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Holly3278
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Hi everyone. A Catholic friend of mine told me that contraception prevents sex from being unitive. Is this true? If so, how? 

Taken from the following article:Hi everyone. A Catholic friend of mine told me that contraception prevents sex from being unitive. Is this true? If so, how?![]()
From a purely theological perspective, I think that argument can be made. From personal experienceā¦I donāt think it is true.Hi everyone. A Catholic friend of mine told me that contraception prevents sex from being unitive. Is this true? If so, how?![]()
If I may be so bold, why is your personal experience superior to a theological and ontological reality? Rather, why is your perception of your personal experience superior to a theological and ontological reality?From a purely theological perspective, I think that argument can be made. From personal experienceā¦I donāt think it is true.
āRico
The answer is right there in your own question.Yes but what about those who donlt want any part of our spouses ferlity? I donlt want my husbands nor does he want mine. How is it disunitive in that case?
I guess I am a little slow I still donlt get it⦠But I will read the other posts.The answer is right there in your own question.![]()
Unity, unitive means child. A child is the manifestation of the unity.Yes but what about those who donlt want any part of our spouses ferlity? I donlt want my husbands nor does he want mine. How is it disunitive in that case?
I guess I am a bit confused by this post. If you are Catholic and following the teachings of the Church, the simple solution to your question is to not have sex. Sex, as defined in the Catechism of the Catholic Church is to be both unitive and procreative. Those two aspects of the marital act cannot be seperated.Yes but what about those who donlt want any part of our spouses ferlity? I donlt want my husbands nor does he want mine. How is it disunitive in that case?
I think my intitial statement is a bit misleading. I donāt agree with the theological ārealityā that you and others have shared in this thread, though the argument can sometimes sound good. And, my own personal experience seems to agree with that assessment. However, I am sure others find the churchās theological argument quite convincing and their own personal experience would support that.If I may be so bold, why is your personal experience superior to a theological and ontological reality?
Justusfive,I understand about the unitive and procreative aspects of our Catholic teachings, but I am hoping to post some questions here that I am hoping will provide some answers that I can use to defend this position more confidently.
What if a man and woman have four or five children and have shown eachother the love and respect a marriage deserves, but feel that another child will put even more stress on the family? Isnāt this couple acting responsibly by accepting their limitations and providing for the family they have been blessed with? Why couldnāt they use contraception to be responsible not to oppose the teachings of the Church?