E
Edward_H
Guest
I think there’s helpful spiritual grist in thinking about marriage as an inclined plane toward an ever-greater union between the man and the woman, and God.
The Sacrament in this sense begins an act of communion, gives and sets aside actual and sanctifying grace for the couple to use in their marriage ahead, striving to build an ever more perfect union with their lives until one of them dies, in the hands of God.
This union is intended to be across all of the faculties of the person: Intellect, will, emotions, appetites, body, intention, etc.
I think if more couples understood this idea of growing more in union each day, there would not just be fewer failed marriages, there would be many more “great marriages”, after all the goal of all and each marriage is a great marriage, not just a good marriage.
As with God, the life of holiness of each person should be an inclined plane leading us to Him; so to with Marriage.
Thus, there are “two axis of unity”: Ours with God, and ours with our wife; both converging on God, of course.
The Sacrament in this sense begins an act of communion, gives and sets aside actual and sanctifying grace for the couple to use in their marriage ahead, striving to build an ever more perfect union with their lives until one of them dies, in the hands of God.
This union is intended to be across all of the faculties of the person: Intellect, will, emotions, appetites, body, intention, etc.
I think if more couples understood this idea of growing more in union each day, there would not just be fewer failed marriages, there would be many more “great marriages”, after all the goal of all and each marriage is a great marriage, not just a good marriage.
As with God, the life of holiness of each person should be an inclined plane leading us to Him; so to with Marriage.
Thus, there are “two axis of unity”: Ours with God, and ours with our wife; both converging on God, of course.
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