Folks, here’s information from a scholarly book dealing with medieval Slavic history, again re-quoted from the Monachos website
monachos.net/forum/showthread.php?1420-Birth-control-among-various-Orthodox-groups/page2& :
**Quoting from a book by Eve Levin entitled, Sex and Society in the World of the Orthodox Slaves, 900-1700, the author states:
“Because only the birth of a child justified sexual intercourse between husband and wife, any attempt to prevent conception was regarded as evil. From the medieval Slavic perspective, contraception, abortion, and infanticide were similar offenses; provision against birth control did no always distinguish among them. All three represented the same thing: an attempt to forestall the introduction into the world of a new soul. For that reason, all three offenses were sometimes call
dusegube**, literally ‘the destruction of a soul’”; *Levin, 1989, pp. 175-176. *
I assume when the author speaks about medieval Slavic perspective, he speaks essentially about medieval Eastern Orthodox perspective, because most Slavic people and notably the largest group, the Russians, were Eastern Orthodox. I think this is an indication that the medieval Slavic Eastern Orthodox Churches did regard contraception, abortion, and infanticide as similar offenses.
So, when some Eastern Orthodox Churches allow today contraception, but not abortion and infanticide, on reason of oikonomia, I would argue that’s a departure from the past. I guess in the medieval past all three (contraception, abortion, infanticide) were strictly forbidden and no allowance was made for contraception on the basis of oikonomia. I just can’t see a medieval Slavic EO Church allowing contraception, given how Slavic culture regarded all three members of the contraception-abortion-infanticide triad as similar evils.