Recreational meaning aside from procreative? Isn’t “recreational” sex unitive?
See the third person posts below
I disagree that the Church does not address “recreational” sex between married couples;
I do not know of such, please post that teaching, I know of the teachings which make that not an option
otherwise the Church would state that sex is only for procreation, no?
many have put forth such a belief but I do not know of a church teaching which directly matches such. It seems the Church teachings are clear that the natural design of a man and woman pairs them to become one whether procreative or not. And this appears where many are lost:
“I [third person] would like relations which are not procreative but unitive” - The Church teaches these relations can only be attempted through naturally infertile periods and must remain open to life.
“I [third person] would like relations which are procreative but not unitive” - The Church teaches these relations do not exist, natural law unites the man and woman.
*“I [third person] would like relations which are not procreative and not unitive” *- The Church teaches these relations are immoral and equal to adultery and fornication, this is recreational relations which are derived from man’s weakness and misuse of natural design.
*“I [third person] do not believe a difference exists between artificial birth control(abc) and planning infertile periods”- *The Church teaches moral relations are confined to married people who become through this process one, the unity and procreation aspect are intrinsic to the process. The abc is disordered allowing either party to walk away with no children to abandon, additionally it allows (particularly the man) to have relations with out discerning as there will be no deep lifelong commitment. These recreational activities live many empty people, lives, houses, and eventually some abandon children. The fault was in the idea the abc prevented a need to discern whether the full commitment needed to be made prior to relations
What was the end of your thought “…unity could we…”?
I did not have an end, it is an example of disordered logic. If the question makes sense the logic is disordered.
It requires :
assume we can separate the natural design of the woman
assume we can separate the natural design of the man
assume we can separate the procreations
assume we can add or subtract the unity
These can not be done (look at the paternity cases) thus the disordered logic leads the person to bad consequences.
Hope that helps