The theology of the body is a term used in Christian theology to refer to the teaching of various Christian denominations on the human body as it relates to God and the church.
The Early Church Fathers wrote extensively on the theology of the body, especially with regard to Christian marriage.[1]
Saint Ignatius of Antioch (died A.D. 108) taught that "It is right for men and women who marry to be united with the bishop's approval. In that way their marriage will follow God's will and not the promotings of lust. Let everything be done so as to advance God's honor."[1] He emphasized marriage as a component of the baptismal commitments of Christian couples.[1]
The Shepherd of Hermas, authored in the second century, forbids spouses to remarry after a divorce has occurred.[1] It furthermore encouraged reconciliation among divorced spouses in cases of adultery.[1] While permitting marriage after the death of a spouse, it taught that a widow/widower who remained single "gains...more extraordinary honor and great glory with the Lord."[1]
Saint Justin Martyr (A.D. 100–165) distinguished between the sexual promiscuity of the pagan Romans and "the behavior of Christians whom he said only marry for the sake of bringing up children."[1] In this era, Christians who did not wish to have children "renounced marriage" and lived in "perfect continence".[1]
Saint Athenagoras of Athens (A.D. 133–190) taught that "According to our laws, each of us thinks of the woman he has married as his wife only for the purpose of bearing children. For as the farmer casts his seed on the soil and awaits the harvest without sowing over it, so we limit the pleasure of intercourse to bearing children."[1]
The views held by Saint Justin Martyr and Saint Athenagoras of Athens were held by the early Christians, who held that the purpose of marriage "was the procreation and education of children", opposing "engaging in sexual activity for the hedonistic pursuit of pleasure."[1]
Lactantius (A.D. 240—320) "extolled marriage as a sublime and essential expression of Christian love":[2]
He rejected the old Jewish laws of sexual purity in the name of Christian freedom, allowing sexual intercourse and intimacy with one's spouse even during menstruation and pregnancy. And he urged older or sterile couples to maintain healthy sex lives, even after the window of fertility had closed. This not only protected the couple from sexual sin but also fostered in them mutual love and harmony.[2]
Lactantius' views were characteristic of other contemporary Church Fathers, such as Clement of Alexandria.[2]
In Catholic theology, "God intends for sex to express the mutual self-giving of a man and woman joined in marriage."[3] Pope John Paul II, in his Theology of the Body, taught that the Bible encourages Christians to "experience the joys of physical union as a sign of the deeper spiritual union of marriage".[3]
The Lutheran Churches emphasize the role of the Holy Spirit, who has sanctified the bodies of Christians to be a temple.[4] Amongst His creation was included the human body, which God called "very good".[4]
The importance of the human body was delineated in the bodily resurrection of Jesus, in which Christ arose from the dead in his body, not just in spirit.[4] In Lutheran theology, this is important with respect to the resurrection of the dead at the Last Judgment.[4] It is for this reason that the Lutheran Churches have historically discouraged the practice of cremation.[4]
Methodist theology emphasizes seven pillars that substantiate the theology of the body:[5]
As Wesleyans, it is also important to understand that all of the “means of grace” happen in and through the body. Our bodies are baptized. We take communion with our mouths. We hear the preaching of God’s word with our ears. Our eyes read God’s word. Our bodies are not only pointers to the incarnation, but the ongoing bridges by which God continues to extend his grace into the world. Charles Wesley captured this beautifully in his hymn Celebrate Immanuel’s Name, writing, “God is in our flesh revealed; heaven and earth in Jesus join / mortal with immortal filled, and human with divine.”[5]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theology of the body.
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