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wanner47
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Of course you would.And of course we would say that the Latins split away from the Church about 1000 years ago.![]()
Of course you would.And of course we would say that the Latins split away from the Church about 1000 years ago.![]()
Well, yes, of course they could. There is really nothing to stop them, is there? But they could NOT do so and still remain in communion with the Church.But it seems to me a Catholic could say, āIām pregnant, but I canāt afford to follow the Churchās rules regarding abortionā and justify it that way.![]()
It just doesnāt process for me to say that itās not true that larger families are more expensive because a larger family means more mouths to feed, more bodies to clothe, more tuition to pay, more odds and ends to support those extra mouths and bodies. And itās not like you can send the kids out to jobs, you canāt do thatI agree with you, which is why Iām glad that NFP is available to those who need to space their children for financial reasons, regardless of location or circumstances. My larger point was that itās not necessarily true that larger families are more expensive. Youāre going to have the bills cited above whether or not you have 2 children or 6 children, and there are several ways to cut costs in non-essential areas to help pay for the essential ones.
I am really grateful on your behalf that the Church has helped you. Catholic Charities helped with my grandmotherās daycare so that we could keep her at home when she had alzheimers, and family worked during the day. The Chicago Mejugorgie Center (I know I slaughtered that spelling) paid for some of my tutuion as well when I was younger. But now that my mom is sick, there are no resources to tap. I struggled through nursing school and wasnāt able to tap any resources. My brother didnāt get a dollar of support for his LPN training. Evidently there is a disparity in resource availability and access to it. Familes are struggling here where I live. Theyāre not going to be having large families. Theyāre not able to deal with what they have now. If the Church wants them to have more kids, the Church will have to help them to support the additional kids. Thatās the reality of it. Itās not going to change until families can cope with taking care of the kids they have now so that they can afford to have more.I donāt have that perception of the Church at all.She has never left me to āsolve my own problems.ā I have always received guidance and sometimes material help whenever I needed it.
And how do you figure out when to abstain? you make observations, do charts or graphs, track cervical mucous - those are all active steps. You get to the abstaining part after you have already done a whole lot of real-world actions to figure out when the time to abstain is. NFP involves observation and action. In fact a lot more action than using a condom.What steps would that be? The point of NFP is to abstain (that is, to take no steps) during fertile times as part of responsible parenthood.
See my answer to Rence. NFP very obviously frustrates conception - that is what the charts, the graphs, the temperature-taking, and the observations of cervical mucous are for - to figure out WHEN to abstain. It isnāt a passive decision to abstain. It is a decision reached after careful monitoring - monitoring which is done to frustrate conception.How, exactly, does NFP frustrate conception?
Ok, so youāre inclined to think that tracking oneās fertility signs is the same as putting on a codom. I, on the other hand, believe that being aware of oneās fertility signs is the evaluation stage, before an action or inaction is taken - driven by the information available during the evaluation stage.And how do you figure out when to abstain? you make observations, do charts or graphs, track cervical mucous - those are all active steps. You get to the abstaining part after you have already done a whole lot of real-world actions to figure out when the time to abstain is. NFP involves observation and action. In fact a lot more action than using a condom.
Information is not morally neutral in every case, although it can be. I do not agree that a condom is bad and information on a womanās cycle is morally neutral, or harmless. They are both ways to manipulate the reproductive process. But then I am not a practicing Catholic.If thatās his argument, itās a weak one. Not only because NFP does nothing to prevent or inhibit already ejaculated sperm from reaching an egg (unlike condoms), but also because condoms violate the unitive aspect of a completed marital act by placing a physical, artificial barrier between the man and woman.
NFP is nothing but information provided to the couple, and based on that information they choose to either unite in a fully unitive and procreative marital act, or to prayerfully abstain by mutual consent.
How does NFP prevent already-ejaculated sperm from reaching an egg?Information is not morally neutral in every case, although it can be. I do not agree that a condom is bad and information on a womanās cycle is morally neutral, or harmless. They are both ways to manipulate the reproductive process. But then I am not a practicing Catholic.
They arenāt the same. I personally think they achieve the same purpose, to modify reproductive activity. I am not judging whether that is good or bad. But I honestly donāt see a moral distinction here. The Church does b/c they reject physical barriers during sexual activity.Ok, so youāre inclined to think that tracking oneās fertility signs is the same as putting on a codom. I, on the other hand, believe that being aware of oneās fertility signs is the evaluation stage, before an action or inaction is taken - driven by the information available during the evaluation stage.
Sooo, then itās pointless to argue the rules of the Church, that guide us to use NFP, when trying to discourage someone from using condomsā¦because theyāre the same. That makes it a lot easier.![]()
Please cite any example where information per se is not morally neutral.Information is not morally neutral in every caseā¦
That explains why you think gathering fertility information is considered an action. Itās not an action to impede natural conception according to the Church. This is the reason why they say NFP is allowed and ABCs are not. ABCs are physical and chemical barriers. Keeping track of fertility signs is not a chemical or physical barrier.Information is not morally neutral in every case, although it can be. I do not agree that a condom is bad and information on a womanās cycle is morally neutral, or harmless. They are both ways to manipulate the reproductive process. But then I am not a practicing Catholic.
See my answer to Rence. NFP very obviously frustrates conception - that is what the charts, the graphs, the temperature-taking, and the observations of cervical mucous are for - to figure out WHEN to abstain. It isnāt a passive decision to abstain. It is a decision reached after careful monitoring - monitoring which is done to frustrate conception.
If I am abstaining, I cannot frustrate conception. Frustrating conception means to engage in the act and doing something to cause it to be sterile.frusĀ·trateā ā/ĖfrŹstreÉŖt/ Show Spelled
[fruhs-treyt] Show IPA
verb, -tratĀ·ed, -tratĀ·ing, adjective
āverb (used with object)
- to make (plans, efforts, etc.) worthless or of no avail; defeat; nullify: The studentās indifference frustrated the teacherās efforts to help him.
- to disappoint or thwart (a person): a talented woman whom life had frustrated.
I understand that. I will admit I have a dog in this fight having got genital herpes from child sexual assault and my husband having gotten the hepatitis C virus from blood transfusion. We have been abstaining for other reasons (the state of my mental health) and are not using contraception, but if we follow the Church then we canāt have sex ever again. I think that is too harsh - well I think itās too harsh for anyone who has an STD except perhaps for AIDS where prevention is not 100%. but neither one of us asked for this - he got his virus from treatment related to a kidney transplant and I got mine related to abuse. b/c of his transplant we have to be more careful than other people and Iāve been told to use condoms.That explains why you think gathering fertility information is considered an action. Itās not an action to impede natural conception according to the Church. This is the reason why they say NFP is allowed and ABCs are not. ABCs are physical and chemical barriers. Keeping track of fertility signs is not a chemical or physical barrier.
when it comes at too high a cost - I imagine you would say that the use of information is what determines its morality. I agree most of the time. I assume you would agree that information related to genocide, etc. was related to immoral actions.Please cite any example where information per se is not morally neutral.
The Church recognizes that her teachings are not always easy. The problem of difficult teachings has indeed been with us since the beginning (see John 6). However, she does whatever she can to give pastoral guidance and support to those who have difficulty living all aspects of a Christian life. The best way to get that help is to sincerely ask for it.I understand that. I will admit I have a dog in this fight having got genital herpes from child sexual assault and my husband having gotten the hepatitis C virus from blood transfusion. We have been abstaining for other reasons (the state of my mental health) and are not using contraception, but if we follow the Church then we canāt have sex ever again. I think that is too harsh - well I think itās too harsh for anyone who has an STD except perhaps for AIDS where prevention is not 100%. but neither one of us asked for this - he got his virus from treatment related to a kidney transplant and I got mine related to abuse. b/c of his transplant we have to be more careful than other people and Iāve been told to use condoms.
I know what people say about anecdotal evidence - but this my life and I canāt get the issues to make sense in theory, either. the person who abused me did not care about how I was doing, or anything like that - that would require empathy he did not have. the hepatitis C virus had not been identified, much less screened for, when my husband got treatment - that meant we were totally clueless until later - which is probably the shape a lot of people are in actually.
ask for it how? I donāt mean that to be hostile. I would not really be comfortable having a long discussion on CAF, besides I imagine there are other threads about these issues - Iām not trying to be insincere, just not happy.The Church recognizes that her teachings are not always easy. The problem of difficult teachings has indeed been with us since the beginning (see John 6). However, she does whatever she can to give pastoral guidance and support to those who have difficulty living all aspects of a Christian life. The best way to get that help is to sincerely ask for it.
Iām so sorry for your struggles.I understand that. I will admit I have a dog in this fight having got genital herpes from child sexual assault and my husband having gotten the hepatitis C virus from blood transfusion. We have been abstaining for other reasons (the state of my mental health) and are not using contraception, but if we follow the Church then we canāt have sex ever again. I think that is too harsh - well I think itās too harsh for anyone who has an STD except perhaps for AIDS where prevention is not 100%. but neither one of us asked for this - he got his virus from treatment related to a kidney transplant and I got mine related to abuse. b/c of his transplant we have to be more careful than other people and Iāve been told to use condoms.
I know what people say about anecdotal evidence - but this my life and I canāt get the issues to make sense in theory, either. the person who abused me did not care about how I was doing, or anything like that - that would require empathy he did not have. the hepatitis C virus had not been identified, much less screened for, when my husband got treatment - that meant we were totally clueless until later - which is probably the shape a lot of people are in actually.
I said information** per se** (following your assertion that information might not be morally neutral). That explicitly excludes the means by which information is obtained.when it comes at too high a cost - I imagine you would say that the use of information is what determines its morality. I agree most of the time. I assume you would agree that information related to genocide, etc. was related to immoral actions.
However there are times like in basic science research, where the cost involved to get the information is so high that it might not justify the resources that are put into obtaining it. ** technically this is not the information itself but the investment made in obtaining it. ** I have a degree in science and support a lot of research but there are times when money needs to be used for other things. NFP does not require a ton of money to use although there are some costs and the need to observe and pay attention. but if NFP required thousands of dollars of equipment a month, I donāt see how that would be a morally neutral situation, if the family had children to feed and could not both pursue NFP and support themselves. But I suppose this is investment in resources rather than information by itself.
The best way is to approach your parish priest (or your confessor if they are not the same) and explain your issue. He would be the best first stop in finding the help needed to live through difficult times. Keep in mind that prayer is the most powerful tool we have. In some cases, there are specific organizations that exist primarily to help people with certain issues (e.g. Retrouvaille for couples with marriage troubles or Courage for same-sex attracted persons who need help living celibately).ask for it how? I donāt mean that to be hostile. I would not really be comfortable having a long discussion on CAF, besides I imagine there are other threads about these issues - Iām not trying to be insincere, just not happy.
I second this silentstar, please talk to your priest!!The best way is to approach your parish priest (or your confessor if they are not the same) and explain your issue.
I didnāt get that idea from anywhereā¦you simply made it up.Wait, your position is that couples canāt engage in the marital act without serious reasons to do so? Where on earth do you get that idea?
You said the Church disagrees with this statement: āEffectiveness (or lack thereof) has no bearing on the morality of the act.ā
I asked for a source for this, and you provided me with several quotes regarding Church teaching on the use of NFP.
The effectiveness issue is not explicit, but implicit, as explained below.What I want is a source saying that the Church disagrees that effectiveness (or lack thereof) has no bearing on the morality of the act. By act, I mean spacing oneās pregnancies. Your claim is that the Church teaches that the effectiveness of the birth control determines its morality. I want proof of your assertion.