilization of love.'
It depends on the civilization of love and, in great measure, contributes to its
upbuilding."(89)
A Sanctuary of Life and Faith
61. No one can deny that the first example and the greatest help that
parents can give their children is their generosity in accepting life, without
forgetting that this is how parents help their children to have a simpler
lifestyle. Moreover, "it is certainly less serious to deny their children
certain comforts or material advantages than to deprive them of the presence of
brothers and sisters, who could help them to grow in humanity and to realize the
beauty of life at all its ages and in all its variety."(90)
62. Lastly, we recall that in order to achieve these objectives, the
family first of all should be a home of faith and prayer, in which God the
Father's presence is sensed, the Word of Jesus is accepted, the Spirit's bond of
love is felt, and where the most pure Mother of God is loved and invoked.(91)
This life of faith and "family prayer has for its very own object family life
itself, which in all its varying circumstances is seen as a call from God and
lived as a filial response to his call. Joys and sorrows, hopes and
disappointments, births and birthday celebrations, wedding anniversaries of the
parents, departures, separations and home-comings, important and far-reaching
decisions, the death of those who are dear, etc.—all of these mark God's loving
intervention in the family's history. They should be seen as suitable moments
for thanksgiving, for petition, for trusting abandonment of the family into the
hands of their common Father in heaven."(92)
63. In this atmosphere of prayer and awareness of the presence and
fatherhood of God, the truths of faith and morals should be taught, understood
and deeply studied with reverence, and the Word of God should be read and lived
with love. In this way Christ's truth will build up a family community based on
the example and guidance of parents who "penetrate the innermost depths of their
children's hearts and leave an impression that the future events in their lives
will not be able to efface."(93)
VI. Learning Stages
64. Parents in particular have the duty to let their children know about
the mysteries of human life, because the family "is, in fact, the best
environment to accomplish the obligation of securing a gradual education in
sexual life. The family has an affective dignity which is suited to making
acceptable without trauma the most delicate realities and to integrating them
harmoniously in a balanced and rich personality."(94) As we have recalled, this
primary task of the family includes the parents' right that their children
should not be obliged to attend courses in school on this subject which are not
in harmony with their religious and moral convictions.(95) The school's task is
not to substitute for the family, rather it is "assisting and completing the
work of parents, furnishing children and adolescents with an evaluation of
sexuality as value and task of the whole person, created male and female in the
image of God."(96)
In this regard, we recall what the Holy Father teaches in Familiaris
Consortio: "The Church is firmly opposed to an often widespread form of
imparting sex information dissociated from moral principles. That would merely
be an introduction to the experience of pleasure and a stimulus leading to the
loss of serenity—while still in the years of innocence—by opening the way to
vice."(97)
Therefore, four general principles will be proposed and afterward the
various stages in a child's development will be examined.
Four Principles Regarding Information about Sexuality
65. 1.) Each child is a unique and unrepeatable person and must receive
individualized formation. Since parents know, understand and love each of their
children in their uniqueness, they are in the best position to decide what the
appropriate time is for providing a variety of information, according to their
children's physical and spiritual growth. No one can take this capacity for
discernment away from conscientious parents.(98)
66. Each child's process of maturation as a person is different.
Therefore, the most intimate aspects, whether biological or emotional, should be
communicated in a personalized dialogue.(99) In their dialogue with each child,
with love and trust, parents communicate something about their own self-giving
which makes them capable of giving witness to aspects of the emotional dimension
of sexuality that could not be transmitted in other ways.
67. Experience shows that this dialogue works out better when the parent
who communicates the biological, emotional, moral and spiritual information is
of the same sex as the child or young person. Being aware of the role, emotions
and problems of their own sex, mothers have a special bond with their daughters,
and fathers with their sons. This natural bond should be respected. Therefore,
parents who are alone will have to act with great sensitivity when speaking with
a child of the opposite sex, and they may choose to entrust communicating the
most intimate details to a trustworthy person of the same sex as the child.
Through this collaboration of a subsidiary nature, parents can take advantage of
expert, well-formed educators in the school or parish community, or from
Catholic associations.
68. 2.) The moral dimension must always be part of their explanations.
Parents should stress that Christians are called to live the gift of sexuality
according to the plan of God who is Love, i.e., in the context of marriage or of
consecrated virginity and also celibacy.(100) They must insist on the positive
value of chastity and its capacity to generate true love for other persons. This
is the most radical and important moral aspect of chastity. Only a person who
knows how to be chaste will know how to love in marriage or in virginity.
69. From the earliest age, parents may observe the beginning of
instinctive genital activity in their child. It should not be considered
repressive to correct such habits gently that could become sinful later, and,
when necessary, to teach modesty as the child grows. It is always important to
justify the judgment of morally rejecting certain attitudes contrary to the
dignity of the person and chastity on adequate, valid and convincing grounds,
both at the level of reason and faith, hence in a positive framework with a high
concept of personal dignity. Many parental admonitions are merely reproofs or
recommendations which the children perceive more as the result of fear of
certain social consequences, or related to one's public reputation, rather than
arising out of a love that seeks their true good. "I exhort you to correct, with
the greatest commitment, the vices and passions that assail us in every age. For
if in some stage of our life we sail on, deprecating the values of virtue and
thereby suffer continuous shipwreck, we risk arriving in port devoid of all
spiritual charge."(101)
70. 3.) Formation in chastity and timely information regarding sexuality
must be provided in the broadest context of education for love. It is not
sufficient, therefore, to provide information about sex together with objective
moral principles. Constant help is also required for the growth of children's
spiritual life, so that the biological development and impulses they begin to
experience will always be accompanied by a growing love of God, the Creator and
Redeemer, and an ever greater awareness of the dignity of each human person and
his or her body. In the light of the mystery of Christ and the Church, parents
can illustrate the positive values of human sexuality in the context of the
person's original vocation to love and the universal call to holiness.
71. Therefore, in talks with children, suitable advice should always be
given regarding how to grow in the love of God and one's neighbor, and how to
overcome any difficulties: "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 foster devotion to the Immaculate Mother of God."(102)
72. To teach children how to evaluate the environments they frequent
with a critical sense and true autonomy, as well as to accustom them to
detachment in using the mass media, parents should always present positive
models and suitable ways of using their vital energies, the meaning of
friendship and solidarity in the overall area of society and of the Church.
When deviant tendencies and attitudes are present, which require great
prudence and caution so as to recognize and evaluate situations properly,
parents should also have recourse to specialists with solid scientific and moral
formation in order to identify the causes over and above the symptoms, and help
the subjects to overcome difficulties in a serious and clear way. Pedagogic
action should be directed more to the causes rather than to directly repressing
the phenomenon,(103) and, if necessary, they should seek the help of qualified
persons, such as doctors, educational experts and psychologists with an upright
Christian sensitivity.
73. The objective of the parents' educational task is to pass on to
their children the conviction that chastity in one's state in life is possible
and that chastity brings joy. Joy springs from an awareness of maturation and
harmony in one's emotional life, a gift of God and a gift of love that makes
self-giving possible in the framework of one's vocation. Man is in fact the only
creature on earth whom God wanted for its own sake, and "man can fully discover
his true self only in a sincere giving of himself."(104) "Christ gave laws for
everyone.... I do not prohibit you from marrying, nor am I against your enjoying
yourself. I only want you to do this with temperance, without indecency, guilt
and sin. I do not make a law that you should flee to the mountains and deserts,
rather that you should be good, modest and chaste, as you live in the midst of
the cities."(105)
74. God's help is never lacking if each person makes the necessary
commitment to respond to his grace. In helping, forming and respecting their
children's conscience, parents should see that they receive the sacraments with
awareness, guiding them by their own example. If children and young people
experience the effects of God's grace and mercy in the sacraments, they will be
capable of living chastity well, as a gift of God, for his glory and in order to
love him and other people. Necessary and supernaturally effective help is
provided by the Sacrament of Reconciliation, especially if a regular confessor
is available. Although it does not necessarily coincide with the role of
confessor, spiritual guidance or direction is a valuable aid in progressively
enlightening the stages of growth and as moral support.
Reading well-chosen and recommended books of formation is also of great
help both in offering a wider and deeper formation and in providing examples and
testimonies of virtue.
75. Once the objectives of the information to be provided have been
identified, the time and ways must be specified, starting from childhood.
4.) Parents should provide this information with great delicacy, but
clearly and at the appropriate time. Parents are well aware that their children
must be treated in a personalized way, according to the personal conditions of
their physiological and psychological development, and taking into due
consideration the cultural environment of life and the adolescent's daily
experience. In order to evaluate properly what they should say to each child, it
is very important that parents first of all seek light from the Lord in prayer
and that they discuss this together so that their words will be neither too
explicit nor too vague. Giving too many details to children is
counterproductive. But delaying the first information for too long is imprudent,
because every human person has natural curiosity in this regard and, sooner or
later, everyone begins to ask themselves questions, especially in cultures where
too much can be seen, even in public.
76. In general, the first sexual information to be given to a small
child does not deal with genital sexuality, but rather with pregnancy and the
birth of a brother or sister. The child's natural curiosity is stimulated, for
example, when it sees the signs of pregnancy in its mother and experiences
waiting for a baby. Parents can take advantage of this happy experience in order
to communicate some simple facts about pregnancy, but always in the deepest
context of wonder at the creative work of God, who wants the new life he has
given to be cared for in the mother's body, near her heart.
Children's Principal Stages of Development
77. It is important for parents to take their children's needs into
consideration during the different stages of development. Keeping in mind that
each child should receive individualized formation, parents can adapt the stages
of education in love to the particular requirements of each child.
1. The Years of Innocence
78. It can be said that a child is in the stage described in John Paul
II's words as "the years of innocence"(106) from about five years of age until
puberty—the beginning of which can be set at the first signs of changes in the
boy or girl's body (the visible effect of an increased production of sexual
hormones). This period of tranquillity and serenity must never be disturbed by
unnecessary information about sex. During those years, before any physical
sexual development is evident, it is normal for the child's interests to turn to
other aspects of life. The rudimentary instinctive sexuality of very small
children has disappeared. Boys and girls of this age are not particularly
interested in sexual problems, and they prefer to associate with children of
their own sex. So as not to disturb this important natural phase of growth,
parents will recognize that prudent formation in chaste love during this period
should be indirect, in preparation for puberty, when direct information will be
necessary.
79. During this stage of development, children are normally at ease with
their body and its functions. They accept the need for modesty in dress and
behavior. Although they are aware of the physical differences between the two
sexes, the growing child generally shows little interest in genital functions.
The discovery of the wonders of creation which accompanies this phase and the
experiences in this regard at home and in school should also be oriented toward
the stages of catechesis and preparation for the sacraments which takes place
within the ecclesial community.
80. Nonetheless, this period of childhood is not without its own
significance in terms of psychosexual development. A growing boy or girl is
learning from adult example and family experience what it means to be a woman or
a man. Certainly, expressions of natural tenderness and sensitivity should not
be discouraged among boys, nor should girls be excluded from vigorous physical
activities. On the other hand, in some societies subjected to ideological
pressures, parents should also protect themselves from an exaggerated opposition
to what is defined as a "stereotyping of roles." The real differences between
the two sexes should not be ignored or minimized, and in a healthy family
environment children will learn that it is natural for a certain difference to
exist between the usual family and domestic roles of men and women.
81. During this stage, girls will generally be developing a maternal
interest in babies, motherhood and homemaking.
By constantly taking the motherhood of the most holy Virgin Mary as a
model, they should be encouraged to value their femininity.
82. In this period, a boy is at a relatively tranquil stage of
development. This is often the easiest time for him to set up a good
relationship with his father. At this time, he should learn that, although it
must be considered as a divine gift, his masculinity is not a sign of
superiority with regard to women, but a call from God to take on certain roles
and responsibilities. Boys should be discouraged from becoming overly aggressive
or too concerned about physical prowess as proof of their virility.
83. Nonetheless, in the context of moral and sexual information, various
problems can arise in this stage of childhood. In some societies today, there
are planned and determined attempts to impose premature sex information on
children. But, at this stage of development, children are still not capable of
fully understanding the value of the affective dimension of sexuality. They
cannot understand and control sexual imagery within the proper context of moral
principles and, for this reason, they cannot integrate premature sexual
information with moral responsibility. Such information tends to shatter their
emotional and educational development and to disturb the natural serenity of
this period of life. Parents should politely but firmly exclude any attempts to
violate children's innocence because such attempts compromise the spiritual,
moral and emotional development of growing persons who have a right to their
innocence.
84. A further problem arises when children receive premature sex
information from the mass media or from their peers who have been led astray or
received premature sex education. In this case, parents will have to begin to
give carefully limited sexual information, usually to correct immoral and
erroneous information or to control obscene language.
85. Sexual violence with regard to children is not infrequent. Parents
must protect their children, first by teaching them a form of modesty and
reserve with regard to strangers, as well as by giving suitable sexual
information, but without going into details and particulars that might upset or
frighten them.
86. As in the first years of life also during childhood, parents should
encourage a spirit of collaboration, obedience, generosity and self-denial in
their children, as well as a capacity for self-reflection and sublimation. In
fact, a characteristic of this period of development is an attraction toward
intellectual activities. Using the intellect makes it possible to acquire the
strength and ability to control the surrounding situation and, before long, to
control bodily instincts, so as to transform them into intellectual and rational
activities.
An undisciplined or spoiled child is inclined toward a certain
immaturity and moral weakness in future years because chastity is difficult to
maintain if a person develops selfish or disordered habits and cannot behave
with proper concern and respect for others. Parents should present objective
standards of what is right and wrong, thereby creating a sure moral framework
for life.
2. Puberty
87. Puberty, which constitutes the initial phase of adolescence, is a
time in which parents are called to be particularly attentive to the Christian
education of their children. This is a time of self-discovery and "of one's own
inner world, the time of generous plans, the time when the feeling of love
awakens, with the biological impulses of sexuality, the time of the desire to be
together, the time of particularly intense joy connected with the exhilarating
discovery of life. But often it is also the age of deeper questioning, of
anguished or even frustrating searching, of a certain mistrust of others and
dangerous introspection, and the age sometimes of the first experiences of
setbacks and of disappointments."(107)
88. Parents should pay particular attention to their children's gradual
development and to their physical and psychological changes, which are decisive
in the maturing of the personality. Without showing anxiety, fear or obsessive
concern, parents will not let cowardice or convenience hinder their work. This
is naturally an important moment for teaching the value of chastity, which will
also be expressed in the way sexual information is given. In this phase,
educational needs also concern the genital aspects, hence requiring a
presentation both on the level of values and the reality as a whole. Moreover,
this implies an understanding of the context of procreation, marriage and the
family, a context which must be kept present in an authentic task of sexual
education.(108)
89. Beginning with the changes which their sons and daughters experience
in their bodies, parents are thus bound to give more detailed explanations about
sexuality (in an on-going relationship of trust and friendship) each time girls
confide in their mothers and boys in their fathers. This relationship of trust
and friendship should have already started in the first years of life.
90. Another important task for parents is following the gradual
physiological development of their daughters and helping them joyfully to accept
the development of their femininity in a bodily, psychological and spiritual
sense.(109) Therefore, normally, one should discuss the cycles of fertility and
their meaning. But it is still not necessary to give detailed explanations about
sexual union, unless this is explicitly requested.
91. It is very important for adolescent boys to be helped to understand
the stages of physical and physiological development of the genital organs
before they get this information from their companions or from persons who are
not well-intentioned. The physiological facts about male puberty should be
presented in an atmosphere of serenity, positively and with reserve, in the
framework of marriage, family and fatherhood. Instructing both adolescent girls
and boys should also include detailed and sufficient information about the
bodily and psychological characteristics of the opposite sex, about whom their
curiosity is growing.
In this area, the additional supportive information of a conscientious
doctor or even a psychologist can help parents, without separating this
information from what pertains to the faith and the educational work of the
priest.
92. Through a trusting and open dialogue, parents can guide their
daughters in facing any emotional perplexity, and support the value of Christian
chastity out of consideration for the other sex. Instruction for both girls and
boys should aim at pointing out the beauty of motherhood and the wonderful
reality of procreation, as well as the deep meaning of virginity. In this way
they will be helped to go against the hedonistic mentality which is very
widespread today and particularly, at such a decisive stage, in preventing the
"contraceptive mentality," which unfortunately is very common and which girls
will have to face later in marriage.
93. During puberty, the psychological and emotional development of boys
can make them vulnerable to erotic fantasies and they may be tempted to try
sexual experiences. Parents should be close to their sons and correct the
tendency to use sexuality in a hedonistic and materialistic way. Therefore, they
should remind boys about God's gift, received in order to cooperate with him "to
actualize in history the original blessing of the Creator—that of transmitting
by procreation the divine image from person to person"; and this will strengthen
their awareness that, "fecundity is the fruit and the sign of conjugal love, the
living testimony of the full reciprocal self-giving of the spouses."(110) In
this way sons will also learn the respect due to women. The parents' task of
informing and instructing is necessary, not because their sons would not know
about sexual reality in other ways, but so that they will know about it in the
right light.
94. In a positive and prudent way, parents will carry out what the
fathers of the Second Vatican Council requested: "It is important to give
suitable and timely instruction to young people, above all in the heart of their
own families, about the dignity of married love, its role and its exercise; in
this way they will be able to engage in honorable courtship and enter upon a
marriage of their own."(111)
Positive information about sexuality should always be part of a
formation plan so as to create the Christian context in which all information
about life, sexual activity, anatomy and hygiene is given. Therefore, the
spiritual and moral dimensions must always be predominant so as to have two
special purposes: presenting God's commandments as a way of life, and the
formation of a right conscience.
To the young man who asked him what he had to do in order to attain
eternal life, Jesus replied: "If you would enter life, keep the commandments"
(Mt 19:17). After listing the ones that concern love for one's neighbor, Jesus
summed them up in this positive formulation: "You shall love your neighbor as
yourself" (Mt 19:19). In order to present the commandments as God's gift
(written by his hand, cf. Ex 31:18), expressing the covenant with him, confirmed
by Jesus' own example, it is very important for the adolescent not to separate
the commandments from their relationship with a rich interior life, free from
selfishness.(112)
95. As its departure point, the formation of conscience requires being
enlightened about God's project of love for every single person, the positive
and liberating value of the moral law, and awareness both of the weakness caused
by sin and the means of grace which strengthen us on our path toward the good
and toward salvation.
"Moral conscience, present at the heart of the person"—which is "man's
most secret core and sanctuary," as the Second Vatican Council affirms,(113)
"enjoins him at the appropriate moment to do good and to avoid evil. It also
judges particular choices, approving those that are good and denouncing those
that are evil. It bears witness to the authority of truth in reference to the
supreme Good to which the human person is drawn, and it welcomes the
commandments."(114)
In fact, "conscience is a judgment of reason whereby the human person
recognizes the moral quality of a concrete act that he is going to perform, is
in the process of performing, or has already completed."(115) Therefore, the
formation of conscience requires being enlightened about the truth and God's
plan and must not be confused with a vague subjective feeling or with personal
opinion.
96. In answering children's questions, parents should offer
well-reasoned arguments about the great value of chastity and show the
intellectual and human weakness of theories that inspire permissive and
hedonistic behavior. They will answer clearly, without giving excessive
importance to pathological sexual problems. Nor will they give the false
impression that sex is something shameful or dirty, because it is a great gift
of God who placed the ability to generate life in the human body, thereby
sharing his creative power with us. Indeed, both in the Scriptures (cf. Sg 1-8;
Hos 2; Jer 3:1-3; Ez 23, etc.) and in the Christian mystical tradition,(116)
conjugal love has always been considered a symbol and image of God's love for
us.
97. Since boys and girls at puberty are particularly vulnerable to
emotional influences, through dialogue and the way they live, parents have the
duty to help their children resist negative outside influences that may lead
them to have little regard for Christian formation in love and chastity.
Especially in societies overwhelmed by consumer pressures, parents should
sometimes watch out for their children's relations with young people of the
opposite sex—without making it too obvious. Even if they are socially
acceptable, some habits of speech and conduct are not morally correct and
represent a way of trivializing sexuality, reducing it to a consumer object.
Parents should therefore teach their children the value of Christian modesty,
moderate dress, and, when it comes to trends, the necessary autonomy
characteristic of a man or woman with a mature personality.(117)
3. Adolescence in One's Plan in Life
98. In terms of personal development, adolescence represents the period
of self-projection and therefore the discovery of one's vocation. Both for
physiological, social and cultural reasons, this period tends to be longer today
than in the past. Christian parents should "educate the children for life in
such a way that each one may fully perform his or her role according to the
vocation received from God."(118) This is an extremely important task which
basically constitutes the culmination of the parents' mission. Although this
task is always important, it becomes especially so in this period of their
children's life: "Therefore, in the life of each member of the lay faithful
there are particularly significant and decisive moments for discerning God's
call.... Among these are the periods of adolescence and young adulthood."(119)
99. It is very important for young people not to find themselves alone
in discerning their personal vocation. Parental advice is relevant, at times
decisive, as well as the support of a priest or other properly formed persons
(in parishes, associations or in the new fruitful ecclesial movements, etc.) who
are capable of helping them discover the vocational meaning of life and the
various forms of the universal call to holiness. "Christ's 'Follow me' makes
itself heard on the different paths taken by the disciples and confessors of the
divine Redeemer."(120)
100. For centuries, the concept of vocation was reserved exclusively for
the priesthood and religious life. In recalling the Lord's teaching, "You,
therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Mt 5:48), the
Second Vatican Council renewed the universal call to holiness.(121) As Pope Paul
VI wrote shortly after the Council: "This strong invitation to holiness could be
regarded as the most characteristic element in the whole Magisterium of the
Council, and so to say, its ultimate purpose."(122) This was reiterated by Pope
John Paul II: "The Second Vatican Council has significantly spoken on the
universal call to holiness. It is possible to say that this call to holiness is
precisely the basic charge entrusted to all the sons and daughters of the Church
by a Council which intended to bring a renewal of Christian life based on the
gospel.(123) This charge is not a simple moral exhortation, but an undeniable
requirement arising from the mystery of the Church."(124)
God calls everyone to holiness. He has very precise plans for each
person, a personal vocation which each must recognize, accept and develop. To
all Christians—priests, laity, married people or celibates—the words of the
Apostle of the Nations apply: "God's chosen ones, holy and beloved" (Col 3:12).
101. Therefore, in catechesis and the formation given both within and
outside of the family, the Church's teaching on the sublime value of virginity
and celibacy must never be lacking,(125) but also the vocational meaning of
marriage, which a Christian can never regard as only a human venture. As St.
Paul says "This is a great mystery, and I mean in reference to Christ and the
Church" (Eph 5:32). Giving young people this firm conviction is of supreme
importance for the good both of the Church and humanity which "depend in great
part on parents and on the family life that they build in their homes."(126)
102. Parents should always strive to give example and witness with their
own lives to fidelity to God and one another in the marriage covenant. Their
example is especially decisive in adolescence, the phase when young people are
looking for lived and attractive behavior models. Since sexual problems become
more evident at this time, parents should also help them to love the beauty and
strength of chastity through prudent advice, highlighting the inestimable value
of prayer and frequent fruitful recourse to the sacraments for a chaste life,
especially personal confession. Furthermore, parents should be capable of giving
their children, when necessary, a positive and serene explanation of the solid
points of Christian morality such as, for example, the indissolubility of
marriage and the relationship between love and procreation, as well as the
immorality of premarital relations, abortion, contraception and masturbation.
With regard to these immoral situations that contradict the meaning of giving in
marriage, it is also good to recall: "The two dimensions of conjugal union, the
unitive and the procreative, cannot be artificially separated without damaging
the deepest truth of the conjugal act itself."(127) In this regard, an in-depth
and reflective knowledge of the documents of the Church dealing with these
problems will be of valuable assistance to parents.(128)
103. Masturbation particularly constitutes a very serious disorder that
is illicit in itself and cannot be morally justified, although "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."(129) Therefore, adolescents should be helped to
overcome manifestations of this disorder, which often express the inner
conflicts of their age and, in many cases, a selfish vision of sexuality.
104. A particular problem that can appear during the process of sexual
maturation is homosexuality, which is also spreading more and more in urbanized
societies. This phenomenon must be presented with balanced judgment, in the
light of the documents of the Church.(130) Young people need to be helped to
distinguish between the concepts of what is normal and abnormal, between
subjective guilt and objective disorder, avoiding what would arouse hostility.
On the other hand, the structural and complementary orientation of sexuality
must be well clarified in relation to marriage, procreation and Christian
chastity. "Homosexuality refers to relations between men or between women who
experience an exclusive or predominant sexual attraction toward persons of the
same sex. It has taken a great variety of forms through the centuries and in
different cultures. Its psychological genesis remains largely unexplained."(131)
A distinction must be made between a tendency that can be innate and acts of
homosexuality that "are intrinsically disordered"(132) and contrary to natural
law.(133)
Especially when the practice of homosexual acts has not become a habit,
many cases can benefit from appropriate therapy. In any case, persons in this
situation must be accepted with respect, dignity and delicacy, and all forms of
unjust discrimination must be avoided. If parents notice the appearance of this
tendency or of related behavior in their children, during childhood or
adolescence, they should seek help from expert qualified persons in order to
obtain all possible assistance.
For most homosexual persons, this condition constitutes a trial. "They
must be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust
discrimination in their regard should be avoided. These persons are called to
fulfill God's will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to unite to the
sacrifice of the Lord's cross the difficulties they may encounter from their
condition."(134) "Homosexual persons are called to chastity."(135)
105. Awareness of the positive significance of sexuality for personal
harmony and development, as well as the person's vocation in the family, society
and the Church, always represents the educational horizon to be presented during
the stages of adolescent growth. It must never be forgotten that the disordered
use of sex tends progressively to destroy the person's capacity to love by
making pleasure, instead of sincere self-giving, the end of sexuality and by
reducing other persons to objects of one's own gratification. In this way the
meaning of true love between a man and a woman (love always open to life) is
weakened as well as the family itself. Moreover, this subsequently leads to
disdain for the human life which could be conceived, which, in some situations,
is then regarded as an evil that threatens personal pleasure.(136) The
trivialization of sexuality is among the principal factors which have led to
contempt for new life. Only a true love is able to protect life.(137)
106. We must also remember how adolescents in industrialized societies
are preoccupied and at times disturbed not only by the problems of
self-identity, discovering their plan in life and difficulties in successfully
integrating sexuality in a mature and well-oriented personality. They also have
problems in accepting themselves and their bodies. In this regard, out-patient
and specialized centers for adolescents have now sprung up, often characterized
by purely hedonistic purposes. On the other hand, a healthy culture of the body
leads to accepting oneself as a gift and as an incarnated spirit, called to be
open to God and society. A healthy culture of the body should accompany
formation in this very constructive period, which is also not without its risks.
In the face of what hedonistic groups propose, especially in affluent
societies, it is very important to present young people with the ideals of human
and Christian solidarity and concrete ways of being committed in Church
associations, movements and voluntary Catholic and missionary activities.
107. Friendships are very important in this period. According to local
social conditions and customs, adolescence is a time when young people enjoy
more autonomy in their relations with others and in the hours they keep in
family life. Without taking away their rightful autonomy, when necessary,
parents should know how to say "no" to their children(138) and, at the same
time, they should know how to cultivate a taste in their children for what is
beautiful, noble and true. Parents should also be sensitive to adolescents'
self-esteem, which may pass through a confused phase when they are not clear
about what personal dignity means and requires.
108. Through loving and patient advice, parents will help young people
to avoid an excessive closing in on themselves. When necessary, they will also
teach them to go against social trends that tend to stifle true love and an
appreciation for spiritual realities: "Be sober, be watchful. Your adversary the
devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour. Resist him,
firm in your faith, knowing that the same experience of suffering is required of
your brotherhood throughout the world. And after you have suffered a little
while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ,
will himself restore, establish, and strengthen you" (1 Pet 5:8-10).
4. Toward Adulthood
109. It is not within the scope of this document to deal with the
subject of proximate and immediate preparation for marriage, required for
Christian formation and particularly recommended by the needs of the times and
Church teaching.(139) Nevertheless, it must be kept in mind that the parents'
mission does not end when their children come of legal age which, in any case,
varies according to different cultures and laws. Some particularly significant
moments for young people are also when they enter the working world or higher
education, moments when they come into contact with different behavior models
and occasions that represent a real personal challenge—a brusque contact at
times, but a potentially beneficial one.
110. By keeping open a confident dialogue that encourages a sense of
responsibility and respects their children's legitimate and necessary autonomy,
parents will always be their reference point, through both advice and example,
so that the process of broader socialization will make it possible for them to
achieve a mature and integrated personality, internally and socially. In a
special way, care should be taken that children do not discontinue their faith
relationship with the Church and her activities which, on the contrary, should
be intensified. They should learn how to choose models of thought and life for
their future and how to become committed in the cultural and social area as
Christians, without fear of professing that they are Christians and without
losing a sense of vocation and the search for their own vocation.
In the period leading to engagement and the choice of that preferred
attachment which can lead to forming a family, the role of parents should not
consist merely in prohibitions, much less in imposing the choice of a fiancé‚ or
fiancée. On the contrary, they should help their children to define the
necessary conditions for a serious, honorable and promising union, and support
them on a path of clear and coherent Christian witness in relating with the
person of the other sex.
111. Parents should avoid adopting the widespread mentality whereby
girls are given every recommendation regarding virtue and the value of
virginity, while the same is not required for boys, as if everything were licit
for them.
For a Christian conscience and a vision of marriage and the family, St.
Paul's recommendation to the Philippians holds for every type of vocation:
"Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure,
whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence, if there
is anything worthy of praise, think about these things" (Phil 4:8).
VII. Practical Guidelines
112. In the context of education in the virtues, parents thus have the
task of making themselves the promoters of their children's authentic education
for love. Through its very nature, the primary generation of a human life in the
procreative act must be followed by the secondary generation, whereby parents
help their child to develop his or her own personality.
Therefore, summing up what has been said so far and putting it on a
practical level, whatever is set out in the following paragraphs is
recommended.(140)
Recommendations for Parents and Educators
113. It is recommended that parents be aware of their own educational
role and defend and carry out this primary right and duty.(141) It follows that
any educative activity, related to education for love and carried out by persons
outside the family, must be subject to the parents' acceptance of it and must be
seen not as a substitute but as a support for their work. In fact, "Sex
education, which is a basic right and duty of parents, must always be carried
out under their attentive guidance whether at home or in educational centers
chosen and controlled by them."(142) Frequently parents are not lacking in
awareness and effort, but they are quite alone, defenseless and often made to
feel they are wrong. They need understanding, but also support and help by
groups, associations and institutions.
1. Recommendations for Parents
114. 1.) It is recommended that parents associate with other parents,
not only in order to protect, maintain or fill out their own role as the primary
educators of their children, especially in the area of education for love,(143)
but also to fight against damaging forms of sex education and to ensure that
their children will be educated according to Christian principles and in a way
that is consonant with their personal development.
115. 2.) In the case where parents are helped by others
in educating their own children for love, it is recommended
that they keep themselves precisely informed on the content
and methodology with which such supplementary education is imparted.(144) No
one can bind children or young people to secrecy about the content and method of
instruction provided outside the family.
116. 3.) We are aware of the difficulty and often the impossibility for
parents to participate fully in all supplementary instruction provided outside
the home. Nevertheless, they have the right to be informed about the structure
and content of the program. In all cases, their right to be present during
classes cannot be denied.(145)
117. 4.) It is recommended that parents attentively follow every form of
sex education that is given to their children outside the home, removing their
children whenever this education does not correspond to their own
principles.(146) However, such a decision of the parents must not become grounds
for discrimination against their children.(147) On the other hand, parents who
remove their children from such instruction have the duty to give them an
adequate formation, appropriate to each child or young person's stage of
development.
2. Recommendations for All Educators
118. 1.) Since each child or young person must be able to live his or
her own sexuality in conformity with Christian principles, and hence be able to
exercise the virtue of chastity, no educator—not even parents—can interfere with
this right to chastity (cf. Mt 18:4-7).(148)
119. 2.) It is recommended that respect be given to the right of the
child and the young person to be adequately informed by their own parents on
moral and sexual questions in a way that complies with his or her desire to be
chaste and to be formed in chastity.(149) This right is further qualified by a
child's stage of development, his or her capacity to integrate moral truth with
sexual information, and by respect for his or her innocence and tranquillity.
120. 3.) It is recommended that respect be given to the right of the
child or young person to withdraw from any form of sexual instruction imparted
outside the home.(150) Neither the children nor other members of their family
should ever be penalized or discriminated against for this decision.
Four Working Principles and Their Particular Norms
121. In the light of these recommendations, education for love can take
concrete form in four working principles.
122. 1.) Human sexuality is a sacred mystery and must be presented
according to the doctrinal and moral teaching of the Church, always bearing in
mind the effects of original sin.
Informed by Christian reverence and realism, this doctrinal principle
must guide every moment of education for love. In an age when the mystery has
been taken from human sexuality, parents must take care to avoid trivializing
human sexuality, in their teaching and in the help offered by others. In
particular, profound respect must be maintained for the difference between man
and woman which reflects the love and fruitfulness of God himself.
123. At the same time, when teaching Catholic doctrine and morality
about sexuality, the lasting effects of original sin must be taken into account,
that is to say, human weakness and the need for the grace of God to overcome
temptations and avoid sin. In this regard, the conscience of every individual
must be formed clearly, precisely and in accord with spiritual values. But
Catholic morality is never limited to teaching about avoiding sin. It also deals
with growth in the Christian virtues and developing the capacity for self-giving
in the vocation of one's own life.
124. 2.) Only information proportionate to each phase of their
individual development should be presented to children and young people.
This principle of timing has already been presented in the study of the
various phases of the development of children and young people. Parents and all
who help them should be sensitive: (a) to the different phases of development,
in particular, the "years of innocence" and puberty, (b) to the way each child
or young person experiences the various stages of life, (c) to particular
problems associated with these stages.
125. In the light of this principle, the relevance of timing in relation
to specific problems can also be indicated.
(a) In later adolescence, young people can first be introduced to the
knowledge of the signs of fertility and then to the natural regulation of
fertility, but only in the context of education for love, fidelity in marriage,
God's plan for procreation and respect for human life.
(b) Homosexuality should not be discussed before adolescence unless a
specific serious problem has arisen in a particular situation.(151) This subject
must be presented only in terms of chastity, health and "the truth about human
sexuality in its relationship to the family as taught by the Church."(152)
(c) Sexual perversions that are relatively rare should not be dealt with
except through individual counseling, as the parents' response to genuine
problems.
126. 3.) No material of an erotic nature should be presented to children
or young people of any age, individually or in a group.
This principle of decency must safeguard the virtue of Christian
chastity.
Therefore in passing on sexual information in the context of education
for love, the instruction must always be "positive and prudent"(153) and "clear
and delicate."(154) These four words used by the Catholic Church exclude every
form of unacceptable content in sexual education.(155)
Moreover, even if they are not erotic, graphic and realistic
representations of childbirth, for example in a film, should be made known
gradually, so as not to create fear and negative attitudes toward procreation in
girls and young women.
127. 4.) No one should ever be invited, let alone obliged, to act in any
way that could objectively offend against modesty or which could subjectively
offend against his or her own delicacy or sense of privacy.
This principle of respect for the child excludes all improper forms of
involving children and young people. In this regard, among other things, this
can include the following methods that abuse sex education: (a) every
"dramatized" representation, mime or "role playing" which depict genital or
erotic matters, (b) making drawings, charts or models etc., of this nature, (c)
seeking personal information about sexual questions(156) or asking that family
information be divulged, (d) oral or written exams about genital or erotic
questions.
Particular Methods
128. Parents and all who help them should keep these principles and
norms in mind when they take up various methods which seem suitable in the light
of parental and expert experience. We will now go on to single out these
recommended methods. The main methods to |