J
Joseph_L_Varga
Guest
Tommy, that’s a good article you linked to. I’ve read it and it was well worth reading it. Here’s a quote from the article:I will directly address your comments when you actually present an argument until then, why don’t you read this: The Catholic View of Artificial Contraception
Quote:
Code:
...when Casti Connubii was issued [in 1931], some significant changes had taken place. The first birth control clinic had opened, Margaret Sanger had formed the Birth Control League, and the Anglican Church had decided that artificial contraception was permissible for serious reasons. Pope Pius XI knew that contraception had to be addressed in his document usually translated as “On Christian Marriage.” In the encyclical the first subject he addresses is the growing animosity towards childbearing:
He connects the animosity towards children directly with artificial means of contraception, and not the periodic abstinence associated with NFP. Furthermore, the Pope issued a statement which would be echoed in future generations. He said that the artificial means of birth control were to be considered intrinsically evil:
But no reason, however grave, may be put forward by which anything intrinsically against nature may become conformable to nature and morally good. 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.[12]
This statement also ran directly counter to the statement issued by the Anglican Church earlier that same year. Whereas the Church of England had allowed for artificial birth control for serious reasons, the Catholic Church maintained the teaching that the prohibition against contraception could not be abrogated under any circumstances. He defends his argument by quoting St. Augustine, who notes the “wickedness” of intentionally preventing conception.[13] He closes the topic with an exhortation drawn from the Council of Trent. He reminds the faithful that the precepts of the Church can be adhered to when strengthened by the grace of God.[14]
/end Quote.
I love those statements by Pope Pius XI which I bolded above in the quote. They amount to a clear explanation of what’s allowed, and what’s forbidden by God’s law as the Church understands it. Virtuous continence is not a sin, and using mutually agreed upon abstinence in marriage is not a sinful way to avoid begetting children. But interfering with the nature of the marital act is a sin against nature. This is based on the philosophy that the human body, and its physiological functions were created by God, and intended to function in a certain way - their natural way of functioning. Thus, it is a sin against nature to interfere with the natural workings of the human body during the marital act.