This chapter reconstructs traditional teachings on sex, marriage, and family life, and connects them with modern family law and family theory. It presents the marital family as a sphere, or a globe. At the bottom is (1) a natural pole that anchors the natural goods of marriage and natural human inclinations, appetites, and capacities for sex, marriage, and family life. Radiating up from this natural pole are: (2) a social dimension that articulates the public goods of the marital family, and the important supportive role of social institutions and professions, not least church and state; (3) an economic dimension that reflects the union of properties, labor, and rights in marriage and the family, and the channeling, expressive, and signaling functions of modern family law; (4) a communicative dimension expressed in public liturgies, celebrations, and symbols on important family days, as well as the vital private daily communications among spouses, parents, and children; and (5) a contractual dimension, expressed in the complex formal promises that form a marital household and define ongoing family rights, duties, and expectations. At the top of the sphere is (6) a spiritual pole that helps integrate these dimensions around sacramental, covenantal, or other transcendent ideals for family life.
Witte, Jr., John (Sat,) studied this question.
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