This thread is an example of why catholics need to learn moral principles, rather than just lists of sins to avoid. . . .There are two distinct issues here that need to be separated:
- Is it morally acceptable for a rape victim to take non-abortifacient measures to prevent pregnancy?
- Does ‘Plan B’ always act by supressing ovulation or does it also achieve effectiveness by preventing implantation of an embryo.
Let’s do #1 first. Contraception is NOT wrong merely by virtue of being on a list of forbidden things. (C)ontraception is wrong because it does violence to the divinely linked procreative and unitive features of sexual intimacy. (T)here IS NO INTIMACY in a rape! The victim does NOTHING wrong by attempting to kill her attackers sperm before they can reach her egg, or by using scientific means to prevent ovulation if it hasn’t happend yet. A man’s sperm can live for 24 hours or more inside the woman if she it at or nearing her peak cervical mucus state. IF (and that IF is the subject of issue #2 below) there is a pill that would prevent ovulation during that window of opportunity to prevent that new life from forming without harming a new life that already formed, there is nothing wrong with that! She is NOT committing a sin by using contraception in this case.
#2. So how does this pill work? Does it only prevent ovulation or might it also prevent implantation of a young embryo? . . .As a bishop, do you tell a rape victim she cannot take it because there is reason to believe that it MIGHT cause an abortion? I think the bishop’s response IS inadequate and gives the appearance of undermining church teaching. They should IMO have done the following:
A. Banned the practice for the very short term.
B. Funded some intense medical research to find a quick and reliable blood test by which doctors can determine if a woman has ovulated yet.
C. Once B is done, allow the use of the Plan B only for rape victims if they have a blood test come back showing no ovulation yet or equivalent NFP documentation showing the same. BUT such women should be advised that there IS an unknown level of risk that a breakthrough ovulation could occur anyways and that the resulting child might die. Such an occurence would probably fall under ‘remote material cooperation with evil’ and would possibly not be inherently evil, but would surely need at least a moment of prayer and discernment.
In short, the bishops would seem to be doing a bad job of pastoral care in this decision, but they are not necessarily totally off course from a moral theology perspective.