C
cjaubert
Guest
Here is a hypothet that I would appreciate comment on.
A Catholic woman is married to a non-Catholic man. The Catholic wife believes and accepts Church teaching that all forms of artificial birth control are intrinsically evil (CCC 2370). She has valid reasons for not wanting any more children, which leaves NFP as her only option for sexual relations with her husband.
The non-Catholic husband agrees that the couple should not have any more children at this time, but he also wishes to have sexual relations any time he wants to, and, therefore, wishes to wear a condom (i.e., contracept) while having sexual relations with his wife.
The Catholic wife argues, cajoles, attempts to persuade, gives resources, and tries her absolute best to convince her non-Catholic husband that contraception is wrong and tells him that she is unwilling to have sexual relations with him if he contracepts. The non-Catholic husband will have none of it, is not persuaded at all by his wife’s arguments, and will not budge on his position of wanting to contracept. The wife then gives in and has sexual relations with her husband who wears a condom.
The short question is, can she do this and not be in mortal sin? The longer question is, under ANY circumstance AT ALL can the wife engage in sexual relations with her husband who uses contraception? For example, would “saving the marriage” or “honoring her husband” or “honoring the sacrament of marriage” by giving in to her husband give the wife ANY excuse AT ALL to concede the point and have sexual relations with her husband even though she is 100% against contraception? If she does so, is she in mortal sin and can she receive the Eucharist by claiming, in essence, “I know it is wrong and I don’t want to do it, but I must honor my husband so I will do it anyway?”
I would certainly appreciate opinions on this, but also citation to support the opinions. Thank you, and God bless.
A Catholic woman is married to a non-Catholic man. The Catholic wife believes and accepts Church teaching that all forms of artificial birth control are intrinsically evil (CCC 2370). She has valid reasons for not wanting any more children, which leaves NFP as her only option for sexual relations with her husband.
The non-Catholic husband agrees that the couple should not have any more children at this time, but he also wishes to have sexual relations any time he wants to, and, therefore, wishes to wear a condom (i.e., contracept) while having sexual relations with his wife.
The Catholic wife argues, cajoles, attempts to persuade, gives resources, and tries her absolute best to convince her non-Catholic husband that contraception is wrong and tells him that she is unwilling to have sexual relations with him if he contracepts. The non-Catholic husband will have none of it, is not persuaded at all by his wife’s arguments, and will not budge on his position of wanting to contracept. The wife then gives in and has sexual relations with her husband who wears a condom.
The short question is, can she do this and not be in mortal sin? The longer question is, under ANY circumstance AT ALL can the wife engage in sexual relations with her husband who uses contraception? For example, would “saving the marriage” or “honoring her husband” or “honoring the sacrament of marriage” by giving in to her husband give the wife ANY excuse AT ALL to concede the point and have sexual relations with her husband even though she is 100% against contraception? If she does so, is she in mortal sin and can she receive the Eucharist by claiming, in essence, “I know it is wrong and I don’t want to do it, but I must honor my husband so I will do it anyway?”
I would certainly appreciate opinions on this, but also citation to support the opinions. Thank you, and God bless.