Of God and His Creatures
Of the Sacrament of Matrimony
THOUGH by the Sacraments men are restored to grace, they are not
immediately restored to immortality. Since then the faithful people
needs to be perpetuated to the end of the world, this has to be done by
generation. Now generation works to many ends: to the perpetuity of the
species, to the perpetuity of the political commonwealth, and to the
perpetuity of the Church. Hence it comes to be ruled and guided by
different powers. As it works to the good of nature in the perpetuity
of the species, it is guided to that end by nature so inclining; and in
that respect it is called 'a function of nature.' As it works to social
and political good, it is subject to the ordinance of the civil law. As
it works to the good of the Church, it must be subject to Church
government. But the things that are administered to the people by the
ministers of the Church, are called Sacraments.* Matrimony then, as consisting in the union of
male and female, intending to beget and educate offspring to the
worship of God, is a Sacrament of the Church. Hence a blessing is
pronounced upon it by the ministers of the Church. And as in other
Sacraments something spiritual is prefigured by external acts, so in
this Sacrament, by the union of male and female, there is figuratively
represented the union of Christ with His Church, according to the text
of the Apostle (Eph. v, 32). And because the Sacraments effect what
they represent (sacramenta efficiunt quod figurant), we must believe
that grace is bestowed by this Sacrament on persons marrying, to enable
them to have their part in the union of Christ with His Church; and
this aid is very necessary for them, that in their application to
fleshly and carnal things they may not be sepa rated from Christ and
the Church.
Now the figure must correspond to the reality which it signifies. But
the union of Christ with His Church is of one Bridegroom with one Bride
to be kept for ever. For of the Church it is said: One is my
beloved, my perfect one (Cant. vi, 8): nor ever shall Christ be
parted from His Church: for so He says Himself, Lo, I am with you
even to the end of the world (Matt. xxviii, 20); and so the
Apostle, We shall be for ever with the Lord (1 Thess. iv, 16).
Matrimony therefore, as a Sacrament of the Church, must be of one
husband with one wife, to continue without separation: this is meant by
the faith (or troth), whereby husband and wife are bound
to one another. So then there are three goods of matrimony, as it is a
Sacrament of the Church: offspring, to be reared and educated to
the worship of God: faith, whereby one husband is tied to one
wife: and sacramental signification by the indivisible union of
the matrimonial connexion, making it a sacred sign of the union of
Christ with His Church.
4.77 : That Sacraments can be administered even by Wicked Ministers
4.79 : That through Christ the Resurrection of our Bodies will take place