F
felra
Guest
There is nothing to reconcile here. This is an apple and orange comparison. The woman is using the pill to treat a hormone disease, which is morally licit. The person using a condom during his wife’s pregnancy is not treating a disease, and has recourse to abstinence as a morally licit option, (which is not the case with the former).If you are correct, please reconcile this with a woman using the pill for non-contraceptive purposes? Isn’t she also witholding her fertility?
Okay, I concede that I ventured too far beyond my laity expertise in trying to synthesize in brief form the encompass of the unitive and procreative aspect of the marital act and the theology of the body. In a strictly medical/biological sense, I am in total agreement that the condom is not functioning as a contraceptive devise as there is no possibility of the wife becoming pregnant.I have asked repeatedly to address how this is contraception (an act to prevent pregnancy) when the pregnancy already exists. I’m willing to consider your conclusion but you keep avoiding this question. It appears to me that you are expanding the definition of contraception (an act to prevent pregnancy as it says in the catechism) to any act changes the nature of the congugal act itself. And if this is the Church’s intent when defining artificial contraception, they should have said “to change the nature of the congugal act” instead of “to prevent conception”. While meritorious, it still seems to me to be an attempt to expand specific Church teaching to support an individual agenda.
It is curious that you make the quantum leap accusation that I am attempting to revise Church teaching to support an “individual agenda”.
Interesting how you parade your own obedience and watchdog “qualifications” to filter out the “misperceptions” of others against authentic Church teaching :getholy: ; and the subtle insinuation that I am in the camp of those who would lead others away from the Church.I am obediant to the Church and its legitimate authorities. I’m also on the look out for people distorting Church teaching. As someone involved in my parish’s ecumenical and RCIA activities, I deal with misperceptions of Church teaching and such misperceptions (well intentioned or not) adversely impact the effort of the Church to bring more people home to the Catholic Church. I believe that I am just as committed to the Church as you are and I have reached a rational contrary conclusion. In such situations, I’m called to follow my conscience in absence of clarity from such a credentialed source.
Can you make the case where a husband’s use of a condon during the sexual act with his pregnant wife does not “offends against” “the inner truth of conjugal love”? (Please, no ABC trump card to skirt the theological process aspect of the marital act).I’ve expressed numerous times that I’m willing to change my position if ANYONE would address directly how this is artificial contraception as defined by the Catechism. The following is directly taken verbatum from the glossary- “CONTRACEPTION, ARTIFICIAL: The use of mechanical, chemical, or medical procedures to prevent conception from taking place as a result of sexual intercourse; contraception offends against the openness to procreation required of marriage and also the inner truth of conjugal love.” To me, the operative words in the definition are “to prevent conception.” In this limited situation that is the subject of the thread, the couple is not trying to prevent contraception as conception has already taken place.
To the exclusion of the sacramental language and unitive aspect of the marital act?I totally agree if you would just focus on my question on how this is an act to prevent pregnancy.