PalletBoy:
Felra, you miss the point!
Where does scripture say, imply, or infer that artificial birth control is wrong, but non-artificial birth control is acceptable?
It is suggested in Scripture when Onan “spills his seed in Genesis” and is killed by God on the spot for it.
However, the rationale against contraception is not *primarily *Scriptural, except in the sense that Scripture supports human life as the highest achievement of the Creator,
nor does it need to be explicitly Scriptural. Was it C. S. Lewis who said “God writes the world as a man writes a letter”? The foundational premises against contraception are rooted not in the Bible, but in natural law. The first book of revelation is creation itself – millennia before a syllable of Scripture was committed to papyrus. When applying the term “natural law” to human sexuality, we do not mean our animal nature but our full
human nature, including our rational, intellectual, and moral attributes and gifts. Our reproductive organs (note: they are
called “reproductive” organs) are designed primarily for procreation, so under natural law, we look at sexuality with the view that procreation is a divinely created good that must not be demeaned in any way. Note: not just “artificial” contraception but “natural” means, such as
coitus interruptus and mutual masturbation are unacceptable because they distort the “natural human act.”
Until the Anglican Lambeth Conference of 1930 that NO Christian body approved of contraception for any reason; *abstinence *was enjoined for those cases in which producing a child needed to be avoided (so NFP actually gives us *more *opportunities to share our conjugal privileges than were available to previous generations).
If you look up Christopher West on the Internet, you will find good reference material on this subject – West has done a great job in rendering JP-2’s
Theology of the Body into manageable terms.