F
fix
Guest
First, the Church use of open to procreation is not tortured at all. It is used it in a specific philosophical way. Why must people impute their monolithic use of the term as the only way to understand it?It is not clear to me why one aspect of human life, sex, must be performed in the way that is believed to be in accord with its biological function, procreation, but this standard is not applied to any other aspect of human life. Setting aside the Church’s tortured definition of “procreative”, why must sex be procreative but eating need not be nutritious?
Many, probably all, human activities have multiple purposes. Meals have a social (even “unitive”) purpose, a nutritional purpose, a pleasure or entertainment purpose, and probably more. But no one says that eating meals with friends for social and pleasurable purposes while deliberately avoiding absorbing nutrients is a sin, let alone intrinsically evil. It may well be a sin to abuse food to any extreme - obesity or its various opposites - but each consumption of each morsel need not be nutritive.
Because the sex act has a moral aspect to it.Why is sex different? I can think of only two reasons. The one heard most often is because the Church says so, which is a non-answer answer, but has some honesty to it. The other is because sex is dirty and wrong and must be justified by something more than pleasure and unity, but that is not a reason the Church has given, as far as I know.
Contraceptive intercourse, as we have seen, is contra-ceptive because it
necessarily includes the choice to set aside or destroy the openness of the
act of sexual union to the good of transmitting life. The person who
chooses to have intercourse contraceptively is saying that it is not good
that this act is open to life, that it is not good that he or she is
fertile. Rather the contraceptor is saying that his or her procreative
power, his or her fertility is, here and now, not something good, but to
the contrary a disvalue or disease or evil. He or she is saying that
fertility is not a wonderfully good power of the human person, something
participating in the goodness of the human person. It may be a useful good,
or “bonum utile,” something good for something other than itself, a
“functional” good that can and indeed ought to be destroyed when it comes
into conflict with what is really humanly and personally good, namely the
unitive good of human sexuality…
…To put it briefly, those who accept contraception recognize that it
requires an anti-procreative choice, the choice to set aside or get rid of
or destroy fertility and the openness of the act of coition to the good of
transmitting human life. Yet they argue that this choice is morally good
“because” the procreative aspect of our sexuality is not, for them, a
personal good but rather a merely functional good dependent for its “human,
personal” goodness on other aspects of the human person.32…