That is understandable if you believe the Church says what you say it does. Let us examine…
Physical fertility is not a requirement for marriage, True. But what you say next is false. You are NOT required to succeed at having children to have a valid marriage. Nowhere is that an official teaching of the Church. What IS the teaching is that youintend (at the time you enter into the marriage covenent) to have children. There is a difference. It is also not true that if fecundity is an end to marriage that marriage requires children. That’s bogus logic. Intent matters. A lot. More than ability. An analogy; A priests intent (end) is to get all of his flock to heaven. If he does not succeed, does that mean he’s not a priest? Of course not. He is still required to intend to get his whole flock to heaven.
There was an extra clause in my statement that you seemed to miss. I said that children appear to be a requirement, unless you’re infertile. Children are not an absolute requirement. I agree with this. However, my point was that if a married couple is physically able* to have children, there is no moral way for them not to have children. A couple cannot have “just reasons” for the entirety of their marriage.
*“Physically able” not only means fertile, but as in your example of a woman having health problems where she would not survive through childbirth, includes other medical issues as well.
Mostly correct. Couples are allowed to properly discern when and how many children to have, even if this number is zero, as long as the true intent when the marriage covenant was entered into was that they would have a family. A situation where a couple marry, and shortly afterwards finds that childbirth would probably bring a result of death to the mother, this couple could probably discern God’s will that they not concieve.
This is almost exactly my point. A couple must “discern” what God has in store for them, and this implies a complete lack of “choice”. A married couple is not allowed to choose not to have children, but they may discern that God does not want them to have children. By analogy, this is expandable to a couple choosing vs. discerning having 2, 5 or 20 children. Therefore, it is God deciding the number of children to have, not the couple.
A follow up question, do you think God ever leaves the decisions up to us? Does God ever want us to have somewhere between 2 and 5 children, and it’s up to us to decide the exact number?
Again you are ignorning intent and/or confusing what a couple wants versus what they achieve. Intent is one of three fundamental aspects of morality. It can’t be ignored. What we actually achieve has very little to do with morality. Perhaps you confuse civil law with moral law. Civilly, you can’t be charged with murder if you tried with all your will but did not succeed. However, morally your just as culpable as if you had succeeded.
There is more that must be said, but this post is probably too long already.
First off, you can be charged with
attempted murder if you attempted, but did not succeed, at killing somebody. There are many civil laws on the books for attempted crimes, or even for the intent. Just ask those guys they catch on “To Catch a Predator” whether they were charged with actually having sex with children, or just that they wanted to. Secondly, this is just the converse of statement 2. My point is that the church states that God decides whether a couple has children, and it is not up to the couple to decide. The couple has no say in the matter: if they do not have children, it is because God decided against it.
Upon further review, I think that this misunderstanding may come about through a fundamental disagreement of human freedom:
“Freedom makes man responsible for his acts to the extent that they are voluntary.” (CCC 1734)
We are responsible for the outcomes of our actions. Since having sex is a voluntary action geared to creating a child, then man, not God, is responsible for the creation of children conceived through sexual acts. I’ve said this before in this thread, and it bears repeating now: God makes you fertile, but He does not make you pregnant. I’m getting the message from several people here that since God is the creator of life, then He is responsible for the creation of every child. This somehow removes the creation of a child from the result of a sexual act, to the result of an act of God. Obviously, every sexual act does not result in pregnancy, as evidenced by NFP users, but that does not mean that sex and pregnancy are unrelated events from a human standpoint.