Wow, aren’t we testy there dropping in out of the blue?
I’m sorry if I’ve come across as testy. Still, I must suggest that to say I have “dropped in out of the blue” kind of makes it sound like I’ve entered a room and butted into a conversation with no regard for its context, no clue as to what’s already been said. This, of course, is not the case; I promise I have read the entire thread.
Still, the first thing I said was rather abrupt and possibly rude; I’m sorry if I offended you.
The only real problem is that I’m having trouble understanding where you’re coming from.
See, other people in this thread began quoting the Catechism and explaining Catholic teaching on contraception, NFP, etc. You said in no uncertain terms that they were incorrect. When pressed for your position, however, you explain one that seems entirely consistent with Catholic teaching, yet you somehow still find statements like “the use of NFP is moral” objectionable.
I think this thread became an argument over semantics even before I entered.
But you
have clarified your position, so I’ll address it:
I have a jar of jelly beans. I eat one of them today. Next it is tomorrow. I have a toothache. I decide not to have a jelly bean due to my toothache. For just reason, I refrained from eating a jelly bean. I did not plan how many jelly beans I was going to eat.
Right. But let’s say that you regularly like to have a jelly bean as part of a midnight snack each day, but you’re having an operation on Saturday and after midnight on that day, you can’t eat or drink anything. So you plan ahead and decide
not to eat one then.
In that example, you
still haven’t decided in advance how many jelly beans you’re going to eat
total, but you
have planned out in advance
when you plan on eating more, and when you plan on
not doing so.
Doesn’t that constitute “jelly bean planning” even though you have
not decided on the total number of jelly beans you’re going to eventually have eaten?
With periodic continence, the act (or more correctly the omission of an act) is not immoral. Therefore the means are moral. It is the end which determines whether it is licit or not. Periodic continence can be practiced seeking a good end and as well it can be practiced seeking an immoral end.
Of course you’re right; it
is possible for the end of periodic continence (which is the means) to be moral or immoral.
The two are not one and the same.
This was in reply to my statement,
"You agree that it is ‘in keeping with good stewardship for [a couple] to choose …] periodic continence’ for just reasons, but you contrast ‘periodic continence’ with the use of Natural Family Planning."
Attention! Attention! Most Important Part of My Reply! I will be granting your request:
Now if you could make clear what you are taking issue with.
Of course you’re correct that periodic continence and NFP are not one and the same.
But
this is the commonly accepted idea of what “Natural Family Planning” constitutes.
You
explicitly stated in your first post in this thread that
Natural Family Planning “is wrong.”
Natural Family Planning does not refer to what you have in mind by “family planning.”
You are the
only person I’ve talked to who believes that the commonly accepted connotation of
Natural Family Planning includes the sinful intentions that you associate with it. Case in point:
Natural Family Planning encompasses much more than charting fertility cycles. Charting fertility cycles in order to know when one should refrain does not equal planning ones family.
Of course “charting fertility cycles in order to know when one should refrain” does not equal “planning one’s family” by your definition, but it does equal Natural Family Planning.
Because I can’t admit that I disagree with Catholic Church. I fully 100% with the Catholic Church.
I apologize for accusing you of that. I can see now that our difference is purely one of semantics. Still, you’re going to confuse an awful lot of people if you go around asserting that
Natural Family Planning is wrong, when it really doesn’t mean or even have the connotations that you claim it does.
This does not have anything to do with whether one charts their cycles or just abstains for an indefinite amount of time.
It has everything to do with it - that and that alone is what
Natural Family Planning is.