Monday, October 1, 2018

The correlation between body and soul


THOUGH there is a distinction between our body and our
spiritual soul, we always have to remember that these two are both
constitutive of our being. They are meant to be together. We are
neither body alone nor soul alone. We are at once body and soul.
  
            There might be some separation of the two at our death,
but then at the end of time, our faith tells us that there will be a
resurrection of the body and the reunification of it with the soul. In
heaven or in hell, in our definitive state of life in eternity, we
will be both body and soul. In this life, they are like friends that
cannot get together often, and enemies that cannot separate from each
other.
   
            That there is distinction between the body and soul is
quite obvious. In fact, not only is there distinction, but also
conflict, as testified by St. Paul when he said, “In my inner being I
delight in God’s law; but I see another law at work in me, waging war
against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin
at work within me.” (Rom 7,22-23)
  
            But in spite of that distinction and conflict, they are
meant to be united. This is how our Catechism teaches us about this
point: “The unity of soul and body is so profound that one has to
consider the soul to be the ‘form’ of the body, i.e., it is because of
its spiritual soul that the body made of matter becomes a living,
human body; spirit and matter, in man, are not two natures united, but
rather their union forms a single nature.” (CCC 365)
  
            These clarifications are significant for they would show
us that somehow the condition of the body is determined to some extent
by the condition of the soul, and vice-versa. There is some kind of
correlation between the two, though not in a strictly one-to-one
mathematical kind of correlation.
  
            To put it bluntly, we cannot say that just because one has
an ugly face or a frail body, he too has an ugly soul or a weak soul.
That is absolutely foul. In the lives of saints and holy men and
women, we can see a beautiful soul in ugly faces and sickly bodies.
  
            In fact, we have these prophetic words from the Book of
Isaiah that described the future Christ: “He had no stately form or
majesty to attract us, no beauty that we should desire him.” (53,2)
   
            So we have to be careful with making judgments based on
looks alone and other external things. Just the same, we have to say
that when the body is sick, especially of the mental, emotional,
psychological kind, we cannot say that the illness is due exclusively
to some organic malfunction. The condition of the soul has something
to do with it also.

             In these illnesses, we can say that the person has his
soul not totally identified with God, with Christ in the Holy Spirit,
because if he is, he would know what to do with those illnesses in
terms of how to avoid, handle and overcome them.
  
            These illnesses should not just be managed by using drugs
alone and other human and material means. The recourse to spiritual
and supernatural means to recover full union with God is also
necessary. When the soul is not with God, then it is with the devil
completely or partially.
  
            Thus, when attending to our ailments and those of the
others, we should not forget to have recourse also to the spiritual
and supernatural means which, in fact, are more important and
indispensable than the drugs and other medical interventions that we
also need.
  
            We have to liberate ourselves from the mindset that our
sicknesses and illnesses are purely bodily affairs with no spiritual
and supernatural dimensions involved.


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