By the directive of the
sublime fraternity, the
Divine Word recommends:
Therefore, you too, each
one in particular, love
your own wife as
yourself, and the wife
revere her husband. —
Paul (Ephesians, 5:33.).
From the Spiritist
literature, it appears
that the union of the
sexes is the divine
aspect of marriage. The
unfolding of the law of
love, mentioned union,
will have to transcend
the bonds of the flesh,
to converge in the face
of souls. God wanted
this to happen so that
the “(...) mutual
affinity of the spouses
would be transmitted to
their children and that
there would be two, and
not just one, to love
them, to care for them
and to make them
progress.”1
However, in the abode
where we live2,
what do we do with
marriage? A partnership
regulated by the law of
men? The unavoidable
condition for the
constitution of a
family? A life goal? A
social status? A record
of our prosperity in the
world?
In the Gospel
According to Spiritism,
Kardec seems to answer
such arguments:
What is being considered
is not the satisfaction
of the heart, but the
satisfaction of pride,
vanity, cupidity, in a
word: of all material
interests. When
everything goes for the
best according to these
interests, it is said
that the marriage is one
of convenience and, when
the purses are well
stocked, it is said that
the spouses are likewise
and very happy they will
be.
What we make of marriage
and how we understand it
is directly related to
how advanced we are. In
the coexistence of
imperfect spirits, the
satisfaction of the
heart is, in most cases,
replaced by personal
interest3,
defined even before the
meeting of the sexes.
In our earthly existence
we talk about marriage,
we witness it being
carried out and we get
married. Through these
experiences, we build
our point of view about
such a union. However,
we must ask ourselves
why an institute so
vividly present in our
lives is so encouraging
to us, and why do we
have the innate feeling
of being constantly
pushed towards it?
The answer lies in the
character of this union,
made up of different
divine hues.
As creatures of the
Creator, we carry with
us the divine spark that
at all times puts us on
the paths towards the
Father4.
One of these paths is
marriage, the fruit of
free choice and
fraternal solidarity of
being, which fulfills a
sublime and progressive
ambition: to love and be
loved.
Through this kind of
love for others, the
spouses place themselves
in communion with God,
giving themselves up for
the happiness of the
other in sweet
exhortations of
fraternity.
Joanna de Angelis5 teaches
us:
Love is an achievement
of the mature,
psychologically balanced
spirit; power plant to
keep emotional equipment
in harmonic operation.
It is a form of self-denial in
fulfilling self-giving.
It does not rest on
suspicions or childish
demands; it eliminates
jealousy and ambition
for possession,
providing ineffable
well-being to the loved
one who, uncommitted to
the duty of retribution,
also loves. When, by
chance, unrequited, it
does not get hurt or
irritated, understanding
that its goal is to
give, not to demand. It
allows freedom to the
other, who allows
himself, without the
burden of anxiety or
compulsion.
When we get married, we
consolidate the choice
to love each other
unpretentiously and to
strip ourselves of the
pride that persecutes
us, from the criticism
that destroys and from
the jealousy that
sickens.
Emmanuel, recalling the
tragedies of married
life and the need for
spouses to be bound to
the teachings of Christ,
asserts:
Many men and women
demand, for a long time,
heavenly flowers on
earthly thorns,
demanding from others
attitudes and guidelines
that they are, for the
time being, unable to
adopt, and marriage
becomes a detestable
institution for them.
(...)
Does your wife remain
below your expectations?
Remember that she is the
mother of your children
and the servant of your
needs. Is your husband
ignorant and cruel? Do
not forget that he is
the companion that God
has given you...
We will stumble. In many
battles fought in our
hearts between
selfishness and love,
the former will win. We
will often steal our
companion's happiness
and peace. However, we
must not fear. The
Father knows us. Their
expectations, just and
pious, are not that we
put out the fire that
may happen in married
life, but that we always
have a glass of water
with us in our hands.
Ricardo Di Bernardi6,
dealing with
probationary marriages,
recalls that:
Probational marriages,
with the effort of the
partners, can become
similar marriages, if
not in this life in a
next incarnation if the
current coexistence
creates new and
productive stimuli. One
does not reincarnate in
order to suffer, but to
grow, change, evolve and
love. Besides, there is
no apology for accepting
aggressive or frankly
harmful and unproductive
relationships in which
separation would be the
inexorable path.
We know that, in certain
cases, the overcoming of
problems will determine
at the end of the
present life a fraternal
and respectful
coexistence. The
overcoming of mutual
difficulties will lead
to the liberation of
both who, when feeling
free in spirituality,
will be able to be
reborn in another
context, that is,
together with their
kindred souls.
Through marriage, we
experience a new form of
affection, which, like
the love between
brothers, between
parents and children and
friends, is a way of
teaching and polishing
the Spirit to the
sublime fraternal love
of the universal family
of God.
References:
AUGUSTINE, Aurelius (St.
Augustine). Confessions.
Translation J. Oliveira
Santos, S.J. and A,
Ambrosio de Pina, S. J.
Sao Paulo: Publisher:
Editora Nova Cultural
(Coleção Os Pensadores),
2004.
DE
ANGELIS, Joanna
(Spirit). The whole
man. Psychographed
by Divaldo Pereira
Franco. Salvador: Leal,
1996.
DI
BERNARDI, Ricardo.
Sexual energy, love and
spirituality. Matao-SP:
O Clarim, 2021.
EMMANUEL
(Spirit). Vineyard of
Light. Psychographics by
Francisco Candido
Xavier. Brasilia: FEB,
2019.
KARDEC,
Allan. The Book of
Spirits. Translation by
Salvador Gentile,
revised by Elias
Barbosa. Macaws: IDE,
2009. 182 edition.
KARDEC
Allan. The gospel
According to Spiritism.
Translation by Guillon
Ribeiro. Brasilia: FEB,
2018.
KARDEC
Allan. The Gospel
According to Spiritism.
Translated by Guillon
Ribeiro. Brasilia: FEB,
2018. Pages 277-278.
2 The
Earth, therefore, offers
one of the types of
expiatory worlds, whose
variety is infinite, but
revealing all, as a
common character, to
serve as a place of
exile for spirits
rebellious to the Law of
God. These spirits have
to fight, at the same
time, with the
perversity of men and
with the inclemency of
Nature, a double and
arduous work that
simultaneously develops
the qualities of the
heart and those of the
intelligence. This is
how God, in His
goodness, makes
punishment itself result
in a benefit for the
progress of the Spirit.
3 895.
Leaving aside the
defects and vices about
which no one can be
mistaken, what is the
most characteristic sign
of imperfection?
4 (...)
man wants to praise You,
this fragment of Your
creation. You incite him
that he may like to
praise You, because you
made Him towards You and
our heart is restless,
until it rests in You.”
(Augustine, Saint,
Bishop of Hippo,
354-430.
Confessions/Latin
translation and preface
by Lorenzo Mammì - 1st ed.
– Sao Paulo: Penguin
Classics Companhia das
Letras, 2017.
5 DE
ANGELIS, Joanna
(Spirit). The whole
man. Psychographed
by Divaldo Pereira
Franco. Salvador: Leal,
1996. p. 114.
6 DI
BERNARDI, Ricardo.
Sexual energy, love and
spirituality. Matao-SP:
O Clarim, 2021. p. 20.
|