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The Meaning of Christian Chastity
Our Lady of Fatima said that more souls go to hell for sins "of
the flesh" that is, sins against chastity, than for any other sin. Thus it is
important that we know what God MEANS when He commands us TO BE CHASTE. This
brief article by Father Pelagia, a Catholic theologian, will help us understand
our very serious obligations to God in this matter.
by Father Bruno R. Pelagia,
Doctor of Sacred
Theology
It is these who have not defiled themselves . . . for they
are chaste . . . These have been redeemed from mankind as firstfruits for
God. (Apoc. 14:4)
From the time of creation God has given to the sacred powers and
appetites of fatherhood and motherhood a high and holy place in His Providence.
But the body of a man and its power of fatherhood became doubly sacred when God
the Son, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, became Man - perfect Man and
perfect God. The body of a woman with its power of motherhood became doubly
sacred when the Blessed Virgin Mary carried the Son of God within Her and
delivered Him into the world in a stable at Bethlehem. God is accustomed to
want restrictions of the use of anything very sacred. One who would use a
sacred object, like a Mass chalice, to shovel up dirt or filth, would be guilty
of a mortal sin, for he would be gravely misusing something sacred.
When anyone has a conscience enlightened according to true
Christian teaching, he knows that he commits a great sin if he deliberately
uses and enjoys the powers and appetites of fatherhood or motherhood without
God's authority. Because unmarried persons never have this authority, anything
they undertake to satisfy (even partially) these appetites will be mortally
sinful, whether by actions or by daydreaming or by reading or by certain
entertainments. Even in married life God gives His authority to satisfy these
appetites only within His sacred plan. This plan requires a self-sacrificing
love which must be a worthy sign of the love of the divine Bridegroom for His
Church, for which He sacrificed His life on the Cross and to which He has given
His Body in the Holy Eucharist. These teachings make up the law of chastity. To
violate chastity, to be unchaste, is to go against the teaching of the Holy
Scriptures, especially 1 Cor. 6:9-10; Ephesians 5:5; Deut. 23:17; Matt. 5:28,
as well as the sixth and ninth commandments of God given in Exodus 20:14,17.
All the Popes and all the Saints (who have written on the subject) have taught
this doctrine. It is among the most fundamental in the Christian faith.
As God's minister I have presented a teaching which the Catholic
Church always insists upon and which her ministers may never water down. We
will not succeed for long, however, in living by this teaching of chastity
without God's help: "l knew that I could not otherwise be continent (chaste)
except God gave it" (Wis. 8:21). Divine help is available in abundance if we
use the means to gain it, which are: that we avoid situations where we should
fear we would sin: that we humbly pray every day for help, especially when
tempted, and practice devotion to the Blessed Virgin; that we make frequent and
worthy use of the Sacraments; that, along with a program of Christian
self-denial, we renew each day the sincere resolve to keep ourselves in the
grace and friendship of God always, no matter what the cost, knowing that it is
well worth it.
In order to protect ourselves and others from some often
dangerous temptations against chastity, we have the duty of modest dress and
behavior. Pope Pius XI had good reasons when he condemned the nudist colony
movement as undermining and destroying modesty and shame, nature's two
protectors of chastity. The Holy Father called the use and cult of nudism "a
horrible blasphemy."1
How can we judge whether we are dressing immodestly? We have to
duly consider and care about the possible effects of what we do. If we have a
prudent suspicion that a dish of food is poisoned, we do not serve it to anyone
for fear of the harm that could come to him. Even more so we should wisely
avoid risks in the way we dress when we have a prudent fear that sin would
otherwise result, knowing that sin is the greatest of evils.
In this connection when furnishing their homes people sometimes
put up certain pictures and little statues which a good conscience cannot
approve of.2 We speak of objects which are apt to lure some of the persons
who see them to voluntary unchaste pleasure. It is sad how many people are
thoughtless about such things. Likewise when we prudently fear that certain
reading material, certain theater or television programs or other diversions
would lead us to voluntary unchaste pleasure, we are obliged to avoid them.
Pope Pius XII once gave this advice to a group of newlyweds concerning
dangerous reading:
There have ... been talented authors who have written good,
wholesome romances ... But alongside these pure flowers to be found in the huge
garden of imaginative writings, what a large number of poisonous plants there
are! Now these poisonous ones, being more available and readily seen, are
plucked far too often, and because their perfume is penetrating and
intoxicating, it is more willingly inhaled.
"I am no longer a little girl," says a young woman, "and I know
life. Therefore I have the desire and right to know it even better." But the
poor thing does not realize that her language is the language of Eve looking at
the forbidden fruit. And does she by any chance think that to know, love and
participate in life profitably she needs to examine all its abuses and evils?
Likewise some young man says: "I am no longer a little boy, and
at my age sensual discourses and immodest scenes do not affect me." Is he so
sure? (If this were true, it would be a sign of a subconscious badness
resulting from some evil reading he had already done ...)
But do not believe ... that you may sometimes let yourselves
read, perhaps in secret, books you suspect are dangerous. Do not believe that
their poison will not affect you. Fear rather that this effect, because it is
not immediate, is all the more dangerous ... The soul, like an animal suffering
from sleeping sickness, will slowly slide into mortal sin and become God's
enemy.3
The Archbishop St. Anthony Mary Claret, who wrote a moral
theology and many other religious works during the last century, left us some
tips about courtships. He praised the parents of a couple preparing for
marriage and the couple themselves, where the couple managed without dating to
become sufficiently acquainted to enable themselves to wisely choose one
another in marriage. He declared that in their preparation the "best and only
means to assure oneself in this matter are a holy life, prayer, and counsel.
Nevertheless," he adds, "if they choose to marry one another, one can tolerate
their going together for a time, but it must not be for more than a half of a
year ... If the courtship has already lasted a year or more, then, even though
the couple want to marry, they ought not to be allowed to have dates together
any more; for they will have sinned by that time in thought, word, or action,
or it will not be long before one of them does, and it is already a sin to put
oneself in a proximate occasion (or a likely danger) of sinning."
The Saint makes it clear that during this period of going
together, or courtship, which he tolerates, the couple's meetings must be
regulated and chaperoned (or suspended if sin would otherwise likely result) in
such wise that they could be sure of not neglecting their part to stay always
in God's grace.4
It is doubtless true that sometimes there is a blameless
ignorance that excuses some people of certain faults against chastity. But
those who love God are glad to know His law, desiring to keep it. Trusting in
God's help, let us never grow careless about keeping ourselves upright and
pure.
St. Remigius and other Saints thought that a majority of people,
excluding infants, are lost on account of sins against chastity.5 It is wise
to play safe about all-important matters and foolish to do otherwise. "Enter at
the narrow gate: for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to
destruction: and many go in thereat. How narrow is the gate and straight is the
way that leads to life: and few there are that find it!" (Matt. 7:13-14). How
many so weaken their conscience by this sin that they no longer care seriously
whether they live in God's friendship! Let us never forget that the religion
taught by our Savior is not a spineless religion calling for no proofs of love
and conviction. Instead it calls upon young and old alike to practice courage
and zeal and make sacrifices, to stand up against opposition and be ready to
suffer unpopularity, persecution and sometimes death, if they would be counted
faithful followers of Jesus Christ.6
| Footnotes |
| 1. |
Reported in L'Osservatore Romano, March 6, 1935, and
in the public press of that time, St. Alphonsus Liguori, admitting that a
limited measure of immodest exposure can cease to be a grave snare to people
who have grown used to it, adds that those who first introduced it when it was
grave snare, sinned gravely, and he makes it clear that there are limits beyond
which customariness does not remove the grave snare. |
| 2. |
St. Alphonsus Liguori, Theologia Moralis, L. II, n.
56; L. III, n. 424. |
| 3. |
Discourse of August 7, 1940, in Insegnamenti
Pontifici, vol. 15, nn. 155-157 (Rome: Ed. Paoline, 1968.) |
| 4. |
St. Antonio M. Claret, Prontuario de Teologia Moral (Barcelona, 1860), pp. 663-665. |
| 5. |
Reported by St. Cyprian in De bono pudic., I. 1, according
to St. Alphonsus Liguori, where the latter favors this view in his Istruzione al popolo, cap. 6, n. 9. We said, "a majority ... excluding
infants." |
| 6. |
A Declaration on Certain Questions concerning Sexual
Ethics issued Dec. 29, 1975, by the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith by order of Pope Paul VI, treats in detail the matter we have
covered. It has been published in English and other languages by the Vatican
Polyglot Press, Vatican City. The Latin text is in Acta Apostolicae Sedis, an. 1976, pp. 77-96. |
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