E
eponymic
Guest
I’ve been mulling over a thought recently, and I was hoping I could bounce it off a few people to get some feedback and discussion. I would also like to point out right away that this has nothing to do with NFP or other contraceptive issues, because that topic seems to have been done to death.
To start out with, I’d like to stipulate a fact that was brought up in the Family Life section recently: entering a marriage with the intention of never having children is immoral.
If we think about why this is, it is often cited that one cannot deny fertility within marriage, essentially cutting themselves off from life and from God’s plan for marriage. Furthermore, it is usually implied that taking control over your own fertility is a sin. Marital sex with the use of contraceptives, for instance, means that we say that we want to have sex but do not want to be fertile. We must be open to life within marriage, and choosing not to be fertile is not consistent with this.
Therefore, we get to my main point. If choosing not to have children is a sin, isn’t choosing to have children, or more specifically choosing when to have children equally a sin? While the choice in the affirmative is being open to life, we are being open to life on our terms, not God’s. If we plan to have exactly 5 children three years apart, and acheive this through NFP for example, are we not removing the fertile/procreative aspect of sex for those intermediate times and only having children when it suits us? I understand that the Church teaches that NFP can be used for “grave reasons”, but is this type of family planning really a just reason? Obviously, there are no set rules for determining this, but it seems to be to be a bit of rationalization: “It’s okay for us to have sex without the procreative aspect, because we’ve just had kids/going to wait a bit to have another/done having kids. We’re not saying ‘no’, we’re just saying ‘not now’. I know that You have a plan, but I have a plan too and we’re going to follow mine.”
Doesn’t this form a bit of a double standard? If it’s not okay to remove the procreative aspect of sex, why is it okay to remove it temporarily when it doesn’t fit in to our plans? Just to reiterate, I’m not talking about people who have severe emotional or financial hardships that are true “grave reasons” to abstain, but rather people who just plan every child.
To start out with, I’d like to stipulate a fact that was brought up in the Family Life section recently: entering a marriage with the intention of never having children is immoral.
If we think about why this is, it is often cited that one cannot deny fertility within marriage, essentially cutting themselves off from life and from God’s plan for marriage. Furthermore, it is usually implied that taking control over your own fertility is a sin. Marital sex with the use of contraceptives, for instance, means that we say that we want to have sex but do not want to be fertile. We must be open to life within marriage, and choosing not to be fertile is not consistent with this.
Therefore, we get to my main point. If choosing not to have children is a sin, isn’t choosing to have children, or more specifically choosing when to have children equally a sin? While the choice in the affirmative is being open to life, we are being open to life on our terms, not God’s. If we plan to have exactly 5 children three years apart, and acheive this through NFP for example, are we not removing the fertile/procreative aspect of sex for those intermediate times and only having children when it suits us? I understand that the Church teaches that NFP can be used for “grave reasons”, but is this type of family planning really a just reason? Obviously, there are no set rules for determining this, but it seems to be to be a bit of rationalization: “It’s okay for us to have sex without the procreative aspect, because we’ve just had kids/going to wait a bit to have another/done having kids. We’re not saying ‘no’, we’re just saying ‘not now’. I know that You have a plan, but I have a plan too and we’re going to follow mine.”
Doesn’t this form a bit of a double standard? If it’s not okay to remove the procreative aspect of sex, why is it okay to remove it temporarily when it doesn’t fit in to our plans? Just to reiterate, I’m not talking about people who have severe emotional or financial hardships that are true “grave reasons” to abstain, but rather people who just plan every child.