Posted on 09/01/2003 7:03:21 PM PDT by Polycarp
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An impressive array of arguments and proof of the Church's long standing position on the sanctity of life.
But in the not so wealthy parish I grew up in I distinctly remember the only acceptable method of birth control, to the Church, was the rythymn method.
Even that ( can't spell it again ) appears to be unacceptable to Church fathers. How did that gain acceptance when Augustine's Marriage and Concupiscence seems to address that issue?
The problem I have is the "How do we get there from here" part.
In answer to this question, I think the best tactic is to fall back on the Natural Law, rather than address it in a way that relies upon Church history (not that Church history can't play a role - it can and should - but that need not be the main rhetorical thrust).
The Natural Law on this issue is very simple. The purpose of sex is procreation. If you're engaging in sex in a way that intentionally blocks the procreative purpose, you're committing a perversion against the Natural Law.
All the moral and social consequences that follow from that are the same ones identified several places above. When you create a society that systematically violates the Natural Law, you would obviously expect social decay and even social breakdown in some areas (witness the growing acceptance of homosexual "marriage," sexualization of ever younger children, and now a growing "polyamorist" movement). That's the importance of Natural Law in a secular society. It allows you to address moral problems, even among conflicting moral views, by drawing on the experience of our shared humanity.
Obviously the Christian teachings on the matter are richer and fuller, and Christians should eagerly engage anyone (especially their fellow Church members) with a willingness to brag about how true and right the Church has always been about this issue. That would be a welcome shift from the currently pervasive embarrassed avoidance of it.
I think the main problem here is two-fold. The first part is that most people truly have separated sex from procreation. They see them as virtually unrelated things. Getting them to see them as one is going to be one heck of a struggle all its own, but it's an essential foundation to any progress against contraception.
The second problem is sexual obsession bordering on addiction. Even when they realize and admit it's wrong, there are going to be a LOT of people who refuse to change anyway (and don't think these will all be liberal Democrats). Many (perhaps even most) will still want their sex for recreation, rather than procreation.
I think we can do something about the first problem. The second is trickier. Part of it stems from the "culture of death" mindset, which has conditioned most people to see lots of children as a burden and a sadness rather than a blessing and a joy. When people want 1 or 2 children (or none at all), an anti-contraception ("contra-contraception?" Or perhaps just "ception"?) message seems to hedge them into a life of celibacy. The way this mindset pervades so many aspects of our culture is dizzying. Modern people don't realize that we live in the most sexually obsessed culture the world has ever seen. The fact that it has simultaneously lead to such an anti-child culture is a perversion worthy of Satan himself.
An extremely important question!
The "Rhythm method" was really just an early form of Natural Family Planning, which has since adopted more sophisticated, yet still technically licit, methods. Google the "sympto-thermo method" or "Natural Family Planning" for more info on the methods.
The theology, however, is tricky. In fact, I would argue that in most cases, couples practicing Natural Family Planning are violating the constant teaching of the Church on this topic. I say this as a former practitioner of it, who only saw the problems inherent in it after the birth of my first child.
I know Dr. Kopp has a differing opinion, and I'll not try to put words in his mouth. But in my opinion, Natural Family Planning lends itself very easily to the same contraceptive intentions as artificial contraception. In those cases, it is in violation of the Church's teaching.
The "argument from natural law" against contraception, in order to get off the ground, STILL requires you to convince a secular society of propositions which, while true, are NOT logically necessary to argue against abortion.
When speaking to other pro-lifers who are Christian but not Catholic, one may of course argue directly for the teaching against contraception and point out the link with abortion; but most of them will be more interested in preventing unborn babies from being killed than preventing them from being conceived.
In fact, "preventing them from being conceived" is the wrong emphasis even theologically, and the Aquinas quote is therefore inappropriate; what is illicit is the ARTIFICIAL prevention of conception in the context of a sexual act, not the prevention of conception per se. "Natural family planning", avoiding sex at the fertile times of a wife's reproductive cycle, is not condemned.
Thus the analogy with murder is misguided. The gravity of the sin of artificial contraception is, at most, on a par with that of sodomy. It would be better to prevent one murder than to prevent one thousand acts of sodomy, and similarly for acts of artificial contraception (as always, classifying abortifacient "contraception" properly as abortion).
This is what I meant earlier by "incommensurability". Of course, smaller sins can still result in one's condemnation, but that doesn't mean we should regard all such sins as objectively of the same order.
I think you're missing the larger picture. You can argue against a single instance of abortion without recourse to the issue of contraception. But I believe we're finding solid evidence that you can't argue against abortion as a socially accepted practice without addressing contraception.
The Janet Smith article states this fairly directly: "The connection between contraception and abortion is primarily this: contraception facilitates the kind of relationships and even the kind of attitudes and moral characters that are likely to lead to abortion."
Stated another way, you can try to stop abortion and ignore contraception, but you'll fail because the contraceptive mindset is continually building the "abortion ethic." Without the ability to address this, the pro-life movement will remain marginalized to sidewalks in front of abortion clinics, and passing the occasional parental notification law.
This is the one salvation of the liberal left...conservative purity.
When they recognized a right, the Justices were actually imposing their morals on the nation? If you read the decision of Griswold vs Connecticut, then you read the reasoning that clearly explains why the decision was a defense of liberty, by removing coercive enforcement of a law designed to violate, rather than defend peoples lives.
Justice Goldberg wrote: To hold that a right so basic and fundamental and so deep-rooted in our society as the right of privacy in marriage may be infringed because that right is not guaranteed in so many words by the first eight amendments to the Constitution is to ignore the Ninth Amendment and to give it no effect whatsoever. Moreover, a judicial construction that this fundamental right is not protected by the Constitution because it is not mentioned in explicit terms by one of the first eight amendments or elsewhere in the Constitution would violate the Ninth Amendment, which specifically states that [t]he enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people....
In regards to your link about the Pill, I found a link at the bottom of the page with a scientific article written on the topic. This article helped to clarify a lot of details that were glossed over in the postfertilization article. It is worth noting that the claim of the brochure is actually a hypothesis. However, the author of the scientific article made a good case and I will concede for the sake of argument that your statement, "... hormonal contraceptives at least are no different than any other form of chemically induced abortion..." is completely true. My original comment was this: Contraception and birth control are measures taken to prevent conception. Why are these on the same moral level as killing babies? In the former, nobodys rights are violated. In the latter, a babys right to life is clearly violated. We have addressed the hormonal contraceptives. What about condoms? Is using a condom is on the same moral level as killing babies?
If I understand your question, then the answer is "no." Self-defense against what "might" happen? My neighbor might try to kill me. Should I kill him first? Self-defense is rightfully invoked for imminent threats.
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NFP vs Contraception
Spacing children may be a desirable goal that does not violate God's laws in certain serious situations such as those outlined above. But the means of achieving the goal differ.
One is intrinsically evil (abortion, abortifacient contraception, barrier methods, sterilization) while one is morally neutral (Natural Family Planning.
In one, an act is performed (sex) but its natural outcome is artificially foiled.
In the other, no act is performed (simple abstinence during fertile times) so there IS no act, therefore the practice is morally neutral.
It is then the intention of using NFP that constitutes its relative moral licitness or illicitness.
If NFP is used in a selfish manner, it too can be sinful.
If it is used only in grave circumstances, it is not sinful.
The difference is real.
Dieting (decreasing caloric intake, the "act" of NOT eating) is a moral and responsible means of losing weight to maintain the body's health.
Bulimia (the ACT of eating, them vomiting) is rightly called an eating DISORDER.
An ACT is performed (eating in this case) and its natural outcome (nutrition) is foiled by expelling the food from the body.
Likewise contraception is a disorder. An ACT is performed (sex) and its natural outcome (procreation) is foiled by expelling the sperm or egg or both (abortifacient contraceptives) from the body.
Contraception is to NFP what Bulimia is to dieting.
But just as dieting can be misused (anorexia) so too can NFP be misused in a sinful manner.
Finally, regarding infertility, if the sterility of the couple is through no act or conscious fault of their own, their marital relations cannot possibly be immoral, since it is not their intent to be sterile.
Yet many the Church married, who were thought for decades to be sterile, have indeed borne children in their later years. So it would be awefully presumptuous of any Church to disallow an "infertile" couple to marry.
We teach there are 4 main reasons for having recourse to NFP.
1--Physical/ mental health---a pregnancy could kill you or so physically impair you as to prevent your fulfillment of your duties in your state in life---NOT because of a widening wasteline or drooping skin! Or psychological health, i.e., mom would literally have a nervous breakdown if she became pregnant---not because she "just couldn't stand being home with the little kids all day without the personal fulfillment of her professional job..."
2--Financial constraints---your child will starve if you have another. Wanting a bigger house or designer SUV just does not cut it!
3--work on the mission fields by one or both spouses that would proclude having children temporarily
4--active persecution or war---i.e., you or your child likely to die by coercive abortion, in concentration camp, in acts of war, etc.
Clearly we say these reasons must be SERIOUS, not trivial. Only the couple and their confessor can truly decide what truly constitutes grave reason.
We've had couples sit through my talk on this subject and literally say, "Gee, we thought we were being good Catholics just for deciding to use NFP. Now we realize we don't even have grounds for recourse to NFP," then tell us a month or two later they're pregnant.
Oops, my error. That is the article I had intended to link for you in my post. I have it linked on my profile page, but that link was changed, and I mixed up the urls when I posted to you.
I believe this to be true. It has never been fully examined. However, the quixotic comprehensive "culture of life" has never been fully examined. If it had been examined and studied, it would be widely publicised that a comprehensive "culture of life" has NEVER existed on the planet Earth at any time in history. Just a few examples:
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not unilaterally demonized women who are pregnant, but not married.
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not stigmatize children born out of wedlock as "bastards" and illegitimate (how can a human being, in God's likeness, be "illegitimate"?). It would not have singled out these children of God for discrimination and public shame.
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not support the law-of-the-jungle mentality in financial and resource distribution. (Laws of the jungle dictate that the weak must be sacrificed for the survival of the strong.)
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not advocate, aid and abet father abandonment of offspring, such as the children born of unions during wartime excursions in foreign lands (as has been the US policy in Asia and before that the policy of all European empirical excursions).
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not hide, aid and abet rapists and child rapists among its heirarchy. ___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not allow millions of mostly women and children to starve in poor coutries while selling arms for profit to spread more misery and internal strife in poor areas.
___A comprehensive "culture of life" would not have supported slavery and near slavery, nor would it have supported race and gender apartheid in education and economic opportunities.
In short, to single out contraception without looking at all the cultural instetutions we have supported and continue to support which are not anything near to supporting the concept of the value of every human life, is shortsighted and hypocritical. There is much we have not fully and credibly debated.
First, with no government or court approval whatsoever, we may refuse to practice any form of birth control, maximize the number of our children and raise them dedicated to the entire agenda and to raise their large families similarly and so on through the generations. As we well know, our opponents will not emulate this tactic. We will have as allies the hard-core Chassidic Jews (average 9 kids per family), the hard core of the Islamic faith who have similar birth rates and the hard core of the evangelicals and pentecostals who also have high birth rates and whose literature racks and stores increasingly carry books urging couples to trust God and turn their backs on the contraceptive mentality.
Second, many, many serious religious believers do not understand the science of the birth control pill and the science of the IUD, both of which function as abortifacients and NOT as contraceptives. More babies are killed by these two methods than by a multiple of all surgical abortions. Most folks do not want this news. Our job is to make sure they get this news anyway. Fully informed, under our post-Griswold, post-Roe culture and "laws", they can make the decision to kill or not to kill their children. That decision is not a mere decision as to whether to have children or how many to have.
Third, we must convert "Catholics" to the Catholic Faith once again, replacing dissenters with Catholics.
Demography will take care of the rest.
My mom once told me that certain contraceptive methods prevent a fertilized egg from implanting into the uterus, therefore killing a life after conception.
Do you know how the anti-abortion Christians justify killing embryos with abortifacient contraception while opposing abortion of embryos?
Since you seem to have research this subject from the theological viewpoints, I would appreciate if you can provide a brief summary of the "pro-life" arguments allowing contraception that kills after conception.
The attorney representing the State of Connecticut in Griswold vs. Connecticut was a very Catholic Irishman named Joe Clark. He was one of nine children and he had nine children of his own. He was an assistant prosecutor in what was then the New Haven County Court. He was very dedicated to the cause of stopping contraception. He got little help. On Estelle Griswold's side (she being PP's state Executive Director) was Yale Law School and the ringleader and strategist of the PP case, Yale Law Professor Thomas Emerson. When the Supreme Court ruled in Griswold, Emerson was reported the very next day in the New Haven Register as saying: Now is the time to go for abortion.
Joe Clark later became a judge and he told me repeatedly that we would never resolve Roe legally until we got rid of Griswold simultaneously, that the entire matter was simply none of the business of the federal courts, that the Tenth Amendment left such matters to the states and that we should strive to establish that strategy. He was an old-fashioned kind of Democrat and tone of the very best human beings as a judge. He died rather suddenly of a heart attack when putting on his coat in chambers one day to walk home from the New Haven courthouse. I forget exactly when but it was in the mid-nineties. Keep Joe Clark, his widow and his family in your prayers. They were also Tridentine Mass Catholics just like our ancestors.
In a nutshell, they simply deny that the pill works in an abortifacient manner.
There are some real semantics games going on, however. Here's an old thread I put together on the issue:
FreeRepublic.com "A Conservative News Forum"
Click to scroll to commentary.
Medical dictionaries redefine "CONCEPTION" to obscure the TRUTH regarding contraceptive technologies
Online Medical Dictionaries | 12/12/01 | Dr. Brian Kopp
Posted on 12/11/2001 11:57 PM EST by Dr. Brian Kopp
The redifining of "conception" by medicine in new medical dictionaries: Verbal engineering always preceeds social (and medical)engineering
There are several major print medical dictionaries, and several online versions. Apparently, under pressure from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), many of them have changed the defintion of "conception" in the last few years, proving once again that verbal engineering always preceeds social (and medical) engineering.
Here is Tabor's Medical Dictionary's entry:
conception (kSn-s&p´shTn)
1. The mental process of forming an idea. 2. The onset of pregnancy marked by implantation of a fertilized ovum in the uterine wall. SEE: contraception; fertilization; implantation.
Copyright 2001 by F. A. Davis Company
Here is the entry from "On-line Medical Dictionary":
conception
The onset of pregnancy, marked by implantation of the blastocyst, the formation of a viable zygote. Origin: L. Conceptio
However, Merriam Webster's Medical Dictionary sits on the fence:
Main Entry: con·cep·tion
Pronunciation: k&n-'sep-sh&n
Function: noun
1 a : the process of becoming pregnant involving fertilization or implantation or both b : EMBRYO, : FETUS 2 a : the capacity, function, or process of forming or understanding ideas or abstractions or their symbols b : a general idea
Yet the good old "The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition," Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company, is much more straightforward:
con·cep·tion (kn-spshn)
n.
Formation of a viable zygote by the union of the male sperm and female ovum; fertilization. The entity formed by the union of the male sperm and female ovum; an embryo or zygote. The ability to form or understand mental concepts and abstractions. Something conceived in the mind; a concept, plan, design, idea, or thought. See Synonyms at idea. Archaic. A beginning; a start. [Middle English concepcioun, from Old French conception, from Latin concepti, conceptin-, from conceptus. See concept.]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc., does not mince words either:
conception \Con*cep"tion\, n. [F. conception, L. conceptio, fr. concipere to conceive. See Conceive.] 1. The act of conceiving in the womb; the initiation of an embryonic animal life.[remaider of definitions deleted]
WordNet ® 1.6, © 1997 Princeton University puts it succinctly:
conception n 1: an abstract or general idea inferred or derived from specific instances [syn: concept, construct] [ant: misconception] 2: the act of becoming pregnant; fertilization of an ovum by a spermatozoon 3: the event that occured at the beginning of something; "from its creation the plan was doomed to failure" [syn: creation] 4: the creation of something in the mind [syn: invention, innovation, excogitation, design]
I wonder how these medical dictionaries define a tubal pregnancy, if "conception" does not occur till after implantation of a fertilized ovum in the uterine wall?
I wonder why the "medical" definition of "conception" has been quietly changed?
No need to wonder, really. All the latest contraceptive technologies target the baby at its most vulnerable point, i.e., before implantation but after conception (as traditionally defined.)
If "conception" is not redefined, medicine must admit that these new technologies are indeed abortifacient. Then comes the whole problem of informed consent, conscience clauses, and a refocus of pro-life activity exactly where medicine does NOT want it: At that distinct line between conception and implantation, a line already crossed by hormonal contraception, the morning after pill, Norplant, Depo-Provera, IUD's, cloning, stem cell research, and many other emerging technologies.
Here lies the future of the pro-life battle, or its failure, if none show up to do battle.
AMA VOTES AGAINST LETTING WOMEN KNOW "THE PILL" IS ABORTIFACIENT
Culture/Society
Source: CATHOLIC WORLD NEWS
Published: Dec 10, 01 Author: CATHOLIC WORLD NEWS
Posted on 12/11/01 12:17 AM Eastern by proud2bRC
AMA Votes Against Letting Women Know "The Pill" Is Abortifacient |
WASHINGTON, DC, Dec 10, 01 (LSN.ca/CWNews.com) - The American Medical Association last week voted overwhelmingly against a proposal to inform women about the potential for birth control pills to cause the abortion of an embryo by preventing implantation in the uterus.
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Cybercast News Service reports that Dr. John C. Nelson, a member of the AMA's executive committee and a self-described conservative, said the Alabama doctor who put forward the proposal before the AMA "believes that in the spirit of enhancing the patient/physician relationship, that information ought to be disclosed to patients to help them make choices." Nelson said, "I couldn't agree more. That's exactly what the AMA is about. It's a cornerstone of American medicine." However, according to Nelson, the proposal was voted down because "many people from the American Society of Reproductive Medicine... decided that they would testify, and their testimony was that there is not sufficient scientific evidence to suggest" that birth control substances can induce abortions. Walter Weber, senior litigation counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, a Virginia-based public interest law firm, reacted to the vote saying, "If [pro-life women] are using a method that can operate after fertilization as well as before fertilization, and they don't know it, they are basically being deceived by lack of information into violating their own consciences." The Family Research Council (FRC) condemned the attempt to conceal the truth from women. FRC Advisory Board Member John Diggs, MD, said Friday, "The AMA is doing a great disservice to women by refusing to fully inform them of their birth control options. Since informed consent is a basic medical ethic, it should be standard operating procedure to tell women that the birth control pill can cause an abortion. Each woman has the right to know what's good for her health and acceptable to her conscience. If the AMA has suppressed its conscience, it shouldn't draw American women into its own ethical lapses." FRC noted that the prescribing information for Ortho Tri-Cyclen, a popular oral contraceptive, enumerates three pathways by which the pill works: suppressing ovulation, preventing fertilization, and precluding the implantation of an already fertilized egg. The third one constitutes an abortion. The third function is conspicuously excluded from information made available to patients. "If manufacturers are telling doctors that oral contraceptives can keep a new member of the human family from being nourished, why isn't that information being passed on to patients?", asked Diggs. Nelson noted that lobbying by the American Society of Reproductive Medicine largely contributed to the AMA's decision. ==================================================== Catholic World News is available via email for personal use only. To subscribe or for further information, contact subs@cwnews.com or visit our Web page at http://www.cwnews.com. Catholic World News (c) Copyright Domus Enterprises 2001. |
ABSTRACT:
The primary mechanism of oral contraceptives is to inhibit ovulation, but this mechanism is not always operative. When breakthrough ovulation occurs, then secondary mechanisms operate to prevent clinically recognized pregnancy. These secondary mechanisms may occur either before or after fertilization. Postfertilization effects would be problematic for some patients, who may desire information about this possibility. This article evaluates the available evidence for the postfertilization effects of oral contraceptives and concludes that good evidence exists to support the hypothesis that the effectiveness of oral contraceptives depends to some degree on postfertilization effects. [in other words, early chemical abortions--proud2brc] However, there are insufficient data to quantitate the relative contribution of postfertilization effects. Despite the lack of quantitative data, the principles of informed consent suggest that patients who may object to any postfertilization loss should be made aware of this information so that they can give fully informed consent for the use of oral contraceptives.<
I agree completely.
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