Educational
Guidance in Human Love
Sacred
Congregation for Catholic Education
Outlines for
sex education
INTRODUCTION
1. The harmonious
development of the human person progressively reveals in each of us the image of
a child of God. " True education aims at the formation of the human person with
respect to his ultimate goal ".(1) Treating christian education, Vatican Council
II drew attention to the necessity of offering " a positive and prudent sex
education " to children and youth.(2)
The Congregation for
Catholic Education, within the sphere of its competence, considers it proper to
make its contribution for the application of the Conciliar Declarations, as some
Episcopal Conferences have done already.
2. This document,
drawn up with the help of educational experts and submitted to wide
consultation, sets itself a precise objective: to examine the pedagogic aspect
of sex education, indicating appropriate guidelines for the integral formation
of a christian, according to the vocation of each.
Also, though it does
not make explicit citations at every turn, it always presupposes the doctrinal
principles and moral norms pertaining to the matter as proposed by the
Magisterium.
3. The Congregation
for Catholic Education is aware of the cultural and social differences existing
in different countries. These guidelines, therefore, should be adapted by the
respective Episcopates to the pastoral necessities of each local Church.
SIGNIFICANCE OF
SEXUALITY
4. 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. Therefore it is an integral part of the development of the
personality and of its educative process: " It is, in fact, from sex that the
human person receives the characteristics which, on the biological,
psychological and spiritual levels, make that person a man or a woman, and
thereby largely condition his or her progress towards maturity and insertion
into society ".(3)
5. Sexuality
characterises 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 thorough
response to the design of God according to the vocation to which each one is
called.
Sexual intercourse,
ordained towards procreation, is the maximum expression on the physical level of
the communion of love of the married. Divorced from this context of reciprocal
gift - a reality which the christian enjoys, sustained and enriched in a
particular way by the grace of God it loses its significance, exposes the
selfishness of the individual, and is a moral disorder.(4)
6. Sexuality,
oriented, elevated and integrated by love acquires truly human quality. Prepared
by biological and psychological development, it grows harmoniously and is
achieved in the full sense only with the realisation of affective maturity,
which manifests itself in unselfish love and in the total gift of self.
THE ACTUAL
SITUATION
7. One can see -
among christians, too - that there are notable differences with regard to sex
education. In today's climate of moral disorientation a danger arises, whether
of a harmful conformism or prejudice which falsifies the intimate nature of
being human, ushered whole from the hands of the Creator.
8. In order to
respond to such a situation one looks for a suitable sex education from every
source. But if the conviction of its necessity is fairly widely held in theory,
in practice there remain uncertainties and significant differences, either with
regard to the persons and institutions who must assume the educational
responsibility, or in connection with , the contents and methodologies.
9. Educators and
parents are often aware of not being sufficiently prepared to impart adequate
sex education. The school is not always in a position to offer that integral
vision of the matter which would remain incomplete with the scientific
information alone.
10. Particular
difficulties are found in those countries where the urgency of the problem is
not recognised, or where perhaps it is thought that it resolves itself without
specific education.
11. In general,
there is need to recognise that one treats of a difficult undertaking by reason
of the complexity of the diverse elements (physical, psychological, pedagogic,
socio-cultural, juridical, moral and religious) which come together in
educational action.
12. Some catholic
organisations in different parts - with the approval and encouragement of the
local Episcopate - have begun to carry out a positive work of sex education; it
is directed not only to help children and adolescents on the way to
psychological and spiritual maturity, but also and above all to protect them
from the dangers of ignorance and widespread degradation.
13. Also
praiseworthy are the efforts of many who, with scientific seriousness, dedicate
themselves to study the problem, moving from the human sciences and integrating
the results of such research in a project which conforms with human dignity, a
project by the light of the Gospel.
DECLARATIONS OF
THE MAGISTERIUM
14. The
Magisterium's declarations on sex education mark out a course which satisfies
the just requirements of history on the one hand and fidelity to tradition on
the other.(5)
Vatican Council II
in the " Declaration on Christian Education " presents the perspective in which
sex education must be set,(6) affirming the right of young people to receive an
education adequate to their personal requirements.
The Council states:
" With the help of advances in psychology and in the art and science of
teaching, children and young people should be assisted in the harmonious
development of their physical, moral and intellectual endowments. Surmounting
hardships with a gallant and steady heart, they should be helped to acquire
gradually a more mature sense of responsibility towards ennobling their own
lives through constant effort, and toward pursuing authentic freedom. As they
advance in years they should be given positive and prudent sex education ".(7)
15. The Pastoral
Constitution " Gaudium et spes ", in speaking of the dignity of marriage and the
family presents the latter as the preferential place for the education of young
people in chastity.(8) But since this is an aspect of education as a whole, the
co-operation of teachers with parents is needed in the accomplishment of their
mission.(9) Such education, therefore, must be offered within the family to
children and adolescents in a gradual manner, always considering the total
formation of the person (10)
16. In the Apostolic
Exhortation on the mission of the christian family in the world as it is, John
Paul II reserves an important place to sex education as valuable to the person.
" Education to love as self giving, says the Holy Father, also constitutes the
indispensable premise for parents called to offer their children a clear and
delicate sex education. Faced with a culture which 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 manifests its
inmost meaning in leading the person to the gift of self in love ".(11)
17. The Holy Father
immediately goes on to speak of the school, which is responsible for this
education in service of and in harmony with parents. " Sex education, which is a
basic right and duty of parents, must also be carried out under their attentive
guidance, whether at home or in educational centres 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 ".(12)
In order for the
value of sexuality to reach its full realisation, " education for chastity
is absolutely essential, for it is a virtue that develops a person's authentic
maturity and makes him or her capable of respecting and fostering the "nuptial
meaning " of the body ".(13) It consists in self control, in the capacity of
guiding the sexual instinct to the service of love and of integrating it in the
development of the person. Fruit of the grace of God and of our cooperation,
chastity tends to harmonise the different components of the human person, and to
overcome the frailty of human nature, marked by sin, so that each person can
follow the vocation to which God has called.
In the commitment to
an enlightened education in chastity, "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 " (14)
19. In the teaching
of John Paul II, the positive consideration of values, which one ought to
discover and appreciate, precedes the norm which one must not violate.
This norm, nevertheless, interprets and formulates the values for which people
must strive.
" 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. For this reason 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 ".(15)
20. This document,
therefore, starting from the christian vision of man and woman and appealing to
the principles enunciated recently by the Magisterium, desires to present to
educators some fundamental guidelines for sex education and for the conditions
and mode of presenting it at the operative level.
I.
SOME FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
21. Every type of education is inspired by
a specific conception of man and woman. Christian education aims to promote the
realisation of man and woman through the development of all their being,
incarnate spirits, and of the gifts of nature and of grace by which they are
enriched by God. Christian education is rooted in the faith which " throws a new
light on all things and makes known the full ideal which God has set for man
".(16)
CHRISTIAN CONCEPT OF SEXUALITY
22. In the christian vision of man and
woman, a particular function of the body is recognised, because it contributes
to the revealing of the meaning of life and of the human vocation. Corporeality
is, in fact, a specific mode of existing and operating proper to the human
spirit: This significance is first of all of an anthropological nature: the body
reveals man,(17) " expresses the person " (18) and is therefore the first
message of God to the same man and woman, almost a species of " primordial
sacrament, understood as a sign which efficaciously transmits in the visible
world the invisible mystery hidden in God from all eternity " .(19)
23. There is a second significance of a
theological nature: the body contributes to revealing God and his creative love,
in as much as it manifests the creatureliness of man and woman, whose dependence
bestows a fundamental gift, which is the gift of love. " This is the body: a
witness to creation as a fundamental gift, and so a witness to love as the
source from which this same giving springs ".(20)
24. The body, in as much as it is sexual,
expresses the vocation of man and woman to reciprocity, which is to love and to
the mutual gift of self.(21) The body, in short, calls man and woman to the
constitutive vocation to fecundity as one of the fundamental meanings of their
being sexual.(22)
25. The sexual distinction, which appears
as a determination of human being, is diversity, but in equality of nature and
dignity.(23)
The human person, through his or her
intimate nature, exists in relation to others, implying a reciprocity of love.
The sexes are complementary: similar and dissimilar at the same time; not
identical, the same, though, in dignity of person; they are peers so that they
may mutually understand each other, diverse in their reciprocal completion.
26. Man and woman constitute two modes of
realising, on the part of the human creature, a determined participation in the
Divine Being: they are created in the " image and likeness of God " and they
fully accomplish such vocation not only as single persons, but also as couples,
which are communities of love.(25) Oriented to unity and fecundity, the married
man and woman participate in the creative love of God, living in communion with
Him through the other.(26)
27 The presence of sin obscures original
innocence, rendering less easy to man and woman the perception of these truths:
their decipherment has become an ethical task, the object of a difficult
engagement entrusted to man and woman: " After original sin the man and the
woman will lose the grace of original innocence. The discovery of the nuptial
meaning of the body will cease to be for them a simple reality of revelation and
of grace. This meaning will remain as a commitment given to man by the ethos of
the gift, inscribed in the depths of the human heart, as a distant echo of
original innocence "(27)
Faced with this capacity of the body to be
at the same time sign and instrument of ethical vocation, one can establish an
analogy between the body itself and sacramental economy, which is the concrete
means through which grace and salvation reach us.
28. Since men and women in their time have
been inclined to reduce sexuality to genital experience alone, there have been
reactions tending to devalue sex, as though by its nature men and women were
defiled by it. These present guidelines intend to oppose such devaluation.
29. " It is only in the Mystery of the
Word made flesh that the mystery of man truly becomes clear",(28) and human
existence acquires its full meaning in the vocation to the divine life. Only by
following Christ does man respond to this vocation and become so fully man,
growing finally to reach the perfect man in the measure approaching the full
maturity of Christ.(29)
30. In the light of the Mystery of Christ,
sexuality appears to us as a vocation to realise that love which the Holy Spirit
instills in the hearts of the redeemed. Jesus Christ has enriched such vocation
with the Sacrament of Marriage.
31. Furthermore, Jesus has pointed out by
word and example the vocation to virginity for the sake of the kingdom of
heaven.(30) Virginity is a vocation to love: it renders the heart more free to
love God.(31) Free of the duties of conjugal love, the virgin heart can feel,
therefore, more disposed to the gratuitous love of one's brothers and sisters.
In consequence, virginity for the sake of
the kingdom of heaven better expresses the gift of Christ to the Father on
behalf of us and prefigures with greater precision the reality of eternal life,
all substantiated in charity.(32)
Virginity, certainly is a renunciation of
the form of love which typifies marriage, but committed to undertaking in
greater profundity the dynamism, inherent in sexuality, of self-giving openness
to others. It seeks to obtain its strengthening and transfiguring by the
presence of the Spirit, who teaches us to love the Father and the brethren,
after the example of the Lord Jesus.
32. In synthesis, sexuality is called to
express different values to which specific moral exigencies correspond. Oriented
towards interpersonal dialogue, it contributes to the integral maturation of
people, opening them to the gift of self in love; furthermore, tied to the order
of creation, to fecundity and to the transmission of life, it is called to be
faithful to this inner purpose also. Love and fecundity are meanings and values
of sexuality which include and summons each other in turn, and cannot therefore
be considered as either alternatives or opposites.
33. The affective life, proper to each
sex, expresses itself in a characteristic mode in the different states of life:
conjugal union, consecrated celibacy chosen for the sake of the kingdom, the
condition of the christian who has not yet reached marriage, or who remains
celibate, or who has chosen to remain such. In all these cases the affective
life must be gathered and integrated in the human person.
NATURE, PURPOSE AND MEANS OF SEX
EDUCATION
34. A fundamental objective of this
education is an adequate knowledge of the nature and importance of sexuality and
of the harmonious and integral development of the person towards psychological
maturity, with full spiritual maturity in view, to which all believers are
called.(33)
To this end, the christian educator will
remember the principles of faith and the different methods of educational aid,
taking account of the positive evaluation which actual pedagogy makes of
sexuality.
35. In the christian anthropological
perspective, affective-sex education must consider the totality of the person
and insist therefore on the integration of the biological, psycho-affective,
social and spiritual elements. This integration has become more difficult
because the believer also bears the consequences of sin from the beginning.
A true " formation ", is not limited to
the informing of the intellect, but must pay particular attention to the will,
to feelings and emotions. In fact, in order to move to maturation in
affective-sexual life, self control is necessary, which presupposes such virtues
as modesty, temperance, respect for self and for others, openness to one's
neighbour.
All this is not possible if not in the
power of the salvation which comes from Jesus Christ.
36. Also, if the modes are diverse which
sexuality assumes in single people, education must first of all promote that
mafiurity which " entails not only accepting sex as part of the totality of
human values, but also seeing it as giving a possibility for " offering ", that
is, a capacity for giving pure love, altruistic love. When such a capacity is
sufficiently acquired, an individual becomes capable of spontaneous contacts,
emotional self control and commitment of his free will ".(34)
37. Contemporary pedagogy of christian
inspiration sees in the person being educated, considered in all his or her
totality and complexity, the principle subject of education. He or she must be
helped to develop capacities for good, above all in a trustworthy relationship.
This is very easily forgotten when excessive weight is given to simple
information, at the expense of other dimensions of sex education. In education,
in fact, a knowledge of new notions is of utmost importance, but enlivened by
the assimilation of corresponding values and by a lively grasp of understanding
of the personal responsibilities associated with entry into adulthood.
38. Given the repercussions which
sexuality has in the whole person, it is necessary that multiple aspects be kept
in mind: conditions of health, the influence of the family and the social
environment, impressions received and the reactions, of the pupil, education of
the will, and the degree of development of spiritual life sustained with the
help of grace.
39. All that has been stated so far serves
educators in helping and guiding the formation of personality in the young. They
must stimulate them to a critical reflection on received impressions, and, while
they propose values, must give testimony of an authentic spiritual life, both
personal and communal.
40. Having seen the close links existing
between morality and sexuality, it is necessary that the knowledge of moral
norms be accompained by clear motivation, so as to bring a sincere personal
adherence to maturity.
41. Contemporary pedagogy has full
consciousness of the fact that human life is characterised by a constant
evolution and that personal formation is a permanent process. This is also
according to age true for sexuality, which expresses itself with particular
characteristics in the different phases of life. It evidently brings riches and
notable difficulties at every stage of maturation.
42. Educators will have to bear in mind
the fundamental stages of such evolution: the primitive instinct, which in the
beginning is manifested in a rudimentary state, meets in its turn the
ambivalence of good and evil. Then with the help of education, the feelings are
stabilised and at the same time augment the sense of responsibility. Gradually
selfishness is eliminated, a certain asceticism is stabilised, others are
accepted and loved for themselves, the elements of sexuality are integrated:
genitality, eroticism, love and charity. Also if the result is not always fully
attained, they are more numerous than may be thought who come near the goal to
which they aspire.
43. Christian educators are persuaded that
sex education is realised in full in the context of faith. Incorporated by
Baptism into the Risen Christ, the christian knows that his or her body, too,
has been vivified and purified by the Spirit which Jesus communicates.(35)
Faith in the mystery of the Risen Christ,
which through his Spirit actualises and prolongs in the faithful the paschal
mystery, uncovers in the believer the vocation to the resurrection of the flesh,
already begun thanks to the Spirit who dwells in the just as pledge and seed of
the total and definitive resurrection.
44. The disorder provoked by sin, present
and operating in the individual as well as in the culture which characterises
society, exercises a strong pressure to conceive and live sexuality in a manner
opposed to the law of Christ, according to that which St. Paul called the law of
sin.(36) At times, economic structures, state laws, mass media and systems of
life in the great metropoloi are factors which negatively impinge on people.
Christian education takes note of this and indicates guidelines for responsibly
opposing such influences.
45. This constant endeavour is sustained
and rendered possible by divine grace through the Word of God received in faith,
through prayer and through participation in the sacraments. In first place is
the Eucharist, communion with Christ in the same act as his sacrifice, where
effectively the young believer finds the bread of life as viaticum in order to
face and overcome the obstacles on his or her earthly pilgrimage. The Sacrament
of Reconciliation, through the grace that is proper to it and with the help of
spiritual direction, not only reinforces the capacity for resistance to evil but
also gives the courage to pick oneself up after a fall.
These sacraments are offered and
celebrated in the ecclesial community. Those who are vitally involved in such
community draw from the sacraments the strength to realise a chaste life,
according to their state.
46 Personal and community prayer is the
indispensable means for obtaining from God the necessary strength to keep faith
with one's baptismal obligations, for resisting the impulses of human nature
wounded by sin, and for balancing the emotions provoked by negative influences
in the environment.
The spirit of prayer helps us to live
coherently the practice of the evangelical virtues of faithfulness and sincerity
of heart, of poverty and humility in the daily effort of work and of commitment
to one's neighbour. The interior life gives rise to christian joy which wins the
battle against evil, beyond every moralism and pyschological aid.
From frequent and intimate contact with
the Lord, everyone, especially the young, will derive the strength and
enthusiasm for a pure life and they will realise their human and christian
vocation in peaceful self control and in generous giving to others.
The importance of these considerations can
escape noone. Today, in fact, many people, implicitly or explicitly, hold a
pessimistic interpretation of the capacity of human nature to accomplish a
life-long commitment, especially in marriage. Christian education should raise
the confidence of the young so that their understanding of and preparation for
life-long commitment be secured with the certainty that God will help them with
His grace to accomplish His purposes.
47. Imitation of and union with Christ,
lived and handed on by the saints, are the most profound motivation for our hope
of realising the highest ideal of a chaste life, unattainable by human effort
alone.
The Virgin Mary is the eminent example of
christian life. The Church, through centuries of experience is convinced that
the faithful, especially the young, by devotion to her, have known how to
realise this ideal.
II.
RESPONSIBILITY IN PUTTING SEX EDUCATION
INTO EFFECT
FUNCTION OF THE FAMILY
48. Education, in the first place, is the
duty of the family, which " is the school of richest humanity".(37) It 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.
49. The affection and reciprocal trust
which exist in the family are necessary for the harmonious and balanced
development of the child right from birth. So that the affective natural bonds
which unite parents to children be positive in the highest degree, parents are
in pride of place in realising a peaceful sexual balance, and in establishing a
relationship of trust and of dialogue with their, children in a manner
appropriate to their age and development.
50. In order to be able to give
efficacious guidance, which is necessary for resolving the problems which arise,
prior to any theoretical knowledge, adults are to be exemplary in their conduct.
Christian parents must know that their example represents the most valid
contribution in the education of their children. These, in their turn, can come
to certainty that the christian ideal is a reality experienced within the family
itself.
51. Openness and collaboration of parents
with other educators who are co-responsible for formation, will positively
influence the maturation of young people. The theoretical preparation and the
experience of parents will help their children to understand the value and
specific role of the reality of man and woman.
52 The full realisation of conjugal life
and, in consequence, the sanctity and stability of the family, depend on the
formation of conscience and on values assimilated during the whole formative
cycle of the parents themselves. Moral values seen in the family are transmitted
to the children more easily.(38) Among these moral values, respect for life in
the womb and, in general, respect for people of every age and condition have
great importance. The young must be helped to understand, appreciate and respect
these fundamental values of existence.
In view of the importance of these
elements for christian life, and also in the perspective of a divine call to the
children to the priesthood or consecrated life, sex education acquires an
ecclesial dimension.
THE ECCLESIAL COMMUNITY
53. The Church, mother of the faithful
born of her to the faith in Baptism, has an educative mission entrusted by
Christ, which is realised especially through proclamation, full communion with
God and one's fellows, conscientious and active participation in the eucharistic
liturgy and through apostolic activity.(39) By being open to life the ecclesial
community constitutes an environment adequate to the assimilation of the
christian ethic in which the faithful learn to witness to the Good News.
54. The difficulties which sex education
often encounters within the bosom of the family solicit a major commitment on
the part of the christian community and, in particular, of priests to
collaborate in the education of the baptised. In this field, the catholic
school, the parish and other ecclesial institutions are called to collaborate
with the family.
55. From the ecclesial character of the
faith derives the co-responsibility of the christian community in helping the
baptised to live coherently and knowledgeably the obligations taken on with
baptism. It is the responsibility of the Bishops to establish norms and
guidelines adapted to the necessities of the individual churches.
CATECHESIS AND SEX EDUCATION
56. Catechesis is called to be the fertile
field for the renewal of all the ecclesial community. Therefore, in order to
lead the faithful to maturity of faith, it must illustrate the positive values
of sexuality, integrating them with those of virginity and marriage, in the
light of the mystery of Christ and of the Church.
This catechesis should bring into relief
that the first vocation of the christian is to love, and that the vocation to
love is realised in two diverse ways: in marriage, or in a life of celibacy for
love of the kingdom.(40) "Marriage and virginity are the two modes of expressing
and living the one mystery of the Covenant of God with His people".(41)
57. So that families may be certain that
catechesis is by no means apart from the Magisterium, pastors are to be involved
both in the selection and preparation of responsible Magisterium personnel and
in the determination of content and method.
58. From what has been said above in n.
48, the fact remains ever valid that with regard to the more intimate aspects,
whether biological or affective, an individual education should be bestowed,
preferably within the sphere of the family.
59. It being understood that catechesis
realised in the family constitutes a privileged form, if parents do not feel
able to perform this duty, they may have recourse to others who enjoy their
confidence. A wise initiative, prudent and adapted to age and environment, can
avoid traumas for children and render to them more easy the solution of sexual
problems.
PRE-MARRIAGE CATECHESIS
60. A fundamental aspect of the
preparation of the young for marriage consists in giving them an exact vision of
the christian ethic regarding sexuality. Catechesis offers the advantage of
facing sexuality in the immediate prospect of marriage. But for its full
success, this catechesis must be conveniently continued by developing a true and
proper catechumenate. It aspires therefore to sustain and strengthen the
chastity proper to the engaged in preparation for conjugal life viewed in a
christian manner, and to the specific mission which the married have amongst the
People of God. ,
61. Future spouses must know the profound
significance of marriage, understood as a union of love for the realisation of
the couple and for procreation. The stability of marriage and of conjugal love
requires as indispensable conditions: chastity and self control, the formation
of character and the spirit of sacrifice. With regard to certain difficulties of
married life, rendered more acute by the conditions of our time, chastity during
one's youth as an adequate preparation for marital chastity will be a decisive
help to the married. They will need therefore to be informed about the divine
law, declared by the ecclesiastical Magisterium, necessary for the formation of
their consciences.(42)
62 Instructed in the value and greatness
of the Sacrament of Matrimony, which specifies for them the grace and vocation
of baptism, christian spouses will know how to live conscienciously the values
and specific obligations of their moral lives as requirement and fruit of the
grace and action of the Spirit, " fortified and, as it were, consecrated for the
duties and dignity of their state by a special sacrament ".(43)
Therefore, in order to live their
sexuality and to carry out their responsibilities in accord with God's plan,(44)
it is important that spouses have knowledge of the natural methods of regulating
their fertility. As John Paul II has said, "every effort must be made to render
such knowledge accessible to all married people and also to young adults before
marriage, through clear, timely and serious instruction and education given by
married couples, doctors and experts ".(45) Evidently, contraception,
insistently propagated today, constrasts with these christian ideals and these
moral norms of which the Church is teacher. This fact renders still more urgent
the necessity of transmitting to the young at an appropriate age the teaching of
the Church on artificial means of contraception, and the reasons for such
teaching, so that the young may be prepared for responsible marriage, full of
love and open to life.
GUIDELINES FOR ADULTS
63. A solid catechetical preparation of
adults on human love establishes the foundations for the sex education of
children. Thus the possession of human maturity illumined by faith in secured,
which will be decisive in the dialogue which adults are called to establish with
the new generations. Further to indications concerning methods to be used, such
catechesis will favour an appropriate exchange of ideas on particular problems,
will make the teaching aids for use better known, and will permit eventual
encounters with experts, whose collaboration could be particularly useful in
difficult cases.
TASK OF CIVIL SOCIETY
64. The person should find in society
existing expressions and experiences of values which exercise an influence not
secondary on the formative process. Therefore, it will be the task of civil
society, in as much as it treats the common good,(46) to be watchful so that a
wise physical and moral environment be secured in schools, and conditions which
respond to the positive requests of parents, or receive their free support, be
promoted.
65. It is the task of the State to
safeguard its citizens against injustices and moral disorders, such as the abuse
of minors and every form of sexual violence, degrading dress, permissiveness and
pornography, and the improper use of demographic information.
RESPONSIBILITY IN EDUCATION IN THE
USE OF THE INSTRUMENTS
OF SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
66. In the actual world, the instruments
of social communication, by their intrusiveness and suggestion, display to youth
and the very young - also and above all in the field of sex education - a
continuous and conditioning stream of information and training, which is very
much more trenchant than that of one's own family.
John Paul II has indicated the situation
in which children find themselves confronted by the instruments of social
communication: " Fascinated and devoid of defence before the world and adults,
children are naturally ready to accept whatever is offered to them, whether good
or bad... They are attracted by the " small screen ", they follow each gesture
which is portrayed and they perceive, before and better than every other person,
the emotions and feelings which result ".(47)
67. It is therefore to be noted that by
the same technological evolution, the necessary control is rendered less easy
and opportune. There is an urgency - for proper sex education, too - that "
those who are at the receiving end of the media, and especially the young,
should learn moderation and discipline in their use of them. They should aim to
understand fully what they see, hear and read. They should discuss them with
their teachers and with experts in such matters and should learn to reach
correct judgements ".(48)
68 In defence of the rights of the child
in this area, John Paul II stimulates the consciences of all responsible
christians, especially parents and operators of the instruments of social
communication, so that they do not hide behind the pretext of neutrality and
respect for the spontaneous development of the child, since in reality this is
behaviour of preoccupying indifference.(49)
Particular duties " in this matter are
incumbent on civil authority in view of the common good ",(50) which requires
the juridical regulation of the instruments of social communication to protect
public morality, in particular the world of youth, especially with regard to
magazines, films, radio and television programmes, exhibitions, shows and
publicity.
TASK OF THE SCHOOL WITH REGARD TO SEX
EDUCATION
69. It being understood from what has been
said on the primary duty of the family, the rôle of the school should be that of
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 ".(51)
70. Interpersonal dialogue required by sex
education, tends to kindle in the pupil an interior disposition suited to
motivating and guiding personal behaviour. Such a point of view is strictly
connected to the values inspired by the concept of life. Sex education is not
reducible to simple teaching material, nor to theoretical knowledge alone, nor
does it consist of a programme to be carried out progressively, but it has a
specific objective in view: that affective maturation of the pupil, of self
control, and of correct behaviour in social relationships.
71. The school can contribute to the
realisation of this objective in various ways. All matters can offer an
opportunity to treat themes in their relation to sexuality; the teacher will do
so always in a positive key and with great delicacy, concretely evaluating the
opportunity and the methods. Individual sex education always retains prior value
and can not be entrusted indiscrimately to just any member of the school
community. In fact, as will be specified in what follows, as well as right
judgement, sense of responsibility, professional competence, affective and
decent maturity, this education requires from the teacher outstanding
sensitivity in initiating the child and adolescent in the problems of love and
life without disturbing their psychological development.
72 Also, though the teacher possess the
necessary qualities for sex education in groups, it is necessary always to
consider the concrete situation of such groups. This applies above all in mixed
groups, since these require special precautions. In each case, the responsible
authorities must examine with parents the propriety of proceeding in such a
manner. Given the complexity of the problem, it is good to reserve for the pupil
a time for personal dialogue in order to accomodate the seeking of advice or
clarification - which a natural sense of decency would not allow to arise in
front of others. Only a strict collaboration between the school and the family
will be able to guarantee an advantageous exchange of experience between parents
and teachers for the good of the pupils.(52) It is the responsibility of
Bishops, taking account of school legislation and local circumstances, to
establish guidelines for sex education in groups, above all if they are mixed.
73 It can sometimes happen that particular
events in the life of the school render a timely intervention necessary. In such
cases, the school authorities, in accordance with the principle of
collaboration, will contact parents interested in agreeing on an appropriate
solution.
74 Persons particularly suited by
competence and balance, and who enjoy the trust of parents, can be invited to
hold private conversations with pupils to help them to develop their affective
maturity and to give the right balance in their social relationships. Such
interventions in personal guidance belong in particular to the more difficult
cases, at least when the gravity of the situation makes necessary recourse to a
specialist in the matter.
75 The formation and development of an
harmonious personality require a peaceful atmostphere, fruitful understanding,
reciprocal trust and collaboration between persons in charge. It is obtained
with mutual respect for the specific competence of the various members of the
educational staff, their responsibilities and the choice of the differentiated
means at their disposal.
APPROPRIATE TEACHING MATERIALS
76. In order to offer correct sex
education, appropriate teaching materials can be of assistance. The elaboration
of such materials requires the contribution of specialists in moral and pastoral
theology, of catechists, of educationists and catholic psychologists. Particular
attention is to be paid to the materials to be used by the pupils themselves.
Some school text-books on sexuality, by
reason of their naturalist character, are harmful to the child and the
adolescent. Graphic and audio-visual materials are more harmful when they
crudely present sexual realities for which the pupil is not prepared, and thus
create traumatic impressions or raise an unhealthy curiosity which leads to
evil. Let teachers think seriously of the grave harm that an irresponsible
attitude in such delicate matters can cause in pupils.
YOUTH GROUPS
77. There exists in education a not
negligible factor which goes side by side with the action of the family and the
school and which frequently has an even greater influence in the formation of
the person: these are youth groups, constituted in leisure time, which impinge
intensely on the life of the adolescent and young adult. The human sciences hold
that " groups " are a positive condition for formation, because the maturation
of the personality is not possible without efficacious personal relationships.
III.
CONDITIONS AND MODE OF SEX EDUCATION
78. The complexity and delicacy of the
task requires accurate preparation of teachers, specific qualities in the way
the matter is treated and particular attention to precise objectives.
PREPARATION OF TEACHERS
79. The mature personality of the
teachers, their training and psychological balance strongly influence their
pupils. An exact and complete vision of the meaning and value of sexuality and a
peaceful integration within the personality itself are indispensable for
teachers in constructive education. Their training takes shape according to
environment. Their ability is not so much the fruit of theoretical knowledge but
rather the result of their affective maturity. This does not dispense with the
acquisition of scientific knowledge suited to their educational work, which is
particularly arduous these days. Meetings with parents can be of great help.
80. The dispositions which must
characterise the teacher are the result of a general formation, founded on a
positive and professional constructive concept of life, and of constant effort
in realising it. Such a formation goes beyond the purely necessary professional
training and addresses the more intimate aspects of the personality, including
the religious and the spiritual. This last will be the guarantee of a recourse
to christian principles, which, by supernatural means, must sustain the
educational enterprise.
81. The teacher who carries out his or her
task outside the family context needs a suitable and serious psychopedagogic
training which allows the seizing of particular situations which require a
special solicitude. A high degree of this is needed when, in consultation with
the parents, a boy or girl needs a psychologist.
82. Beyond the normal topics and
pathological cases, there is a whole range of individuals with problems more or
less acute and persistent, which risk being little cured, yet are truly in need
of help. In these cases, in addition to therapy at the medical level, constant
support and guidance on the part of teachers is needed.
QUALITY OF TEACHING METHODS
83. A clear vision of the situation is
required because the method adopted not only gradually conditions the success of
this delicate education, but also conditions cooperation between the various
people in responsibility. In reality, the criticisms normally raised refer more
to the methods used by some teachers than to the enterprise itself. These
methods must have definite qualities, both in the same teachers and in the end
to which such education is proposed.
NEEDS OF THE PUPIL AND EDUCATIONAL
ASSISTANCE
84. Affective-sex education, being more
conditioned than others by the degree of physical and psychological development
of the pupil, must always be adapted to the individual. In certain cases it is
necessary to advise the pupil in preparation for particularly difficult
situations, when it is foreseen that the pupil will have to encounter them, or
forewarn him or her of imminent or permanent dangers.
85. It is necessary therefore to respect
the progressive character of this education. A proper gradual progress of
initiatives must be attentive to the stages of physical and psychological
growth, which require a more careful preparation and a prolonged period of
maturation. One needs to be assured that the pupil has assimilated the values,
the knowledge and the motivation which has been proposed, or the changes and the
evolution which he or she could observe in him or herself and of which the
teacher opportunely indicates the causes, the connections and the purpose.
QUALITY OF THE TEACHER
86. In order to make a valid contribution
to the harmonious and balanced development of the young, teachers must regulate
their teaching according to the particular rôle which falls to them. The pupil
neither perceives nor receives in the same manner from different teachers the
information and motivation which they give, because different teachers affect
his or her intimacy in a different way. Objectivity and prudence must
characterise such teaching.
87. Progressive information requires a
partial explanation, but always according to truth. Explanations must not be
distorted by reticence or by lack of frankness. Prudence therefore requires of
the teacher not only an appropriate adaption of the matter to the expectations
of the pupil, but also a choice of language, mode and time in which the teaching
is carried out. This requires that the child's sense of decency be taken into
account. The teacher, moreover, remembers the influence of parents: their
preoccupation with this dimension of education, the particular character of
family education, their concept of life, and their degree of openness to other
educational spheres.
88. One must insist first of all on the
human and christian values of sexuality, so that pupils can appreciate them, and
so that the desire to realise them in one's personal life and relationships may
be roused. Without disregarding the difficulties which sexual development
involves, but without creating an obsessive state, the teacher may have
confidence in the educational enterprise: it can rely on the resonance which
true values strike in the young, when they are presented with conviction and are
confirmed by testimony of life.
89. Given the importance of sex education
in the integral formation of the person, teachers, taking account of the various
aspects of sexuality and of their incidence in the global personality, are urged
in particular not to separate knowledge from corresponding values, which give a
sense and orientation to biological, psychological and social information.
Consequently, when they present moral norms, it is necessary , that they show
how find their raison d'etre and value.
EDUCATION FOR MODESTY AND FRIENDSHIP
90. Modesty, a fundamental component of
the personality, may be considered - on the ethical level - as the vigilant
knowledge which defends the dignity of man, woman and authentic love. It tends
to react to certain attitudes and to curb behaviour which stains the dignity of
the person. It is a necessary and effective means of controlling the instincts,
making authentic love flower, integrating the affective-sexual life in the
harmonions picture of the person. Modesty has great pedagogic weight and must
therefore be respected. Children and young people will thus learn to respect the
body itself as a gift from God, member of Christ and temple of the Holy Spirit;
they will learn to resist the evil which surrounds them and to have a vision and
clear imagination to seek to express a truly human love with all its spiritual
components when they meet people in friendship.
91. To such an end, concrete and
attractive models of virtue are to be presented, the aesthetic sense be
developed, inspiring a taste for the beauty present in nature, in art and in
moral life; the young are to be educated to assimilate a system of sensible and
spiritual values in an unselfish impetus of faith and love.
92. Friendship is the height of affective
maturation and differs from mere cameraderie by its interior dimension, by
communication which allows and fosters true communion, by its reciprocal
generosity and its stability. Education for friendship can become a factor of
extraordinary importance in the making of the personality in its individual and
social dimensions.
93. The bonds of friendship which unite
the young of both sexes contribute both to understanding and to reciprocal
respect when they are maintained within the limits of normal affective
expression. If however they become or tend to become manifestations of a genital
character, they lose the authentic meaning of mature friendship, prejudice the
relationships involved and the future prospects with regard to an eventual
marriage, and render the individuals concerned less attentive to a possible call
to the consecrated life.
IV.
SOME PARTICULAR PROBLEMS
The teacher may find that in carrying out
his or her mission, he or she may be confronted by several particular problems,
which we treat here.
94. Sex education must lead the young to
take cognisance of the different expressions and dynamisms of sexuality and of
the human values which must be respected. True love is the capacity to open
oneself to one's neighbour in generosity, and in devotion to the other for the
other's good; it knows how to respect the personality and the freedom of the
other,(53) it is self giving, not possessive. The sex instinct, on the other
hand, if abandoned to itself, is reduced to the merely genital, and tends to
take possession of the other, immediately seeking personal gratification.
95. Relationships of sexual intimacy are
reserved to marriage, because only then is the inseparable connection secured -
which God wants - between the unitive and the procreative meaning of such
matters, which are ordained to maintain, confirm and express a definitive
communion of life - " one flesh "(54) - mediating the realisation of a love that
is " human " " total " " faithful " " creative "(55) which is marital love.
Therefore, sexual relations outside the context of marriage constitute a grave
disorder, because they are reserved to a reality which does not yet exist;(56)
they are a language which is not found in the objective reality of the life of
the two persons, not yet constituted in definitive community with the necessary
recognition and guarantee of civil and, for catholic spouses, religious
society.
96. It seems that there is a spread
amongst adolescents and young adults of certain manifestations of a sexual kind
which of themselves tend to complete encounter, though without reaching its
realisation: manifestations of the merely genital which are a moral disorder
because they are outside the matrimonial context of authentic love.
97. Sex education will help adolescents to
discover the profound values of love, and to understand the harm which such
manifestations do to their affective maturation, in as much as they lead to an
encounter which is not personal, but instinctive, often weakened by reservations
and egoistic calculations, without therefore the character of true personal
relationship and so much less definitive. An authentic education will lead the
young towards maturity and self-control, the fruit of conscientious choice and
personal effort.
98. It is the task of sex education to
promote a continuous progress in the control of the impulses to effect an
opening, in due course, to true and self giving love. A particularly complex and
delicate problem which can be present is that of masturbation and of its
repercussions on the integral growth of the person. Masturbation, according to
catholic doctrine constitutes a grave moral disorder,(57) principally because it
is the use of the sexual faculty in a way which essentially contradicts its
finality, not being at the service of love and life according to the design of
God.(58)
99. A teacher and perspicacious counsellor
must endeavour to identify the causes of the deviation in order to help the
adolescent to overcome the immaturity underlying this habit. From an educative
point of view, it is necessary to consider masturbation and other forms of
autoeroticism as symptoms of problems much more profound, which provoke sexual
tension which the individual seeks to resolve by recourse to such behaviour.
Pedagogic action, therefore, should be directed more to the causes than to the
direct repression of the phenomenon.(59)
Whilst taking account of the objective
gravity of masturbation, it is necessary to be cautious in evaluating the
subjective responsibility of the person.(60)
100. In order that the adolescent be
helped to feel accepted in a communion of charity and freed from self enclosure,
the teacher "should undramatise masturbation and not reduce his or her esteem
and benevolence for the pupil".(61) The teacher will help the pupil towards
social integration, to be open and interested in others; to be able to be free
from this form of autoeroticism, advancing towards self giving love, proper to
mature affectivity; at the same time, the teacher will encourage the pupil to
have recourse to the recommended means of christian asceticism, such as prayer
and the sacraments, and to be involved in works of justice and charity.
101. Homosexuality, which impedes the
person's acquisition of sexual maturity, whether from the individual point of
view, or the inter-personal, is a problem which must be faced in all objectivity
by the pupil and the educator when the case presents itself.
" Pastorally, these homosexuals must be
received with understanding and supported in the hope of overcoming their
personal difficulties and their social mal-adaption, their culpability will be
judged with prudence; but no pastoral method can be used which, holding that
these acts conform to the condition of these persons, accord them a moral
justification.
" According to the objective moral order,
homosexual relations are acts deprived of their essential and indispensable rule
".(62)
102. It will be the duty of the family and
the teacher to seek first of all to identify the factors which drive towards
homosexuality: to see if it is a question of physiological or psycho logical
factors; if it be the result of a false education or of the lack of normal
sexual evolution; if it comes from a contracted habit or from bad example;(63)
or from other factors. More particularly, in seeking the causes of this
disorder, the family and the teacher will have to take account of the elements
of judgement proposed by the ecclesiastical
Magisterium, and be served by the
contribution which various disciplines can offer. One must, in fact, investigate
elements of diverse order: lack of affection, immaturity, obsessive impulses,
seduction, social isolation and other types of frustration, depravation in
dress, license in shows and publications. In greater profundity lies the innate
frailty of man and woman, the consequence of original sin; it can run to the
loss of the sense of God and of man and woman, and have its repercussions in the
sphere of sexuality.(64)
103. The causes having been sought and
understood, the family and the teacher will offer an efficacious help in the
process of integral growth: welcoming with understanding, creating a climate of
hope, encouraging the emancipation of the individual and his or her growth in
self control, promoting an authentic moral force towards conversion to the love
of God and neighbour, suggesting - if necessary - medical-psychological
assistance from persons attentive to and respectful of the teaching of the
Church.
104. A permissive society which does not
offer valid values on which to found one's life promotes alienating escapism, to
which the young are subject in a particular way. Their idealism encounters the
harshness of life, causing a tension which can provoke, because of the frailty
of the will, a destructive escape in drugs.
This is one of the problems which is
getting worse and which assumes dramatic tones for the teacher. Some
psychotropic substances raise the sensibility for sexual pleasure and in general
diminish the capacity for self control and thereby for defense. The prolonged
abuse of drugs leads to physical and psychological destruction. Drugs, mistaken
autonomy and sexual disorders are often found together. The psychological
situation and the human context of isolation being such, many people give up,
addicts living in rebellion, creating conditions which easily lead into sexual
abuses.
105. Remedial intervention, which calls
for a profound transformation of the individual from within and without, is
laborious and long, because it must help to reconstruct the personality and
relationships with the world of people and values. Preventative action is more
efficacious. It secures the avoidance of deep, affective decline. It is love and
care which educate towards value, dignity, respect for life, for the body, for
sex, for health. The civil and christian community must know how to timely
welcome the young who are abandoned, alone, insecure, helping them to be
included in study and in work, to occupy their free time, offering them healthy
places for meeting, happiness, activity, furnishing them with occasions for
affective relationships and for solidarity.
In particular, sport, which is at the
service of man and woman, possesses a great educative value, not only as bodily
discipline, but also as a healthy relaxation in which young people are
encouraged to renounce their egotism and to meet other people. Only a freedom
which is authentic, educated, aided and promoted offers protection from the
quest for illusory liberty of drugs and sex.
CONCLUSION
106. From these reflections one can
conclude that in the actual socio-cultural situation there is urgent need to
give positive and gradual affective-sex education to children, adolescents and
young adults, paying attention to the dispositions of Vatican Council II.
Silence is not a valid norm of conduct in this matter, above all when one thinks
of the " hidden persuaders " which use insinuating language. Their influence
today is undeniable: it is up to parents, therefore, to be alert not only to
repair the harm caused by inappropriate and injurious interventions, but above
all to opportunely inform their own children, offering them a positive and
convincing education.
107. The defense of the fundamental rights
of the child and the adolescent for the harmonious and complete development of
the personality conforms to the dignity of the children of God, and belongs in
first place to parents. Personal maturation requires, in fact, a continuity in
the educative process, protected by love and trust, proper to the family
environment.
108. In accomplishing her mission the
Church has the duty and the right to take care of the moral education of the
baptised.
The contribution of the school in all
education, and particularly in these matters which are so delicate, must be
carried out in agreement with the family.
This presupposes in teachers and in others
involved, whether implicitly or explicitly, a correct criterion for the purpose
of their contribution, and training in order to be able to treat these matters
with delicacy and in a climate of serene trust.
109. So that information and affective-sex
education may be efficacious, it must be carried out with timely prudence, with
adequate expression, and preferably in an individual form. The outcome of this
education will depend largely on the human and christian vision in which the
educator presents the values of life and love.
110. The christian educator, whether
father or mother of the family, teacher, priest or whoever bears responsibility
in this regard, can be tempted, today above all, to demand , from others this
task which needs such delicacy, principle, patience and courage, and which
requires committed generosity in the pupil. It is necessary, therefore, before
concluding, to reaffirm that this aspect of education is firstly a work of faith
for the christian, and of faithful recourse to grace: each aspect of sex
education, in fact, is inspired by faith, and draws indispensable strength from
it and from grace. The Letter of St. Paul to the Galatians puts self-control and
temperance within the ambit which the Holy Spirit, and He alone, can establish
in the believer. It is God who bestows light, it is God who grants sufficient
strength.(65)
111. The Congregation for Catholic
Education turns to Episcopal Conferences so that they promote the union of
parents, of christian communities, and of educators for convergent action in
such an important sector for the future of young people and the good of society.
The Congregation makes this invitation to assume this educational commitment in
reciprocal trust and with the highest regard for rights and specific
competences, with a complete christian formation in view.
Rome, November 1st,
1995 Feast of All Saints
WILLIAM Card. BAUM
Prefect
Antonio M. Javierre, Secretary
Titular Archbishop of Meta
(1) Vatican Council II: Decl.
Gravissimum educationis, n. 1 .
(2) Ibid.
(3) S. Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith: Declaration on Certain Questions Concerning Sexual Ethics, The
Human Person, 29th. December, 1975, AAS 68 (1976) p. 77, n.1 .
(4) Cf. John Paul II, Apostolic
Exhortation, Familiaris consortio, 22nd. November, 1981, AAS 74 (1982) p.
128, n. 37: cf. infra n. 16.
(5) Pius XI, in his
Encyclical Divini illius Magistri, of 31st. December, 1929, declared
erroneous the sex education which was presented at that time, which was
information of a naturalist character, precociously and indiscriminately
imparted. (AAS 22 (1930) pp. 49-86). The Decree of the Holy Office of 21st.
March, 1931 (AAS 23 (1931 ) pp. 118-119) must be read in this perspective.
However, Pius XI considered the possibility of an individual, positive sex
education " on the part of those who have received from God the educational
mission and the grace of state ". (AAS 22 (1930) p. 71) . This positive value of
sex education indicated by Pius XI has been gradually developed by successive
Pontiffs. Pius XII, in his discourse to the Vth. International Congress of
Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, 13th. April, 1953 (AAS 45 (1953) pp.
278-286) and in his allocution to Italian Women of " Azione Cattolica ", 26th.
October, 1941 (AAS 33 (1941) pp. 450-458) defines how sex education should be
conducted within the ambit of the family. (Cf. also, Pius XII; to the
Carmelites: AAS 43 (1951) pp. 734-738; to French Parents: AAS 43 (1951) pp.
730-734) The Teaching of Pius XII prepared the way to the Conciliar Declaration
Gravissimum educationis.
(6) Cf. Gravissimum educationis,
n. 1.
(7) Ibid.
(8) Cf. Vat. II: Const. Gaudium
et spes, n. 49.
(9) Cf. Gravissimum educationis,
n. 5.
(10) Ibid., n. 3; cf. Gaudium et
spes, n. 52.
(11) Familiaris consortio, n.
37.
(12) Ibid.
(13) Ibid.
(14) Familiaris consortio, n.
37.
(15) Ibid.
(16) Gaudium et spes, n. 11.
(17) John Paul II: General Audience,
14th. November, 1979, Teaching of John Paul II, II-2, 1979, p. 1156, n. 4.
(18) John Paul II : General
Audience, 9th. January, 1980, Teaching of John Paul II, III- I , 1980, p. 90, n.
4.
(19) John Paul II: General Audience,
20th. February, 1980, Teaching of John Paul II, III-I, 1980, p. 430, n. 4.
(20) John Paul II : General
Audience, 9th. January, 1980, Teaching of John Paul II, III-I, 1980, p. 90, n.
4.
(21) " Precisely by traversing the
depth of that original solitude, man now emerges in the dimension of the mutual
gift, the expression of which - and for that very reason the expression of his
existence as a person - is the human body in all the original truth of its
masculinity and femininity. The body, which expresses masculinity 'for'
femininity and, viceversa, femininity 'for' masculinity, manifests the
reciprocity and communion of persons. It expresses it by means of the gift as
the fundamental characteristic of personal existence ". Ibid.
(22) Cf. John Paul II : General
Audience, 26th. March, 1980, Teaching of John Paul II, III-I, 1980, pp. 737-74I
(23) Gaudium et spes, n. 49.
(24) Ibid. n. 12.
(25) Ibid., in which comment is made
on the social sense of Gen. 1, 27.
(26) Ibid., nn. 47-52.
(27) John Paul I I : General
Audience, 20th. February, 1980, Teaching of John Paul II, III-I, 1980, p. 429,
n. 2.
(28) Gaudium et spes, n. 22.
(29) Cf Eph. 4, 13.
(30) Cf. Mt. 19, 3-12.
(31) Cf. I Cor. 7, 32-34.
(32) Cf. I Cor. 13, 4-8; cf.
Familiaris consortio, n. 16.
(33) Cf. Vat. II : Const. Lumen
gentium, n. 39.
(34) S. Congregation for Catholic
Education: A Guide to Formation in Priestly Celibacy, 11th. April, 1974,
n. 22.
(35) Cf. I Cor. 6, 15, 19-20.
(36) Cf. Rom. 7, 18-23.
(37) Gaudium et spes, n. 52;
cf. Familiaris consortio, n. 37.
(38) Cf. Familiaris consortio,
n. 37.
(39) Cf. Gravissimum educationis,
n. 3-4; cf. Pius XI, Divini illius Magistri, l.c., pp. 53f., 56f.
(40) Cf. Familiaris consortio,
n. II.
(41) Ibid., n. 16.
(42) Cf. Paul VI, Encyc. Letter,
Humanae vitae, 25th. July, 1968, AAS 60 (1968) p. 493 ff., n.17 ff.
(43) Gaudium et spes, n. 48.
(44) Cf. Humanae vitae, n.
10.
(45) Familiaris consortio, n.
33. On actual contraceptive propaganda widely diffused cf. Humanae vitae,
nn. 14-17.
(46) Cf. Gaudium et Spes, n.
26; cf. Humanae vitae, n. 23.
(47) John Paul II, Message for
the XIII World Communications Day, 23rd. May, 1979, AAS 71, (1979-II) p.
930.
(48)Vat. II: Dec. Inter mirifica,
n. 10; cf. Pontifical Commission for Social Communications : Past. Inst.
Communio et Progressio, AAS 63 (1971) p. 619, n. 68.
(49) Cf. John Paul II: Message
for the XIII World Communications Day, 23rd. May, (1979) AAS 71 (1979-II)
pp. 930-933.
(50) Inter mirifica, n. 12.
(51) Familiaris consortio, n.
32.
(52) Cf above n. 58.
(53) Cf. 1 Cor. 13, 5.
(54) Mt. 19, 5.
(55) Humanae vitae, n. 9.
(56) Cf. The Human Person, n.
7.
(57) Cf. The Human Person, n.
9.
(58) Ibid.
(59) Ibid.
(60) Ibid.
(61) A Guide to Formation in
Priestly Celibacy, n. 63.
(62) The Human Person, n. 8.
(63) Ibid.
(64) Cf. Rom. 1, 26-28; cf.,
per analogia, The Human Person, n. 9.
(65) Cf. Gal. 5, 22-24.