T
Thorns
Guest
If a man did not have an orchidectomy, he could create life.So, you deny that the act of sex is unitive in infertile couples? That is a very strange attitude, and seems to fly in the face of common sense.
Is there is difference in the sex act depending on the time of the month or when the wife is pregnant? Does the unitivity (?) of the act change? How can we determine the change in unitivity? How is it measured? Where is your evidence of a change in unitivity? How does a hysterectomy change the unitivity of the sexual act in the marriage?
And if the husband has had an orchidectomy because of, say, cancer, then do your same remarks apply?
Some heterosexual marriages are sterile for medical reasons. All heterosexual marriages are infertile some of the time. How does this temporary or permanent sterility affect the unitive part of the marriage?
rossum
If a woman didnt have a hysterectomy, she could create life.
There is nothing to reverse or restore in a homosexual relationship that would make their sex open to life. That is the difference. This is nature telling us they are not ordered for each other. The heterosexual infertile couple is still doing what theyre ordered.for, even though the capability no longer exists. The order toward life is what brings unity.
What matters is the order, not necessarily the outcome or capability.