Originally Posted by ahs:
“Procreative” describes a result.
ValPal:
The result is oftentimes an impossibility.
Hence the reason the Church says each act must be “ordered,
per se, toward procreation” (CCC 2366, italics in original) and not “procreative”.
ahs:
“Ordered, per se, toward procreation” describes the manner in which the act is completed.
ValPal:
What exactly does ordering an act toward an impossibility mean?
The Church says, “Ordered,
per se, toward procreation” (CCC 2366) and I have described what this means several times now. Perhaps you should read the Catechism. In short, it mean having sex in the natural manner.
ahs:
by completing the act in the natural manner.
ValPal:
I completely agree with this statement, and it’s where the discussion should begin and end. That makes sense, is very understandable, and does not cause the massive confusion that the explanation does.
Then why are you continuing to equate “procreative” with “ordered,
per se, toward procreation”? Why do you continue to equate a “result” with a “manner of completion”? Why do you equate a “consequence” (pregnancy) with a “natural aspect” (procreative nature)?
Completing the act in a natural manner and ordering it toward procreation are not the same; that is self-evident. The former includes all sex; the later includes some sex (unless the Church is using some definition of procreation that that means that opposite of begetting children, which would be odd).
What?!

Can you please provide for us the portion of Church teaching you are referring to that you find so confusing…yet you seem unable to produce?
Or perhaps you can please explain how
ordering sex toward procreation only includes
some sex while
completing the act in a natural manner includes *all *sex in your mind.
That actually makes no sense…since the Church’s teaching is that “
each and every marriage act remain ordered,
per se, toward the procreation of human life…” (CCC 2366) which mean…
all sex.