The Pope’s new guidance on sex in marriage

Pope Leo 14

credit, AFP via Getty Images

    • author, Edison Vega
    • scroll, From Bled (Slovenia) to BBC News Brazil

A document issued by the Church at the end of November recognizes the existence of a “unified goal of sexual life,” stressing that sexual acts “are not limited to ensuring procreation, but rather contribute to enriching and strengthening the unique and exclusive union and sense of mutual belonging.”

The doctrinal memorandum issued with the approval of Pope Leo 14 was signed by the Department for the Doctrine of the Faith – the current name of the former Holy Office Tribunal – and is a Catholic defense of the monogamous union between man and woman. But between the lines he presents this understanding that the sexual act has a function that goes beyond the generation of offspring.

The text, published only in Italian, states that “in recent decades” due to “the context of postmodern consumer individualism,” many problems have arisen due to “an excessive and uncontrolled search for sex or a simple denial of the procreative purpose of sex.”

At the same time, the note notes, there has also been an “explicit denial of the unitary purpose of sexuality and marriage itself” and encourages “a desire for emotional exchange, through same-sex relations, but also through dialogue and cooperation.”

The document says that “the integrated vision of marital love” is a vision that “does not deny its fertility.” But “sexual union, as a form of expression of conjugal love,” although “it must naturally remain open to the communication of life,” need not have “an explicit purpose for every sexual act” for this purpose.