T
thomasf
Guest
My ‘supposedly catholic but really hates the church’ sister asked me my opinions about an article about birth control and the opposition of many pro-life organizations against it. She asked me what my views on it were. And I responded with what the church’s teaching is, what my compliance with the church’s teaching is, and I not-so-subtly added in comments about what she should be doing as a supposed catholic. And I also disputed her claim that more birth control would lead to fewer abortions, and explained that the exact opposite is actually true, and that Pope Paul VI predicted this and the culture of death when he ruled out bc in the church. What she really wanted to know is what I thought about other non-catholics using bc and if the government should be paying for it.
My response was that I thought everyone should know what the church teaches about it and why, logically. And the teachings of Pope JPII and the theology of the body. Because too often people are only presented the pro-bc argument. And I concluded by saying that ultimately I thought the decision was up to them, the non-catholics, to make that decision for themselves based on the information. And that I don’t think that the government should fund birth control. AND that of course, most of that problem would be solved by eliminating premaritial sex and restoring the concept that sex belongs in the marital relationship soley. I did reiterate that some birth control is not just a preventative but an abortafacent and that as a pro-lifer I oppose its use completely as a contraceptive.
I wasn’t quite sure what the church teaches about bc for non-catholics, and I’m not sure what I said was in line with the church. She did accuse me of trying to push ‘my christianity’ on others and try to control them.
So what is the position on bc for others not in the church. How should we respond to that?
My response was that I thought everyone should know what the church teaches about it and why, logically. And the teachings of Pope JPII and the theology of the body. Because too often people are only presented the pro-bc argument. And I concluded by saying that ultimately I thought the decision was up to them, the non-catholics, to make that decision for themselves based on the information. And that I don’t think that the government should fund birth control. AND that of course, most of that problem would be solved by eliminating premaritial sex and restoring the concept that sex belongs in the marital relationship soley. I did reiterate that some birth control is not just a preventative but an abortafacent and that as a pro-lifer I oppose its use completely as a contraceptive.
I wasn’t quite sure what the church teaches about bc for non-catholics, and I’m not sure what I said was in line with the church. She did accuse me of trying to push ‘my christianity’ on others and try to control them.
So what is the position on bc for others not in the church. How should we respond to that?