NFP and Marriage in College

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GraceMerrie

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Question regarding using NFP when first married. My fiancé and I are newly engaged. We are trying to figure out a date for the wedding. A bit of relevant information, I am 23 and my fiancé is 26. We are both currently attending college.
Some of our relatives (my aunt, uncle, his mother, ect.) have been pushing us to wait until after college to get married. His mother is a bit of a cafeteria catholic and keeps pushing that even if we get married, we should on the pill for a while (which neither my fiancé or I consider an option EVER). We understand going into it that we won’t have a lot of money and are looking at a poor/simple life for a number of years and that with marriage (even with NFP) that there is the potential for life/children. We can understand how this could lead for an argument that we should wait until after college before getting married.
That being said, neither of us are “traditional” students. I was homeschooled, went to community college (which has slowed down/used up my electives for classes I don’t need), and have been at university for 3-years. I don’t like talking about it, but since this is relevant, I was raped the summer before starting university. I had PTSD for a while and then counseling which both dramatically affected my grades / course load. I still have a year and a half before I will earn my bachelors. I am on a pre-med track. I will have 2-years of school left for my Masters and then (assuming I got accepted right away) 4 years of medical school, plus residency. My fiancé has his master’s degree and is currently in the Phd program. The professor he was working under however was recently fired however. This was devastating to him as he will have to re-do all three years of research under a different professor for his thesis.
Basically, we both have a lot of schooling left. If we waited until we were finished with school to get married, I might be too old to have children at all. Also relevant, most of the woman in my family (my mom, one aunt, and my grandmother) all developed tumors on one of their ovaries in their late 20’s early 30’s and had to have it removed. This sped up the development of menopause.
I am sorry if this was a little scattered, my mind is all over the place as I consider it! Basically, understanding the above, what are your thoughts on getting married in college and at least attempting NFP for the first two years (being open to the fact that life could still occur, and if it does, perhaps God is blessing us with a gift we might have been able to have had we waited longer).
I also want to add, that I don’t believe any of this will be easy, but current life experiences mentioned above have taught me and my fiancé strength and to find joy no matter the circumstances. We know there will be good days and bad, but that’s life and that’s okay.
Thank you to all who took the time to read this! God bless.
 
With marriage comes children hopefully.
My children had a great pediatrician. She had 5 children while going through university/medical school. It is possible. Although I think she must have had the help of a dozen angels for her to accomplish that. She also had a huge heart for the poor and I happened to meet one of her other patients who she helped enormously with a horrible congenital condition that even really big city doctors were at a loss at how to treat.

Unfortunately she and her husband eventually divorced. I’m not saying it had anything to do with the kids/coursework. I have no idea why they divorced.

Now, you will get loads of excellent advice to follow. I will pray for you and your future husband.

Please consider watching Sensus Fidelium on YouTube on Courtship/Marriage.

St. Gianna Molla pray for us!
St. Joseph pray for us!
 
With respect to marriage while in college, specifically to your long-term education scenario, as long as you can provide the basic needs for any children that may join your family, I say go for it.

Congrats! on your upcoming marriage!
 
Some of our relatives (my aunt, uncle, his mother, ect.) have been pushing us to wait until after college to get married. His mother is a bit of a cafeteria catholic and keeps pushing that even if we get married, we should on the pill for a while (which neither my fiancé or I consider an option EVER).
Your relatives aren’t helping you even though I’m sure they mean well. It’s hard to tell if it is real practical advice or they subconsciously want your choices to match theirs as a kind of ratification of their own choices. The suggestion of pills is a warning flag it’s the latter.

However, I would say something similar if the relatives were pushing you to have children. Lovers of contraception are annoying, but so are hyperprovidentialists.

Thankfully, the Church does not give a laundry list of approved reasons to postpone children. In fact, when it comes to periodic continence, there is a lot of latitude. (My emphasis):

“Therefore, in our late allocution on conjugal morality, We affirmed the legitimacy, and at the same time, the limits — in truth very wide — of a regulation of offspring, which, unlike so-called ‘birth control,’ is compatible with the law of God.” – Pius XII, Morality in Marriage, from Papal Pronouncements on Marriage and the Family, Werth and Mihanovich, 1955

And that’s pre-Vatican II even.

Now from my experience, I wished I had my children sooner rather than later, but that’s just me. Point is, as long as it isn’t the scourge of contraception (and it’s clear your head is screwed on right about this. Deo gratias!), don’t let anyone boss you either way about children.

And if you think the relative “advice” is bad now, wait until you actually have children and the unsolicited “advice” about proper child-bearing starts rolling in. Find some terrorists to be friends with. They’ll be easier to negotiate with. 🙂
 
Compendium issued by Pope Benedict XVI
  1. When is it moral to regulate births?
2368-2369
2399

The regulation of births, which is an aspect of responsible fatherhood and motherhood, is objectively morally acceptable when it is pursued by the spouses without external pressure; when it is practiced not out of selfishness but for serious reasons; and with methods that conform to the objective criteria of morality, that is, periodic continence and use of the infertile periods.

vatican.va/archive/compendium_ccc/documents/archive_2005_compendium-ccc_en.html

I have not read your post at the moment…but here is a quick quote. Prayer and discernment is needed and perhaps advice from a good faithful Priest.
 
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