R
Rence
Guest
Yes, it is. Using NFP is using a system that God provided. God provided women with cycles of fertile and infertile times and a means to identify them. The fact that it’s not 100% effective and one is still using it is testimony to trusting in God. I can’t even count how many posts have said that NFP didn’t work for a couple.And having sex only during infertile times through NFP is “trusting God”? After all, the opposite is true as well - with NFP you’re purposely using the information you have to avoid as much as possible another child.
With all due respect, what is sad is the fact that you tagged this on to what I said. This is not what I said, nor how I feel. Please do not add to my words.And the fact of the matter is, if you DO have a child, that child is, for purposes of NFP, a “failure” of NFP to work and, to a lesser extent, can even be considered an unwanted or inconvenient child at that time. How sad!
You don’t have to use NFP. But the fact of the matter is that the Church allows for it, and the Catholic Church allows NFP precisely because it does not in any way intervene in the natural process. It actually works with the natural process.Outside of really good reasons for doing so (which one should acknowledge as being a deviation from the normal activity of the marriage), I can’t see the use of NFP as having any interplay with “trusting God”. NFP - justified or not - is the use of information to intervene in the natural process for a time. It is not the same and cannot be comparable to the couple who simply has relations without consulting a calendar.