ONCE again, we celebrate the very wonderful Solemnity of the Assumption of our Lady to heaven, reminding us that like her, we too are meant to be both body and soul in our definitive state of life, hopefully in heaven, at the end of time.
Let’s
remember that man is always a unity of body and soul. He is not just pure body
nor pure spiritual soul. And as our Catechism teaches us, the body, properly
animated by the spiritual soul, shares in the dignity of the “image of God.”
(cfr. CCC 364)
This is
how the Catechism explains it: “The human body shares in the dignity of “the
image of God”: it is a human body precisely because it is animated by a
spiritual soul, and it is the whole human person that is intended to become in
the body of Christ, a temple of the Spirit. Man, though made of body and soul,
is a unity.”
The
Catechism further teaches that, “Through his very bodily condition he (man)
sums up in himself the elements of the material world…He is obliged to regard
his body as good and to hold it in honor since God has created it and will
raise it up on the last day.” (CCC 362 ff.)
Our
attitude toward the body and the material world, I am afraid, has suffered a
dangerous mutation, a radical reversal of God’s designs for them. We seem to be
falling into two extremes.
One is to
consider the body as completely evil, as when the distinction between the body
and the soul becomes exaggerated that they by nature become hostile to each
other. This mindset is prevalent among those who may be regarded as ‘too
spiritual’ in their life.
The other
extreme, the more common one, is to consider the body as completely good, with
no more need for spiritual animation and direction. This is the case of a
variety of people—the hedonists, the naturalists, etc.
We need to
understand that our body is organically linked to our spiritual and the
supernatural character of our life. While distinct, it cannot be separated from
our integral human nature and condition, from our beginning and end, and from
the plan and purpose God our Father and Creator has for us.
Given that
dignity of our human body, we have to make sure that our piety and our devotion
to God and everything related to him has to involve both the body and soul. It
has to involve our whole person. It just cannot be purely spiritual or purely
material. It just cannot be only a matter of knowing the doctrine, quite
cerebral in approach, without some external manifestations, or of practicing
all sorts of devotional exercises, without knowing the doctrine of faith.
If piety
has to be authentic and consistent in all circumstances, then it has to be
lived both in our spiritual soul whose main faculties are our intellect and
will, and in our material body whose link to our soul, the principle of life,
are the emotions and passions, the memory and the imagination, our temperament
and psychological state, etc.
When piety
is limited to one or the other essential element of our being, to either our
spiritual soul or the material body, then it cannot be consistent. It cannot
hold out against that anomaly for long. It sooner or later will fall into the
tricks of hypocrisy and self-deception.


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