K
kbachler
Guest
I understand. With the first point, I’ve definitely seen fundamentalist posters on this forum who would argue tht there is NO good reason for family planning, and that infertile people cannot get married because such a marriage cannot be valid.And this is an interesting coincidence that may help…
Wikipedia distinguishes the difference between “Contraception” and “Birth Control”.
“Contraception” does not list Natural Family Planning (rhythm, FAM, LAM, whathaveyou).
“Birth Control” does.
The Church teaches that controlling and regulating births is not an issue.
It simply:
Hope this clarifies some of the terms a bit…
- Must be justified (serious/just/grave reasons for doing so).
and- Must be done in a moral manner… i.e. not disassociating the unitive and procreative aspects. <— This is where “contraception” is not allowed.
Not saying this is your point, but some have made the point on this board.
Regarding the second point - given the claimed efficacy of the different methods, I find it very difficult to understand why NFP would be allowed, but nothing else, when there are other methods which claim comparable efficacies, and which in some cases allow a greater unitive process.
My point here is this: I understand that the Church wanted to define a moral ground for sex in marriage. I’m all for it.
And they made a good attempt at it.
But given the technology, and given what we actually now know about sex in humans and about the efficacy of various family planning methods, I find it VERY DIFFICULT for the Church to not revisit this issue, because as it stands, I cannot find a reason for preferring any method of family planning over any other.
In addition - there is the fundamental issue that basically the Church is saying “we want you to only use a method that has a chance to fail so God can provide you children.”
But God is God. Is the Church actually arguing that OUR CHOICE of family planning method LIMITS GOD?? Even though all methods are imperfect?
Seems to me that this is an argument that needs to be revisited.
I understand that you may disagree with this. But I respect your thoughts and intellectually honest attempts at answering.