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"Delightful Secrets of Sex" (Vanity)
Touchstone Magazine ^ | 2004 | Juli Loesch Wiley

Posted on 08/09/2005 10:51:53 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o

The Delightful Secrets of Sex Juli Loesch Wiley on Fertility & Contraception

With all the incessant media drooling over the sexual options smorgasbord, with the Gay Summer of 2003 still flickering blue on our TV screens, and with even the Girl Scouts and the YWCA endorsing “safe-sex” training for young girls, people plugged into the mass culture have heard few discordant notes about the sexual revolution—and some have heard, perhaps, only one. Namely, that “the pope” is against it. To whom is sometimes added “the Christian right.” And, especially maddening to the Socially Responsible, “the pope” is even for some reason bizarrely, unaccountably opposed to what even most churches agree is the best thing since One-A-Day vitamins: contraception.

Secular journalists seem to assume that a comprehensive critique of the agenda and the paraphernalia of the sexual revolution is an idiosyncrasy of “the pope” alone. They are unaware that such opposition is only the latest expression of the continuous Judeo-Christian concern for sexual integrity going back to the New Testament and the church fathers, going back in fact to Genesis.

Who bothers to explain, even superficially, the rationale for the (until this century) universal Christian teaching against contraception? The implication is that there are no reasons for the historic Christian position: nothing worth examining, nothing even worth refuting. The believers who do accept the traditional teaching—mostly Catholics, and a minority of them at that—accept it on “blind faith,” and that’s that.

Yet the sexual revolution—the disjointing and dismembering of human sexuality into a heap of fragments to be rearranged into any shape at will—rests upon certain underlying assumptions about the nature and ends of sexuality. It relies upon contraceptive paraphernalia as its necessary technology. I am no professional philosopher, but I can see the urgency of examining the assumptions before taking any stance at all with regard to the technique.

Beyond Primates

Sexually, we resemble baboons. This is, and to a certain extent ought to be, true. But saying it seems like a dig, a put-down.

We know that human sexuality is something like other mammalian sexuality, and at the same time something more. For us, as for apes, mating fulfills an appetitive drive and satisfies an itch. Like other primates, we reproduce sexually. Again like other primates, we use sexual gestures to express affinity or “matedness” or belonging on some level: Our mating patterns order our herd, our group, our community.

But there is still something more than affinity, progeny, and itch. The sacramental view of sexuality was never based on studies of baboon communities or squints at barnyard sex. Christians believe that, first, since we were made in the image and likeness of God, our design is both revelatory and providential. Second, the “honor of the marriage bed” is rooted in the scriptural view of the marital union as showing forth, mysteriously, the love-union of Christ and the Church.

If human sexuality had no designer, then vain is an appeal to honor the design. Furthermore, if there is a design, and the design is already perfectly reflected in our instincts, drives, and appetites, then “honoring the design” should need no special appeal at all: We should expect it to happen automatically.

When Christ, during his ministry here on earth, was asked (in Matthew 19) about the propriety of certain sexual customs, his method was to refer his questioners back to Genesis. He used the argument from design: that the Creator had made the human race male and female, that he had designed them to hold fast together, becoming one flesh. So the design of male and female is a sign of different-sex alliance and fidelity (Gen. 2:18–24) as well as God’s way of making his human creatures fruitful (Gen. 1:28). This is the way it was to be in Eden (literally, “Delight”).

The question Jesus was asked had to do with divorce. His answer made clear that in the beginning (Genesis), in the time of delight (Eden), man and woman were one: There was no divorce. He notes that divorce came in later because of people’s hardness of heart—in other words, because they sinned. But rather than accommodating that hardness of heart, he challenges his listeners with a hard saying—“Anyone who divorces his wife and marries another, is guilty of adultery”—a hard saying that paradoxically upholds once again the norm of Eden, the full-orbed sexuality of delight.

Fragmented Sexuality

What does this discussion of divorce have to do with contraception? The underlying question in both cases is whether we are justified in breaking this full-orbed sexuality apart.May we break apart, rearrange, a man and a woman? May we break apart fruitfulness and delight? Are we free, because we are able to do so, to split sex up into its various “animal” and “angel” components: fondness here, fertility there; here the itch, there the issue; affection and desire and covenant and conception considered separately and experienced separately—rearranging the pieces to suit whatever project we have in mind?

The picture is complicated by the fact that men and women have become hardened in their responses, in their feelings, in what seems natural to them, because of sin. We’re not in the Garden anymore. Our hearts are hard. So, for instance, rape seems natural, even urgent, to some poor sinners. To others, natural is the pleasure of seduction. For some men, mating with a man seems natural. Still others seek sexual gratification with children. Or animals. Or, lower still, with plastic sex toys and video images.

And many—especially in our day—think it a problem and a vexation that natural sex should so easily produce offspring. It seems to them normal that sex should be usually—almost invariably—infertile. The fruitfulness of the sexual embrace distresses them. I could almost say it affronts them. The connection between sexual fulfillment and fertility strikes them as a defect of design.

Fruitfulness is undeniably a component of real sex. Bible and biology, Genesis and genetics, every source of knowledge, natural and supernatural, is there to tell us so. It is not a defect: It is part of the design. The question, then, is what do we do about it? Do we learn to live with our created sexual design, learn about it “on our knees” as learning something holy? Or do we reject our sexual nature as it is, and invent something else?

Contraception means the rejection of real sex: It is an insistence that we can break sexuality into pieces, select the bits we like, and put the rest in the wastebasket.

Patient Sexuality

It takes patience and humility to live with a husband or wife whose sexuality is whole, entire, and unbroken. It means one’s great bodily powers and heart-energies are at the service of somebody else—at the service of another sex, and another generation—and not of oneself. This laying out of sexuality at the service of another—seeing genital activity itself not as self-fulfillment but as self-donation—is at the heart of Christian sacramental reflection.

Now consider this: If the husband or the wife says, “I love you, dearie, but you’ve got one God-given, healthy, holistic power that gives me a pain: fertility. So bag it. Fix it. Suppress it. And then I’ll sleep with you”—that is not exactly the acceptance of a whole person by a whole person. It is altering the person (suppressing natural fertility) as a condition for marital union.

Thus, contraception does not just offend the procreative power; it offends the unitive power, too. It involves a maiming of bodily wholeness—cutting sex down to size—which ultimately means cutting your spouse down to size.

Both reason and revelation tell us that a great purpose of the sexual bonding of a man and a woman—and therefore of marriage—is the begetting and raising of children. But there are some who say that if a husband and wife are, on the whole, accepting of children, there’s no reason for this “holistic acceptance” to be expressed in every act of marital union. In other words, openness to life inheres in the relationship as a whole, and not necessarily in individual sexual acts.

Just a moment now. Suddenly we have a “relationship” that is somehow independent of its “acts.” Try this statement instead, which substitutes “fidelity” for “fertility”: “Marital fidelity inheres in the relationship and not necessarily in individual sexual acts.” (Oops! That comes a little too close to what the mass culture is already beginning to say: “Flexible Fidelity: the Next Big Thing.”) Let’s try one more: “Your Savings and Loan believes that business ethics inheres in the relationship and not necessarily in individual financial transactions.” Now we’re cooking!

A relationship is not separable from its “acts.” The acts are the ingredients of the relationship. If your recipe for brownies is 99 percent wholesome except for a tablespoon from the cat’s litter box, haven’t you subtly altered the character of brownies per se?

Natural Planning

But don’t we have a dilemma here? On the one hand, the marriage relationship is ordered to self-donation: holy oneness with one’s spouse, and the procreation and education of children. But there are occasions—particularly in times of sickness, poverty, and hardship—when the arrival of more children would seriously compromise the family’s ability to care for the children they have already been given and make oneness far more difficult, if not (apparently) impossible.

In these cases—when the mother’s health is at serious risk, or the family’s finances are close to calamitous, or the caregiving needs of the existing children are already nearly overwhelming—wouldn’t contraception actually serve the ends of marriage by making it more likely that the children already born will also be decently cared for, given the parents’ limited resources of time, energy, and money?

I am convinced that the answer is no. Even in these cases, contraception would not serve. There is something literally disordered about contraception: It entails actively rejecting and extirpating part of our created design. We are not allowed, and should not want, to bring disorder into our lives, especially our married lives.

In these cases, natural family planning (NFP) could very well be the answer to prayer. For the same reason, it should be clear why natural family planning is morally acceptable: It means knowing, respecting, and acting in harmony with our created design.

NFP involves knowing the bodily signs of fertility and infertility and then acting accordingly: choosing intercourse during fertile times if the conception of a child could be accepted, or abstaining at those times if there are grave reasons to avoid pregnancy. In both cases, the spouses are acting with, and not against, the natural powers and potentialities inscribed by divine wisdom in their own bodies.

That is why it is inaccurate to call NFP a “method of contraception.” Contraception is a key part of the larger modern project of splitting sexuality into its components and then exploiting those components separately. It calls for nothing by way of virtue. It requires only drugs, devices, or surgery. It is the ultimate technical fix.

NFP expresses a much more ancient and holistic view: that sexual powers require harmonious cooperation, patience, gentleness, self-control—in fact, all the fruits of the Holy Spirit. NFP presupposes husbands and wives who have placed their sexual lives humbly in each other’s hands; who can, by mutual consent, lovingly abstain for a little while, and lovingly come together again (1 Cor. 7:4–5); who know there is a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing (Eccl. 3:5).

Sexual Mystery

St. Paul said something about human sexual love that was never said about any animal’s sex life: that for us—for human persons and particularly for baptized persons—sexual union is a mysterium tremendum. It is the prime image of the union of Christ and the Church (Eph. 5:32). To be sure, St. Paul does not say that this imaging is a property of sexual relations considered in isolation, but of marriage as a whole. Nevertheless, we’re not talking here about the love of parent and child, of brothers and sisters, of workmates or the monastery or the parish, but precisely the union exclusively proper to married persons. The sacred sign of this is sexual intercourse.

It seems to me that the goal of Christ’s work is the creation of a new human race, one that lives the way God originally wanted the human race to live. This is a call backward to Genesis, to original design, to what one might call Alpha Humanity. But it is also a call forward to something new, to life fulfilled in Christ: Omega Humanity.

If the sexual act signifies this, if eternal salvation has a nuptial meaning (the Spirit and the Bride say, “Come”), then its structure is not to be tampered with, any more than one would tamper with the matter of the Eucharist or the name of the Trinity. This means that wholeness is not just desirable, not just an ideal, but is obligatory for purposes of signifying what God wants to signify; in other words, for sacramental reasons. This is why honest virginity and honest married love both honor the sacramentality of sex: virginity, by keeping sex wholly reserved; and marriage, by keeping sex whole whenever it is expressed.

This doesn’t mean that a baby must be desired whenever intercourse is chosen (although it is a beautiful thing for husband and wife to come together knowing that conception is possible; they are then true wonder-workers in each other’s eyes!). But it means, at least, that the natural pattern of fertility and infertility is recognized as providential. We cooperate with it. We respect it. We don’t restructure it.

Those who never really fast, never really feast. The seasons of nature alternate cold and warm, dry and wet, the hard-shelled seed buried in darkness and the spring and sap of the new green shoot. In the same way, the church calendar is spangled with its purple and rose, its white, green, and gold, keeping its octaves, counting its days, fasting without bitterness and feasting without shame.

I speak here of sexual abstinence: the virginity of the unmarried, the continence of the celibate, and the periodic abstinence of NFP couples; and also of those many occasions when husband and wife are unable to come together because of illness, weariness, or separation. These are our fasts. Yet the meaning of abstinence is never found in itself, but in rhythms larger than ourselves, larger than our whole lifetimes. The meaning of the fast is found in the Feast.

Truly, if this life were all there is, there would be no reason not to squander our sexual energy ad libitum, de-coupled as to partner, disoriented as to sex and gender, Dionysian as to its final end: Remember that in Euripides’ play The Bacchae it ends in death.

But if this life points mysteriously to a life to come, we must honor the “secret meaning” of our sexuality as a Sign of sacred fertile union. To deliberately splinter the parts of the Sign—to break away from the sacredness, to split off the fertility, or to disrupt the spouses’ one-flesh unity—would be like hacking up a painted highway marker into a heap of unrelated syllables. But to restore the Sign of whole sexual love—man and woman, lifelong and exclusive, faithful and fruitful—means to read the Sign rightly and to reach the destination to which it points: the Marriage of the Lamb, the feast that has no end.

Juli Loesch Wiley is a worshiper of one God, the wife of one husband, and the homeschooling Mater et Magistra of two fine sons in Johnson City, Tennessee. She can be reached at jlw509@earthlink.net. A version of this article appeared in Re:generation in 1995.

If you enjoyed this article, you'll find more of the same in every issue of Touchstone magazine. An introductory subscription (ten copies for one year) is only $24.95.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: birthcontrol; contraception; holiness; marriage; natural; nfp; sarament; sex; virtue
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To: ShadowAce
I wrote: But you don't have to do it by contraception.

You wrote: "Are you suggesting we deny the gift that God gave to marriage?"

No. I'm saying we should recognize and use the good gift that God built into female sexual physiology, namely, intermittent infertility. Or some call it "periodic ferility." In other words, the recognizable times of fertility/infertility which make it possible to choose either to optimize the chances of pregnancy, or to avoid pregnancy by choosing the infertile times to have intercourse.

There's a fuller explanation of NFP in the article.

41 posted on 08/09/2005 12:04:22 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Make love. Accept no substitutes.)
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To: ShadowAce


I agree...seems it would be selfish to deny your life partner/spouse in order to avoid pregnancy. That would lead one to seek out affection in another therefore sinning. We simply cannot afford to support and raise the big families of yesterday.


42 posted on 08/09/2005 12:06:26 PM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: Mrs. Don-o
No. I'm saying we should recognize and use the good gift that God built into female sexual physiology, namely, intermittent infertility.

Ahh. I understand.

43 posted on 08/09/2005 12:06:28 PM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
No. I'm saying we should recognize and use the good gift that God built into female sexual physiology, namely, intermittent infertility.

I have 3 kids from the 'monthly' method.

44 posted on 08/09/2005 12:09:52 PM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: Mrs. Don-o

From skimming I need to read this article in a more fuller study later thanks.

RB<><


45 posted on 08/09/2005 12:12:07 PM PDT by Rightly Biased (<><)
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To: SouthernFreebird
I have 3 kids from the 'monthly' method.

Is that counting calendar days, or observing basal body temperature and cervical mucus changes?

SD

46 posted on 08/09/2005 12:14:39 PM PDT by SoothingDave
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To: Mrs. Don-o
The submergence of rationality during the sexual act was long viewed by the Western Church as the point at which sin attached to the sexual act. (I.e.we are rational beings, anything that abates our rational nature sinful.)

A more eastern, and Hebraic view, holds that when we engage in the physical action of conception that we are intstead overwhelmed by God's joy in his continuing creative act. For a short time a spiritual doorway is opened. We are swept up for a short time in the emotional swirl and dance of God's Joy at creation, and, I suspect, provided with a view of the emotional joy of heaven.

This will, perhaps, help in an understanding of the unitive nature of marriage and the sexual act, and why marriage is a sacrament.
47 posted on 08/09/2005 12:15:37 PM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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To: Mrs. Don-o

This deals with one aspect of human behavior and proposes an idealistic works-focused solution to man's natural sinful nature. However, the so-called solution of abstention causes its own set of problems. A man who chooses to abstain rather than have relations using contraception will be more likely to look at women with lust and commit adultery in his heart. Try to tidy up man in one area through works and another problem pokes out. Bottom line is we are sinful creatures in dire need of Christ.


48 posted on 08/09/2005 12:20:38 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: ShadowAce

I understand these concerns completely; I was raised the only child of parents concerned with overpopulation. I don't believe that people are intentionally selfish when deciding to use contraception-- it is viewed as normal and necessary by the vast majority of our society. It doesn't occur to many people that avoiding contraception is even an option-- as my mother who has changed her mind on the issue remarked, birth control pills and IUDs were thought by doctors and her generation to be as innocuous and routine as daily multivitamins--, and a relatively small proportion of the Western population is aware of Natural Family Planning (NFP) and its efficacy (the Symptothermal Method has been found in clinical trials to have a lower failure rate (around 1%) than the venerated Pill; articles on this can be found in the Journal of British Medicine, on Medscape, and in the journal of the ACOOG). I don't look down my nose to those who contracept-- it is none of my business-- but I do wish more people were aware of and open to the benefits of NFP.
My beliefs regarding the relational effects of contraception are unchanged by examples of extenuating circumstance. Rejection of another person's reproductive capacities is a rejection of a part of their humanity, whether or not this is our intent. NFP remains equally effective whether couples have health problems or large families, or not.

To pose a question in response to your "pregnancy threat" question, what about the people (and there are many of those) whose health is threatened by birth control hormones? People with latex allergies? Those who develop Pelvic Inflammatory Disease or Toxic Shock Syndrome from using a diaphragm and are rendered sterile, develop chronic pain, or die from their contraceptives?

Re: large families-- It is none of my business how many children other people are blessed with, but it is likely that at the point at which 12 children have been born, there are relatively few reproductive years left, so conception of 5 more babies is unlikely to happen. Couples who have a compelling reason to avoid having more children can learn NFP (ccli.org and omsoul.com have books and contact info for instructors) and abstain from sex during the monthly six-day fertility window.


49 posted on 08/09/2005 12:22:26 PM PDT by Im4LifeandLiberty
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To: plain talk; Mrs. Don-o
A man who chooses to abstain rather than have relations using contraception...

I guess this is the idea here that I don't understand. Where in the Bible does it say that contraception is a sin? Where does it say that married couples must produce children?

Don't get me wrong--children are a blessing to those who can accept them. But I can find no references that intentional childlessness is a sin.

50 posted on 08/09/2005 12:25:14 PM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: plain talk
A man who chooses to abstain rather than have relations using contraception will be more likely to look at women with lust and commit adultery in his heart. Try to tidy up man in one area through works and another problem pokes out. Bottom line is we are sinful creatures in dire need of Christ.

Of course we are sinful. The question is should we even try to avoid sin, to call sin what it is? Or are we better off calling what is evil, good?

SD

51 posted on 08/09/2005 12:27:41 PM PDT by SoothingDave
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To: ShadowAce

Onan's smiting by God for "spilling his seed," the command to "be fruitful and multiply," the statement that children are like arrows, and "happy is the man whose quiver is full of them," condemnations in the Pauline corpus of sexual behaviors that exclude the unitive and procreative powers of physical intimacy.




If I remember correctly, I read the NFP divorce statistics in an old issue of First Things (I think it was a U of Chicago study) and in Prof. Janet Smith's Humanae Vitae: A Generation Later


52 posted on 08/09/2005 12:30:59 PM PDT by Im4LifeandLiberty
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To: SoothingDave
Is that counting calendar days, or observing basal body temperature and cervical mucus changes?

I'll just bet that whatever way I say is bound to be the least effective and your anxious to enlighten me.

53 posted on 08/09/2005 12:35:38 PM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: Im4LifeandLiberty
Rejection of another person's reproductive capacities is a rejection of a part of their humanity, whether or not this is our intent.

What if we changed that sentence to read:
Rejection of another person's reproductive capacities ability to walk is a rejection of a part of their humanity, whether or not this is our intent.

Wouldn't it be the same thing? How about:
Rejection of another person's reproductive tanning capacities is a rejection of a part of their humanity, whether or not this is our intent.

Would you stand by your claim when applied to other areas of life?

Non-recognition of others' abilities/talents/gifts or lack thereof in certain areas is just as much a sin as rejection of abilities/talents/gifts.

Contraception is not sin. How you choose to plan your family is fine--as long as abortion is not involved.

54 posted on 08/09/2005 12:37:03 PM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: SoothingDave

As I said, I believe this so-called solution can cause more sin than it avoids. I don't understand your point.


55 posted on 08/09/2005 12:37:41 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: cjshapi

"Oh sweet mystery of life..."


56 posted on 08/09/2005 12:41:33 PM PDT by Junior (Just because the voices in your head tell you to do things doesn't mean you have to listen to them)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Sexually, we resemble baboons. This is, and to a certain extent ought to be, true. But saying it seems like a dig, a put-down. We know that human sexuality is something like other mammalian sexuality, and at the same time something more. For us, as for apes, mating fulfills an appetitive drive and satisfies an itch. Like other primates, we reproduce sexually. Again like other primates, we use sexual gestures to express affinity or “matedness” or belonging on some level: Our mating patterns order our herd, our group, our community....

Not true. Only among the bonobo is sexuality somewhat similiar... and then a lot of the contact is same sex
Like humans, bonobo females are sexually receptive throughout most of their estrus cycle. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), on the other hand, only mate during the few days when a female is fertile. Generally, the ranking males in chimp society “get the girls.” Male chimps make macho displays to impress females and can be quite vehement in their demands. Consequently, chimp females do not have much control over who they mate with. Bonobo males tend to be a bit more polite. They ask first, by displaying themselves in a persuasive but non-aggressive manner, offering food or making other propositions—and bonobo females have the right to refuse. Baboons, gorillas, orangs and chimps usually only mate when the female is in estrus (heat)... heres a link click here

57 posted on 08/09/2005 12:41:49 PM PDT by meandog (FOR LURKING DUers)
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To: SouthernFreebird
I'll just bet that whatever way I say is bound to be the least effective and your anxious to enlighten me.

I'll take that bet.

SD

58 posted on 08/09/2005 12:42:42 PM PDT by SoothingDave
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To: Im4LifeandLiberty
Onan's smiting by God for "spilling his seed,"

Onan was not smitten for that per se, but for disobeying Joshua. Read Genesis 38:8-10 for the context.

the command to "be fruitful and multiply,"

Hmm. That was written in stone, was it? It seems to me that He was just talking to Noah, and not the whole human race.

The rest I agree on--children are a blessing, and a man can be very happy with children, as I am. But lack of blessings does not sin make.

Paul's condemnation of sexual behaviors did not reach into legal marital, normal sex. By that, I mean loving sex between man and wife.

59 posted on 08/09/2005 12:43:09 PM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: plain talk
As I said, I believe this so-called solution can cause more sin than it avoids. I don't understand your point.

My point is that sin is sin and we should not attempt to rationalize it.

I don't believe the temptation to stray or committ adultery in the heart cause by abstaining from sex for one week a month is equal to the objective sin of engaging in relations while using contraceptive barriers or "medications."

SD

60 posted on 08/09/2005 12:45:05 PM PDT by SoothingDave
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