I was there in the 1950s and 1960s. The late 1960s was the start of the 5 year plan to overthrow the Church and social norms in general. It pained me to watch each step unfold in a massive, coordinated attack both inside and outside the Church. 1968 was the turning point for American and Western society in general.
This is confirmed by the reaction to the release of Humanae Vitae in 1968:
“Within 24 hours, in an event unprecedented in the history of the Church, more than 200 dissenting theologians signed a full-page ad in The New York Times in protest. Not only did they declare their disagreement with encyclical’s teaching; they went one step further, far beyond their authority as theologians, and actually encouraged dissent among the lay faithful.” Source: Regnum Christi
“an event unprecedented in the history of the Church…”
That is the primary event. I have other details as well. After all, makers of The Pill had to move product and could not afford to have people listening to the Pope.
Peace,
Ed
Ed, I would have to disagree with you that Humanae Vitae and the reaction to it were the primary event. Catholics live in society; they work with non-Catholics; they read secular news papers (and in the 1960’s, more and more watched television); they have neighbors who are non-Catholic, and a significant portion of them went to secular schools, and particularly secular colleges.
Primary too often means “first”. I would agree that it was the explosion that rocked the Church and continues to rock the Church; but the ground work had been laid, long before Paul VI was Pope.
Tim is right; the Anglican decision to allow contraception into the bedroom was the significant “primary” event; prior to that no - none - mainline Christian church allowed for birth control. By the time Paul VI started his commission, the only mainline church which still held birth control to be morally wrong was the Catholic Church.
So by the time that the Pill was coming out, the groundwork had already been well paved by the reactions of people in other denominations, something that was not exactly hidden from view of your run-or-the-mill in the pew Catholic.
Keep in mind also, that the Pill was seen as working far differently than any other form of birth control; because it did not appear to work as a mechanical barrier or an abortificent , but rather was seen as a medical change to the women’s cycle preventing ovulation, there were many theologians who felt that this was permissible. And where there is a legitimate quetion, there is going to be a difference of opinion on how to handle the matter. Confessors were getting women in, in droves, questioning the use of the Pill. The ;Church had no pronouncement on the matter; theologians were divided; bishops were left without any final answer, and with theologians all over the map on it.
As to your comment about the makers of the Pill “having to move product”, that is simply wrong. They couldn’t keep up with the demand for it; it was not advertising that was driving it, but rather consumer demand. If the makers of the Pill had to do anything, it was to get out of the road of the onslaught of demand; they were far busier trying to ramp up production than trying to create demand.
Keep in mind the population hysteria which had the population growing exponentially, and food geometrically; we were on a downhill slope headed for hell of starvation riots, and outright all-global war, if one listened to the prophets of doom.
The world had come out of two massive wars, went into a “conflict” in which China decided to put troops on the ground; then after a stalemate there, hand another Asian war in which the Chinese had advisers on the ground; had a stare-off between two super powers armed with nuclear weapons had people realistically thinking Armageddon was 15 to 30 minutes away; and the average pew warmer was caught between a Church that had varying opinions but no answers and a society that was talking doom, the only difference being the method and timing of when it would occur.
By the time Humanae Vitae came out, Catholics were already using the Pill, often with the approval of their confessors; and that approval could vary between reluctance and open approval. Again, hind site is 20-20. It is easy to say “they should have known better”, but the fact is, there were well respected people who saw it differently.
We can look back and see the prescience and the prophetic wisdom of the minority of the commission and of Paul VI. That is far, far different than being in a decision making position in the mid 1960’s.
The reaction to Humanae Vitae blew the lid off the box; but it didn’t start anything; “anything” was already in or past the bud stage. It just put it in full bloom.
And by the way - I was there in the 50’s and 60’s too.