S
seekerz
Guest
So what do we do, tell them to die for their husband’s sins instead? I’m not saying moral education and social reform are not needed, but of what value is that to the thousands of women who’ll die before these take hold?Exactly the same argument used to support a plethora of dispicable actions. Since we can’t truly help the women, let’s offer false hope and inaccurate education in the manifestation of a piece of latex that even our most personally-motivated organizations admit isn’t effective at preventing pregnancy or the spread of disease.
It’s cheap, it helps assuage our conscience, it makes us look good, all in all a win situation for us.
![]()
Personally, I do hope the Church looks at this one again long and hard. There are communities in Africa where only the grandparents are left to look after the children when their parents die of AIDS. Sometimes the kids have to look after themselves.
Maybe the piece of latex isn’t 100% effective, but it offers some protection. I can’t see how a woman can be morally justified in taking the pill to prevent debilitating menstrual cramps and a piece of latex can not be morally justified to help save lives in situations such as described above.
In my opinion, though difficult practically, women can be taught to detect their ovulation, abstain around that time and otherwise use condoms for marital relations. I fail to see the great immorality of such an approach when weighed against the staggering number of lives at risk (both from actual infection/death as well as from deprivation of parental care).