God and Woman | By Rev. Louis Bouyer

God and Woman | By Rev. Louis Bouyer | An excerpt
from Woman
In The Church
The mystery of woman, precisely because it is the mystery of creation redeemed,
completed and espoused by God himself, presupposes the
mystery
of God and cannot be understood without reference to him. However, the mystery
of God is not at all, for all that, simply the reverse side of the mystery
of humanity. To put it better, it encompasses the mystery of man (homo,
man and woman) as well as of vir (the male), but it surpasses it
and in such a way that the mystery of woman in particular finds its source
there, a source wherein one might say it is reflected, but, as in every
reflection, reversed. We must begin by sorting out, as much as possible,
this paradox to which we are driven by the properly Biblical knowledge of
God, in order to see the mystery of woman in proper perspective. Thus the
ministries of man and of woman both will be seen in their proper places.
It is sometimes said, and it is true in a sense, but only in a sense, that
God, the God who has spoken to us through Biblical tradition (as opposed
to the ancient Near Eastern divinities who were so heavily sexualized),
appeared to transcend the division of the sexes. It is suggested, too, that
he unites in himself the most exalted characteristics of both woman and
man. This is not without some justification, but nevertheless it cannot
be admitted as a truly satisfying expression of his revelation.
Many of the great gods in pre-Columbian America and other archaic civilizations
are said to have been seen as both "fathers and mothers" of humanityindeed,
of everything. Certainly the same Hebrew prophets who paved the way for
the New Testament revelation of the divine Fatherhood did not hesitate on
occasion to compare God, in the solicitude and the intimacy of his love,
to a mother who would never abandon her children, so much is children's
being of one flesh with their mother's. But never did the Bible go so far
as to say that God was "our father and our mother," and it is impossible
for anyone who is familiar with what one could call the gist of his whole
revelation to believe that this is a chance omission or simply a momentary
stage before the revelation reached its fullness or was explained by the
Church. The God of the Bible is Father," and even more is he "The Father,"
"the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and our Father," [7] So much so that
his Son, in becoming man, made us also "sons," as St. Paul says, or "children"
of God, as St. John puts it. [8] But Jesus has no other mother than a woman,
the Virgin Mary. And if we ourselves, by virtue of our natural adoption,
have a mother who is our mother more truly than Eve, the "Mother of the
living," this can only be the entire Church, represented, or rather, as
we shall see later, realized par excellence in the same Virgin Mary, the
only one who is both Jesus' mother and our mother.
It is perfectly true, on the other hand, that if Mary realizes this motherhood
which is not only proper to a creature, but in which all her possibilities
are realized, beyond her, yet in the trajectory of her creaturehood, God
is not simply the perfect expression of an essentially human fatherhood,
extended as we might imagine it. He is Father in a completely different
way than any man could be, so much so that, far from fatherhood appearing
to be an essentially human state in the sense that motherhood is, it is,
in man, on the natural plane, at most only an incomplete image, indeed,
one subtly contradictory to that which it is in God. And when it is a matter
of attributing supernatural fatherhood to a man, despite the warning of
Jesus, [10] one must certainly not forget that such fatherhood is not a
property of those by whom it is exercised, but a simple representation in
them of the divine fatherhood. In this sense, they are the bearers or conductors
of it, but not really the owners of it.
As St. Athanasius observes, [11] being a father is never, on the part of
a man, more than one quality among others, and it is only momentarily that
even he who becomes a father exercises the role in fact. On the other hand,
the divine Person who is the source of divinity itself, and as such the
sole first cause in the most radical sense, not only exercises his fatherhood
eternally, but defines himself by this fatherhood which is always in act.
In the case of the heavenly Father, fatherhood is much more than a function:
it is a subsistant relationship by virtue of which everything subsists which
ever shall subsist.
This already is tantamount to saying that that which is most truly divine
in God, if we may put it this way, is expressed in man (homo) by
the polarity between man (vir) and woman, yet nevertheless surpasses and
transcends man just as much as woman, to the point that man (vir)
as such seems incapable of becoming complete in himself This is, in fact,
true in two senses. On the one hand, the fatherhood of man cannot be realized
without woman, not to say in woman. But on the other hand, he is not distinguished
from her or opposed to her in the relation by which they complete one another.
except by this representation of one greater than he; he is himself nothing
more than a touchstone and he will never do better than to evoke, without
ever truly assimilating, the fatherhood which is only properly realized
in God. For fatherhood, in its whole and true sense, can be nothing other
than divine, since it is the quality of being a source-the source of all
beings as of one's own being-and therefore of pure being, always in act.
Even masculine spousehood itself, we shall see, as it derives from the association
of creature to creator which is brought about by the divine Word alone,
is only fully and primarily realized in his incarnate person.
More simply and profoundly, as St. Gregory of Nyssa [12] saw so clearly,
the divine fatherhood, the only true fatherhood worthy of the name, is essentially
virginal. In other words. far from presupposing a complementaritythe
joining of man and womanGod's fatherhood is anterior to this distinction.
But, it must be added, if there is nevertheless some analogue to this fullness,
expressed in the distinction of the sexes and surpassing them, we do not
find it in man (vir). just as with fatherhood, so virginity in man
can only be predicated in an approximate, imperfect sense. On the natural,
created plane, it is only woman who can claim true virginity. The unmarried
woman, in fact, contains, in herself, at least potentially, all future humanity,
both masculine and feminine, for it will never come to being if not by an
interior development in the feminine being which the male does nothing but
set into motion, playing, again, only a representative role, at most as
a transmitter of the creative initiative which remains purely divine. Even
if this initiative happens to pass through him, one can never say it belongs
to him, whereas in woman, on the contrary, the creativity received from
on high is carried, and at the same time is exercised within her and remains
with her. It follows that in Woman physical integrity has a completely different
meaning and a different reality than in man. What one might improperly call
virginity in man is only a matter of not exercising a potential fatherhood,
which, even when he is called to exercise it, still does not truly belong
to him, for it is in him always a matter of a single instant in which he
still does not become the source, but rather a momentary channel of fatherly
creativity. In woman, on the other hand, this integrity is the unmitigated
fullness wherein exist all the possibilities of human developments in
potentia, since they will simply be developments of her being.
We already see, therefore, that God, inasmuch as he reveals himself supremely
as the unique Father, appears in certain regards as a masculine being,
and not feminine: no more bisexual than asexual, although the masculinity
of man only expresses itself in man as a trait not only derivative but borrowed,
and never wholly realizable in him. Even on the physical, natural plane,
to say nothing of the supernatural, man will never be more than a father
by proxy, in a sense, nor will the wholeeven what is in fact essentialof
fatherhood ever be in him. There is only one father who is entirely father,
and that is God.
Here we must make more precise what has been implied thus far. That is,
that if man is capable of being more truly a spouse, in the sense that he
effectively realizes and completes himself in union with his wife, he only
does so in dependence upon, or, as it were, within the archetypal union
of the eternal Word with divine Wisdom, accomplished through the marriage
of Christ and the Church. This wisdom, in fact, is none other than the plan
of God for his creature, and for the union of the creature with himfor
which it was created. This is why it is in creation itself that this wisdom
is truly realized, from beginning to end: first in the Virgin Mary, lastly
in the entire Church. But woman, and each woman in particular, as woman,
not only represents but realizes in her Virginity something of that same
integrity which is proper to the Virgin at the origin (and as the creaturely
origin) of salvation history, and which will be that of the Church when
it has achieved its completion in time. In the same way, as spouse, each
woman realizes in herself something of the feminine spousehood, the fullness
of which is the Church. And as mother, her motherhood is that motherhood
whose perfection is Mary.
There is, therefore, in the masculinity of man, something incomplete and
incapable of completion except in the Son of God become man. Even Christ's
masculinity is not complete, except by virtue of the fatherhood from which
he proceeds; but Christ as man nevertheless exceeds and transcends humanity,
even divinized humanity. We must therefore say definitively that man, the
male, is not truly man except in the heavenly Man, [13] the Son of God.
Further, the only true and integral fatherhood is, strictly speaking, neither
masculine nor feminine, since it belongs exclusively to the only Father
who is solely and integrally father, though he realizes in an equally transcendent
fashion that virginity which finds its earthly, human image only in woman.
As paradoxical as this all may seem, it already shows us in what sense sexuality
is transcended in God, or rather anticipated, not in asexualityeven
less in bisexualitybut in a fatherhood and sonship which transcend
the opposition of the sexes and to which masculinity is like a shadow and
femininity like a reflection.
This last point is borne out, in relation to the Father, in feminine virginity,
the only creaturely integrity in which limitless potentiality responds to
the total actuality of the uncreated: and it is borne out again, in relation
to the Holy Spirit, in motherhood
We have already mentioned the fact that in Hebrew, Aramaic and Syrian, as
well as in other Semitic languages, the word "spirit" is feminine. The writings
of the Syrian fathers, particularly Aphrates, [14] rightly emphasize that
this fact is not insignificant. This linguistic affinity reveals precisely
what we have characterized as a reflection, but a reversed reflection. Let
us reiterate that it is the role of woman to encompass in her motherhood
all that is human, masculine or feminine, Just as we can say it is all pre-contained
in her virginity. We can find no other analogy in the created order for
the relation of the Spirit to that which it inspires. However, the analogy
here, in contrast to that which we drew between human and divine fatherhood,
is not so much a question of incompletion or imperfection as it is of inversion.
This is doubly true. In fact, in the case of the Spirit, it is the inspiration
which seems to be within the inspired, while the child is within the mother.
Moreover, the proper development of the child takes place only in its tending
toward separation from the motherthe leaving of the womb. Even though
he remains dependent upon her who gave him birth, the child must, to be
truly himself, leave the mother's womb and let the umbilical cord be definitely
cut. In the case of the Spirit, on the contrary, the perfection or consecration
of the one inspired presumes not some- kind of independence from the one
who inspires, but on the contrary, the total and unreserved consummation
of their union: what William of St. Thierry calls the unitas Spiritusunity
even more than union. [15] And this, borne out as true by human experience
of the Spirit, can, of course, be verified only in a transcendent sense
in the subsistence of the Spirit in God himself, in the womb of the Trinity.
The fatherhood of the Father is not perfected, nor the sonship of the Son
consecrated there, except by this proceeding of the Spirit from the Father,
coming to rest forever in the Son.
Now, perhaps, we begin to glimpse the profundity of the paradox which encompasses
all the analogies which permit us to represent in some way, not an entirely
misleading one, however inadequate it remains, the life and being of God
in relation to our created life and being. Thus we begin to discern how
God, under one aspect, is not properly speaking masculine, but reveals himself
first, certainly, in the axis of a masculinity that transcends itself And
at the same time, in that which constitutes the perfection of his Trinitarian
life (i.e., the processions of the Spirit), he contains in himself no less
what we have called a reflection of woman in her proper perfection, which
is also the perfection of humanity, indeed of all creation. But this reflection,
like all reflections, is inverted. Or rather, if you prefer, there is in
God, as it were, the antitype of what is reflected in reverse in the motherhood
in which alone woman is wholly revealed, in particular a virginal motherhood.
It is in this sense, certainly very subtle but also disconcertingly profound,
that God is neither man nor woman, though he encompasses from the beginning
all that humanity will ever bring to realization. He goes beyond masculinity
in the only fatherhood worthy of the name, and is at the same time, in his
eternal virginity, the antitype of all motherhood.
Endnotes:
[7] See the salutation of most of the letters of St. Paul.
[8] 1 John 3:1.
[9] Genesis 3:20.
[10] Matthew 23:9 and parallels.
[11] Athanasius, Contra Arianos 1, 18-19; 1st epistle ad Serapionem,
17 and Contra Arianos II, 29-31.
[12] Gregory of Nyssa, De Virginitate, II; PG 46, col. 321 C.
[13] Corinthians 15:45 f.
[14] Aphrates, Demonstratio 18:10; Patrologia Syriaca, v.
1, 839.
[15] Epistula Aurea, II, cha. II, part 11.
Related IgnatiusInsight.com article:
"Why Catholicism
Makes Protestantism Tick: Louis Bouyer on the Reformation" by Mark
Brumley
Rev.
Louis Bouyer (1913-2004) was a member of the French Oratory and one
of the most respected and versatile Catholic scholars and theologians of
the twentieth century.
A friend of Hans Urs von Balthasar,
Joseph Ratzinger, and J.R.R.
Tolkien, and a co-founder of the international review Communio,
Bouyer was a former Lutheran minister who entered the Catholic Church in
1939. He became a leading figure in the Catholic biblical and liturgical
movements of the twentieth century, was on influence on the Second Vatican
Council, and became well known for his excellent books on history of Christian
spirituality. In addition to his many writings, Bouyer lectured widely across
Europe and America.
Woman
in the Church (with an epilogue by Balthasar and an essay by C.S.
Lewis), was one of the first three books published by Ignatius Press, in
1979. Other Ignatius Press books by Bouyer include The
Word, Church, and Sacraments in Protestantism and Catholicism, Women
Mystics, and the introduction to John
Henry Newman: Prayers, Verses, Devotions (Bouyer wrote a biography
of Newman).
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