violet, you fail to admit the strength of a proposal such as " most theologically correct" when promoting daily intercourse as a marital “goal” or “intent.” and you seem to demote to the category of “mood” all subjective reasons to avoid intercourse.
you have a bias. you asked for discussion. you seem unwilling to consider that your conclusions are extremist, instead concluding this discussion isn’t everyone’s ‘cup of tea.’
it’s my cup of tea, violet. i love my generous husband and i love being generous with my generous husband. but I’ll only promote my subjective views based on experience and bias SO FAR as they coincide with Church teaching.
i won’t propose my “most theologically correct” conclusions as such when there isn’t teaching to support it.
and on a personal note which might serve as a cautionary note: i sure as heck will be careful to ***not ***classify my husband’s “needs” as the unstoppable, oversexed compulsions codified as ‘average’ by recent “research.”
violet81 proposed a generous view marital relations that approached daily relations (and then in subsequent posts shared her views on abstinence). She said she believe this approach was “theologically accurate.” Since
violet81’s view is NOT contrary to Catholic Church teaching,how can it be incorrect?
You have brought up the term
most “theologically correct” in your post #195 and then take it even further and move the quote mark, changing the emphasis to
“most theologically correct.” This appears to be your term, unless you are quoting someone else, but you did not cite anyone else’s post containing this term. This seems disingenuous since in criticizing someone, the use of quotes is often used to draw attention to something they wrote in order to refute it.
It seems like you are reframing the issue, exaggerating, attributing the reframed issue onto
violet81 and then saying it is wrong because it is not specifically taught. This is emotional projection, emotional reasoning and lacks logic.
An idea can be consistent with teaching or inconsistent. So generally It can be either described as true or not true. If two views are both consistent with teaching, then both are true. Since both are true, one cannot be the “most theologically correct.” Although one view may work in practice better than the other or work in practice for certain people better than the other. But both are still equally true and neither one is more correct.
If something is not specifically taught, but is consistent with truth and not contrary to truth, it is not wrong.
it is no concern of mine that OP may come off as condescending. my only concern is that OPs assertions of “most correct” are, in fact, wrong by very virtue of overstating Church teaching.
This is wacky logic because how can a view that is consistent and not contrary to Catholic teaching can be deemed wrong?
monicatholic, using the same wacky logic, one could conclude that any Catholic married couple that engaged in relations every day are wrong. Yet I am not aware that the Catholic Church teaches that daily marital relations are wrong. There are other criteria that are used to determine right or wrong and it appears your attempt at application of logic to deem the OP’s beliefs as wrong is faulty.