S
SusanneT
Guest
There is no obligation to have as many children as possible but in marriage we are called to be open to and to welcome children and if and when a couple are sexually intimate they must not use any means to prevent conception. It’s a very clear teaching.So in a recent Catholic Answers Live show a self-identified Traditionalist was asked if he believed that there could be no grave reasons for a married couple to not have children.
Or, without all the negatives: he was asked essentially if it was his position that married couples must have as many children as possible. “Couples should always be trying to have a child”, regardless of circumstances. That is, if a couple is, say, homeless, or a woman is extremely ill, that WOULD NOT excuse them from postponing the possibility of creating a baby.
I wasn’t clear on the caller’s answer.
He did reference Humanae Generis (although I think he meant Humanae Vitae) as saying, (incorrectly), that HV promoted birth control because it excused couples from having a baby in grave situations.
Is this representative of the Traditionalist view?