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Why We Quit Contracepting (Two couples tell their ‘conversion’ stories)
National Catholic Register ^ | August 16, 2005 | Stephen Vincent

Posted on 08/16/2005 1:48:10 PM PDT by NYer

Having married in 1985 when both were medical students, Ann and Michael Moell had their life together planned out.

Once they established medical practices and had a big house with a sprawling back yard, they would begin to have children. Until then, Ann would take the birth-control pill.

Although both had grown up in large Catholic families in Ohio, neither was well versed or much interested in the Church’s teaching on birth regulation.

“While we were in medical school and residency, we didn’t think we had time for a child,” Ann says. “We had the American dream in mind, not just for ourselves but for the children we would have.”

Their plans began to unravel four years into the marriage, when Ann stopped taking the pill because of persistent headaches.

“Here we were, both studying medicine, and neither of us knew anything about the pill and its side effects,” she recalls. “It just isn’t a topic in medical school because the pill is assumed to be a good thing.”

They used periodic abstinence, condoms and other barrier methods but, within a year Ann became pregnant. They welcomed the child into their lives, yet continued to contracept.

After their third child arrived, Ann says, “That was it. We were still young, with three children and growing medical practices. We thought we had to do something foolproof that would keep us from having more children.”

They discussed the possibility of a vasectomy for Michael.

“We thought it would be the best thing for our family,” Michael explains.

Something happened, though, in the Moells’ pursuit of the American dream. Ann began to pray. The couple had begun attending Mass again with the birth and baptism of their first child, but they were “just doing the Catholic thing,” Michael says. “We didn’t know anything about contraception being sinful or that Jesus is present in the Eucharist. We were missing so much.”

“To actually ask God to give us an answer was something new,” Ann admits. “I was praying at Mass, ‘God, show us what to do about this issue.’ A month later, I was pregnant. It was God’s answer. It was so immediate, so direct, and I was elated. It changed our whole attitude about who was in charge of our lives and our marriage.”

They began using natural family planning, and have welcomed two more children into their lives.

But God was not finished with them yet. Ann was a family-practice physician who prescribed the pill. Michael was a pediatrician who was prescribing the pill for young girls. Someone gave them the videotape “Contraception: Why Not?” by Janet Smith. “It changed the whole direction of our practices,” Ann says. “We started looking into the side effects of the pill and I knew I had to stop prescribing.”

Now Dr. Ann Moell is a stay-at-home mother who volunteers as a prenatal-care physician at a pro-life pregnancy center in Dayton, Ohio. Michael left a pediatric partnership to open Holy Family Pediatrics, in the same building as the pregnancy center. About half his patients are pregnant teens referred by his wife. They recommend abstinence before marriage and NFP in marriage to their young patients. Many Catholic parents travel long distances to bring their children for routine care to Holy Family Pediatrics.

“This has been a huge spiritual journey as well as a growth and learning experience in proper health care,” says Ann.

“It was a huge financial leap and leap of faith, to give up the partnership and open my own medical practice,” Michael adds. “Four months after I opened the door, our fourth child was born. I was questioning God the whole way. But it’s worked out better than I could have dreamed.”

Life-Changing Encounter


Conversion is a word Penny and John Harrison use often to describe their experience with birth control. They were married in 1983 in Penny’s Protestant church; a Catholic priest witnessed the ceremony for John, who was raised in a Catholic family.

They used various forms of contraception for the first 10 years of marriage and had two children “pre-conversion,” as John describes it.

A Catholic Marriage Encounter weekend opened Penny’s heart to the Church, and, when she decided to become a Catholic, all the assumptions of their lives were uprooted. While she was going through a parish RCIA program in their hometown of Kansas City, Mo., John began looking at his own faith and asking questions. He had no problems with the sacraments or the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, but his vague knowledge of the Church’s teaching on contraception nagged at him.

When he and Penny asked a priest about the issue, “we got some confusing and unspecific answers,” John recalls. “We ultimately were told to ‘follow our conscience.’ Unfortunately, that’s the answer too many Catholic couples get today, and they’re not being told the full beauty of the truth.”

Penny entered the Church at the Easter Vigil in 1993 and shortly thereafter she and her husband went on a 10th-anniversary vacation without their two children.

“We were both very uncomfortable using contraception on that trip,” John said. “We came back and just stopped using contraception of any kind, and prayed and hoped for another child.”

Key to their decision was hearing a talk by Catholic evangelist Scott Hahn, a former Protestant minister, and reading Rome Sweet Home, in which Hahn and his wife, Kimberly, defend the Church’s teaching on contraception.

“We date our deeper conversion to the heart of the Church primarily from the fervor we took from listening to Scott Hahn’s talks,” John says.

Since their conversion, the Harrisons have had three more children, including twins in 1999.

“I come from a Protestant background where it is considered irresponsible not to practice contraception, so I’ve come a long way,” Penny says. “The problem was that when I was preparing to enter the Church, we knew what Catholics were supposed to believe but we couldn’t find any Catholics who actually lived the teaching on contraception.”

It’s About Respect


As teachers with the Couple to Couple League, which promotes NFP, John and Penny are seeing “more and more couples open to the gift of life,” she says. “I tell them that, in the Nicene Creed, we call the Holy Spirit ‘Lord and Giver of Life.’ If we take that title seriously, we cannot shut the Holy Spirit out of our marriages.”

John says he tells couples who are not particularly religious that contraception is “disrespectful to your wife’s body. You expect a woman to take these hormones that make her body think she’s pregnant just so she can be available to you sexually all the time. And it goes the other way too. Your wife expects you to put on a special device. That’s not very respectful of the man, either.”

“Love means giving your whole self to your spouse,” adds Penny. “And that’s the great gift of NFP.”


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To: Maximilian; sitetest; Prolifeconservative; gbcdoj
"Periodic continence" was introduced as a rare exception in unusual cases

It was not "introduced". It was approved by the Sacred Penitentiary as being without fault that anyone could use with just reasons, and encouraged for suggestive use by those addicted to onanism.

Just as we are charged by Christ to choose either God or Mammon, and we are warned not to make the mistake of trying to serve two masters, in the area of marriage, we must choose either generous fruitfulness or planned sterility.

I do not see how you can square this philosophy of condemnation of family limitation with the marriage of St. Joseph and the Blessed Virgin, which was based on that very premise of planned sterility from its beginning, or with the practice of the early Church of imposing marital continence on married major clerics in Holy Orders who then accepted planned sterility.

Frustrating the primary purpose of marriage is not a morally acceptable ends.

This would make St. Joseph and the Blessed Virgin sinners, since they purposefully and with forethought thwarted the primary purpose of marriage in contracting their marriage. Similarly, many saints in the early Church contracted such marriages to avoid punishment for the pledge of continence. This condemns them also.

121 posted on 08/17/2005 10:18:22 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: DameAutour; Maximilian; Prolifeconservative; sitetest; gbcdoj
It seems to me that whether one uses artificial birth control or one uses NFP, people are trying to avoid pregnancy.

Thus if the intent, the "end" is to avoid pregnancy, it is really splitting hairs to say it is okay in one case, and a terrible sin in another case.

This is what appears to be the precise locus of moral confusion here.

There is no sin of "contraception". Provided that duties towards social justice are being met, there is no sin for a married couple to not have additional children.

Sin is involved in artificial birth control because it frustrates the natural workings of an action and is meant to satisfy lustful intent.

The sin of artificial birth control is primarily and always the use of unnatural means of sexual intercourse and secondarily only possibly a sin against social justice of the end of not having children.

Of course NFP does not make sense if you invent a sin of being married and not having children.

122 posted on 08/17/2005 10:24:53 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
I do not see how you can square this philosophy of condemnation of family limitation with the marriage of St. Joseph and the Blessed Virgin

Comparing the Holy Family to NFP seems sacrilegious to me. The big difference, first of all, is that, as her name implies, the Blessed Virgin Mary was a VIRGIN. St. Joseph also was celibate, at least during his marriage to Mary. They didn't have sex. Virginity is a higher calling. But users of NFP want to have sex but just not have children, thus frustrating the nature and purpose of the conjugal act.

Here's a simple suggestion: any Catholic couples who feel they have grave reasons to avoid conception could simply imitate the Holy Family and avoid all marital relations until they are ready once again to conceive. This would completely eliminate the need for thermometers, beads, charts, graphs, etc.

123 posted on 08/17/2005 10:25:41 AM PDT by Maximilian
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To: Hermann the Cherusker; DameAutour; Maximilian; Prolifeconservative
Sin is involved in artificial birth control because it frustrates the natural workings of an action and is meant to satisfy lustful intent.

Exactly. What do the condemnations of contraception by the Church say?

"Similarly excluded is any action which either before, at the moment of, or after sexual intercourse, is specifically intended to prevent procreation—whether as an end or as a means." Paul VI, Humanae Vitae, 14

"Since, therefore, the conjugal act is destined primarily by nature for the begetting of children, those who in exercising it deliberately frustrate its natural power and purpose sin against nature and commit a deed which is shameful and intrinsically vicious." Pius XI, Casti Connubii, 54

Nothing about "and they won't end up having enough children" mentioned there.

Unfortunately confusion has been created by mixing the duty, in justice, of having children - which is imposed upon all married couples which make use of their marriage, unless just causes exist - with the prohibition of sins against the nature of the conjugal act. Unless these are properly distinguished, the confusion evident in this thread will result.

124 posted on 08/17/2005 10:32:29 AM PDT by gbcdoj (Let us ask the Lord with tears, that according to his will so he would shew his mercy to us Jud 8:17)
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To: annalex
I would say, if another pregnancy puts you in bankruptcy, it is a valid reason. If another pregnancy crowds your children in bunk beds or dashes the hopes for a boat and an SUV, it is not.

That isn't quite right. If one has met the obligations of social justice to provide posterity, it is perfectly licit to avoid having additional children to afford material things. It is certainly not at all virtuous though.

"All things are lawful to me: but all things are not expedient. All things are lawful to me: but I will not be brought under the power of any." (1 Corinthians 6.12)

"All things are lawful for me: but all things do not edify." (1 Corinthians 10.23)

Just because some act is without fault does not make it full of virtue if wordly motivations are at work. This is why abstaining from foods to diet to lose weight is not virtuous, while fasting and abstinence at the appointed times as a means of penance is.

125 posted on 08/17/2005 10:33:16 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker; DameAutour; Prolifeconservative; sitetest; gbcdoj
Of course NFP does not make sense if you invent a sin of being married and not having children.

Thank you for this admission. We agree that "NFP does not make sense" as long as marriage imposes an obligation to have children. You yourself have often stated that the "sin of being married and not having children" is not an "invention," but a reality, although you qualify that statement by saying that "4 is enough."

Here is what Pope Pius XII stated on the topic:

Marriage obliges the partners to a state of life, which even as it confers certain rights so it also imposes the accomplishment of a positive work concerning the state itself. In such a case, the general principle may be applied that a positive action may be omitted if grave motives, independent of the good will of those who are obliged to perform it, show that its performance is inopportune, or prove that it may not be claimed with equal right by the petitioner—in this case, mankind.

The matrimonial contract, which confers on the married couple the right to satisfy the inclination of nature, constitutes them in a state of life, namely, the matrimonial state. Now, on married couples, who make use of the specific act of their state, nature and the Creator impose the function of providing for the preservation of mankind. This is the characteristic service which gives rise to the peculiar value of their state, the bonum prolis. The individual and society, the people and the State, the Church itself, depend for their existence, in the order established by God, on fruitful marriages. Therefore, to embrace the matrimonial state, to use continually the faculty proper to such a state and lawful only therein, and, at the same time, to avoid its primary duty without a grave reason, would be a sin against the very nature of married life.

Therefore, following your own reasoning, "NFP does not make sense," since all couples who make use of their right to conjugal intercourse have imposed upon them a positive obligation to "fruitful marriage."

Artificial contraception is an illegitimate means in and of itself, but even licit means become "a sin against the very nature of married life" if they are used to frustrate the primary purpose of marriage and to avoid one's positive obligation to procreation.

126 posted on 08/17/2005 10:38:32 AM PDT by Maximilian
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To: Maximilian
But users of NFP want to have sex but just not have children, thus frustrating the nature and purpose of the conjugal act.

You can't really mean this, since frustration of the nature and purpose of the conjugal act is intrinsically evil, per Pius XI, and therefore can never be permitted.

Rather, not having children by use of NFP is problematic because of the failure to fulfill the duty owed to society of propagating the human race. This has to be separated from the malice involved in contraception, just as Pius XII does:

The matrimonial contract, which confers on the married couple the right to satisfy the inclination of nature, constitutes them in a state of life, namely, the matrimonial state. Now, on married couples, who make use of the specific act of their state, nature and the Creator impose the function of providing for the preservation of mankind. This is the characteristic service which gives rise to the peculiar value of their state, the bonum prolis. The individual and society, the people and the State, the Church itself, depend for their existence, in the order established by God, on fruitful marriages. Therefore, to embrace the matrimonial state, to use continually the faculty proper to such a state and lawful only therein, and, at the same time, to avoid its primary duty without a grave reason, would be a sin against the very nature of married life.

Otherwise your reasoning will be unable to distinguish at all between the practice of periodic continence and the use of contraception, leading either to approval of both or the condemnation of both, conclusions which are ruled out for us by the authority of the Church.

127 posted on 08/17/2005 10:40:10 AM PDT by gbcdoj (Let us ask the Lord with tears, that according to his will so he would shew his mercy to us Jud 8:17)
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To: gbcdoj
When couples abtain in the practice of NFP, are they making a sacrifice "for the kingdom of Heaven", or is their intention not rather to avoid children for those just reasons which are admitted by the Church?

You would have to ask those couples. I can only say that I believe that gaining mastery over the sexual appetite is incredibly important for any advance in Christian virtue, since the sexual appetite is a part of the love of sensual pleasures that is concupiscence and which is the form of original sin. NFP can be used in this way by a couple if they use this as their motivation.

NFP does not have to be a part of ascetical struggle to be licit, but it does to be virtuous.

128 posted on 08/17/2005 10:41:21 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
NFP does not have to be a part of ascetical struggle to be licit, but it does to be virtuous.

Okay, that makes sense.

129 posted on 08/17/2005 10:42:23 AM PDT by gbcdoj (Let us ask the Lord with tears, that according to his will so he would shew his mercy to us Jud 8:17)
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To: gbcdoj
How humorously ironic that we were simultaneously posting the same quotation from Pope Pius XII to each other!

frustration of the nature and purpose of the conjugal act is intrinsically evil, per Pius XI, and therefore can never be permitted

You make a valid point here, that I should have distinguished between "nature" and "purpose." Artificial contraception violates the "nature" of the conjugal act, which is always and in every case wrong. Periodic continence may violate the "purpose" of the conjugal act, depending on the motives of the participants.

Otherwise your reasoning will be unable to distinguish at all between the practice of periodic continence and the use of contraception, leading either to approval of both or the condemnation of both, conclusions which are ruled out for us by the authority of the Church.

One is condemned in all cases, the other is approved only in exceptional circumstances. I believe that the comparison to missing Mass on Sunday is apt. What were to happen if the exceptions which justify missing Mass on Sunday were extended to a universal approval, and it was even praised as a positive good? That would be analogous to the current situation in which there is a culture of NFP propaganda.

130 posted on 08/17/2005 10:49:23 AM PDT by Maximilian
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To: Maximilian; Prolifeconservative; sitetest
Comparing the Holy Family to NFP seems sacrilegious to me.

I didn't make that comparison at all. I pointed out that your false choice of sterility versus unlimited fecundity in marriage also condemns the Holy Family. You may not like that, but, well, there it is, because the Holy Family did not choose unlimited fecundity.

But users of NFP want to have sex but just not have children, thus frustrating the nature and purpose of the conjugal act.

The conjugal act has more purposes than the conception of children, otherwise it would only be licit for conceiving children, and would be illicit when one cannot.

The path you are travelling down condemns couples who have sex once the wife is already pregnant or after menopause or after a licit operation causing sterilization (i.e. removal of cancerous generative organs). Where do you find such a harsh attitude in the teaching of the Church?

You seem very upset at the thought of couples using their marriage without a probability of conception. But this is no different than the use of marriage when pregnancy is definitely impossible in the cases I listed above. If you do not condemn the use of marriage in the cases above, then you cannot condemn those who justly limit their use of marriage to infertile periods. There is certainly no difference in the act, means, motivation, or end in the case of sex during pregnancy or after menopause and the use of NFP.

Your serve Max.

131 posted on 08/17/2005 10:57:25 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker; visually_augmented
If one has met the obligations of social justice to provide posterity, it is perfectly licit to avoid having additional children to afford material things.

OK. It is somewhere in that ballpark, and, of course, there is a point when NFP to avoid pregnancy becomes allowable, even though it is not yet virtuous (it becomes virtuous, for sure, if that extra child puts the couple on welfare). A couple that feels it has "met the obligations of social justice" should examine their conscience with a priest before they can embark on pregancy-avoidance with NFP. I would caution the reader against an impression that God sets any kind of procreation quota, from your post, or that social justice can overrule the procreative activity of God, but I would not have a drawn-out discussion over it.

132 posted on 08/17/2005 11:02:25 AM PDT by annalex
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
The path you are travelling down condemns couples who have sex once the wife is already pregnant or after menopause or after a licit operation causing sterilization (i.e. removal of cancerous generative organs). Where do you find such a harsh attitude in the teaching of the Church?

You are very well aware that I never said any such thing, nor does the authentic teaching of the Church lead to any such conclusions. "The procreation of children" is the primary purpose of the marriage act. It also has secondary purposes which are perfectly legitimate, as long as the primary purpose is not violated. In situations where the wife is already pregnant, is past child-bearing age, or has suffered from cancer, the fulfillment of the secondary ends of the marriage act demonstrates no evident intention to frustrate the primary end. NFP does, except in sufficiently grave circumstances.

There is certainly no difference in the act, means, motivation, or end in the case of sex during pregnancy or after menopause and the use of NFP.

In my own experience I have found that there is all the difference in the world, the difference between night and day. If I always and in every case never disregard my intention towards fruitfulness, then my conscience need never feel troubled. All conjugal acts carried out in non-fecund circumstances share in my continuous, permanent and uninterrupted intention towards fruitfulness. But once that intention is broken, then my non-fecund marital acts share in a non-fruitful intention.

You can compare it to playing hooky from school. The boy who went to school and studied hard all day is still rightly looked upon as a scholar even when he is home eating his dinner. But the boy who played hooky from school is considered a truant, even when he is home eating his dinner. The school day is over and both are home eating their dinners, but the continuity of intention is very different in the two cases.

133 posted on 08/17/2005 11:12:11 AM PDT by Maximilian
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To: Maximilian; gbcdoj
One is condemned in all cases, the other is approved only in exceptional circumstances.

Not true. It is only in exceptional circumstances where the demands of social justice are not being met. This is extremely clear in the teaching of Pius XII in the Allocution, and the moral theologians I have previously referred you to, and it is what you continue to deny because you wish to invent the obligation of unlimited childbearing for married couples. Pius XII:

However if the limitation of the act to the periods of natural sterility does not refer to the right itself but only to the use of the right, the validity of the marriage does not come up for discussion. Nonetheless, the moral lawfulness of such conduct of husband and wife should be affirmed or denied according as their intention to observe constantly those periods is or is not based on sufficiently morally sure motives. The mere fact that husband and wife do not offend the nature of the act and are even ready to accept and bring up the child, who, notwithstanding their precautions, might be born, would not be itself sufficient to guarantee the rectitude of their intention and the unobjectionable morality of their motives.

The reason is that marriage obliges the partners to a state of life, which even as it confers certain rights so it also imposes the accomplishment of a positive work concerning the state itself. In such a case, the general principle may be applied that a positive action may be omitted if grave motives, independent of the good will of those who are obliged to perform it, show that its performance is inopportune, or prove that it may not be claimed with equal right by the petitioner—in this case, mankind.

The matrimonial contract, which confers on the married couple the right to satisfy the inclination of nature, constitutes them in a state of life, namely, the matrimonial state. Now, on married couples, who make use of the specific act of their state, nature and the Creator impose the function of providing for the preservation of mankind. This is the characteristic service which gives rise to the peculiar value of their state, the bonum prolis. The individual and society, the people and the State, the Church itself, depend for their existence, in the order established by God, on fruitful marriages. Therefore, to embrace the matrimonial state, to use continually the faculty proper to such a state and lawful only therein, and, at the same time, to avoid its primary duty without a grave reason, would be a sin against the very nature of married life.

So if a married couple has provided for the preservation of mankind and the needs of the Church, they are under no such restriction on their actions in the married state to use only the infertile periods. That, as I pointed out, is the unanimous teaching of the moral theologians, and their teaching was quantitatively settled at a minimum of 4 children to satisfy this obligation. This teaching was already set prior to the giving of this Allocution, and the moral theologians writing afterwards state that they view the Allocution as a confirmation of this then general teaching on this very topic. The Allocution did not require a revision of the practical application already being made of the decrees of the Sacred Penitentiary of 1853 and 1880.

134 posted on 08/17/2005 11:17:29 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Maximilian
I agree that there is a serious problem with "NFP propaganda" (that article from Crisis does an amusing job of pointing out some of the silliness involved). What is especially problematic is the practical - and sometimes explicit - setup of an "it's either NFP or contraception" mindset, complete with the implicit or explicit rejection of "providentialism" and having a large family. This is actually somewhat evident in the original post of this thread:
They began using natural family planning, and have welcomed two more children into their lives. ... They recommend abstinence before marriage and NFP in marriage to their young patients.

“Love means giving your whole self to your spouse,” adds Penny. “And that’s the great gift of NFP.”

Is this a "gift of NFP" or of not using contraception? It seems that they are being considered as equivalent.

I also agree that the Sunday obligation is a good comparison, seeing as, like the duty of having children ("the function of providing for the preservation of mankind" Pius XII), it is a positive obligation which binds unless just circumstances excuse. I think it is reasonable to note though that this obligation can be fulfilled by couples to the point where it no longer binds under pain of sin (here our analogy breaks down).

135 posted on 08/17/2005 11:17:31 AM PDT by gbcdoj (Let us ask the Lord with tears, that according to his will so he would shew his mercy to us Jud 8:17)
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To: Maximilian
It also has secondary purposes which are perfectly legitimate, as long as the primary purpose is not violated. In situations where the wife is already pregnant, is past child-bearing age, or has suffered from cancer, the fulfillment of the secondary ends of the marriage act demonstrates no evident intention to frustrate the primary end. NFP does, except in sufficiently grave circumstances.

Either NFP does or does not frustrate the primary end. It can't frustrate it in some circumstances and not in others, because the act being performed (or rather, not being performed) does not change based on the circumstances. The only change based on circumstances is the motivations. Hence Pius XII speaks of "the rectitude of their intention and the unobjectionable morality of their motives" in judgin this practice.

The only question with NFP is whether or not one has worthy reasons to motivate its use. Similarly, this is the only question to be asked regarding the use of the sexual faculties when conception is physically impossible. Obviously, NFP must be excluded if the only motivation is sterile lust, just like any sexual act must be excluded if that is its only motivation.

If I always and in every case never disregard my intention towards fruitfulness, then my conscience need never feel troubled. All conjugal acts carried out in non-fecund circumstances share in my continuous, permanent and uninterrupted intention towards fruitfulness. But once that intention is broken, then my non-fecund marital acts share in a non-fruitful intention.

You cannot actually intend to do what is physically impossible. You can no more intend to be fecund when nature does not allow it than you can jump off a building and intend to fly like a bird by flapping your arms. It is impossible to intend to be fecund when your wife is already pregnant.

136 posted on 08/17/2005 11:29:47 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Maximilian
Reliance upon God's divine providence is not a burden -- quite the opposite -- it is a joy.

The burden is requiring people to do more under pain of sin than they are actually required to do, not the reliance on Providence.

I encourage everyone to read them for themselves and then to decide for themselves.

That is the Protestant way. Catholics allow the Church to teach them, they do not "decide of themselves" what a proclimation of the Church means. If approved moral theologians tell us that proclimation X is telling us to do Y, we accept that with docility. We don't judge it for ourselves.

137 posted on 08/17/2005 11:42:02 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker

Hermann: "This would make St. Joseph and the Blessed Virgin sinners"

I hate to break it to you, but they were sinners. They needed the atoning blood of Jesus Christ just as much as you or I....


138 posted on 08/17/2005 11:58:28 AM PDT by visually_augmented (I was blind, but now I see)
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To: annalex; Hermann the Cherusker

Hemann: "If one has met the obligations of social justice to provide posterity, it is perfectly licit to avoid having additional children to afford material things."

What does God have to say??

Genesis 1:22
And God blessed them, saying, "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth."

Genesis 1:28
Then God blessed them, and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves on the earth."

Genesis 9:1
So God blessed Noah and his sons, and said to them: "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth.

Genesis 9:7
And as for you, be fruitful and multiply; Bring forth abundantly in the earth And multiply in it."

Genesis 35:11
Also God said to him: "I am God Almighty. Be fruitful and multiply; a nation and a company of nations shall proceed from you, and kings shall come from your body.

Etc., etc.,etc.

I have trouble seeing how avoiding children fulfills this command. Does God not open and close the womb? Is it excusable to disobey God's command in order to avoid going on welfare?? In God's view there is no such thing as "licit" or "illicit". There is only obediance or disobediance. God cares nothing about the laws of man, only His own Holy and loving commands.

BTW, I notice Biblical evidence is very sparse on this thread. Much opinion but little evidence...


139 posted on 08/17/2005 12:31:32 PM PDT by visually_augmented (I was blind, but now I see)
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To: visually_augmented

Dear visually_augmented,

I think that perhaps the couple employing NFP could possibly be compared to "binge and fast," but not "binge and purge," as no effort is made to undo the effects of what has already been done.

However, my own experience is that folks who employ NFP are not sex-mad maniacs who are boinking 24/7 during their infertile time, and then holding on for dear life during their fertile time. LOL.

Rather, these are usually couples who often have done a good job of integrating a morally-worthy life of physical intimacy into their overall marital relationships.

Unfortunately, many Catholics who are married and fertile use artificial contraception, so the number of folks employing NFP is too-reduced, and thus not especially representative of Catholics, as a whole. This is to be regretted.

However, the end result is that most of the folks I know that are employing NFP are not trying to limit their families to none, one, two, or three children. All of the families that I know where the married couple is using NFP either have a bunch of kids, or are looking forward to more, or have problems that have prevented large families (I know one woman who has miscarried several times - that's heartbreaking).

Now, I don't know many families with a passel of children where the couples manage to have these maniacal sex lives 17 or 18 days out of the month. So, at least with these folks, the "binge then fast" model isn't accurate either.

It is, however, insulting to suggest that that is prevalent over a population that probably averages five children per family.


sitetest


140 posted on 08/17/2005 12:52:12 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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