R
Rau
Guest
The Church has never and does not now teach that contraception is licit. The point I made is that not all acts appearing to be the wrong of contraception are in fact that. Eg. Sweeping away the semen of a rapist after a rape would not be the moral wrong of contraception.Theologically speaking, when did the Church start to teach that contraception, even for non-abortive reasons, is licit? Casti Connubii, Humanae Vitae, all of the Church Fathers, and even Protestant teaching until 1920 always maintained that contraception is illicit. Sure, certain theologians, churchmen, and even USCC must not have taken the Oath Against Modernism and dissented from infallibly defined doctrine.
Read at thecatholicthing.org/2015/03/21/contraception-conscience-and-church-authority/. Until 1930, all Christendom agreed that contraception was an intrinsically disordered act –in other words, a sin. Martin Luther was as clear on this point as Saint Thomas Aquinas. Laws against the sale of contraceptives were enforced in Catholic and Protestant countries. We may also include the Orthodox world…In 1930, the Lambeth Conference of Anglican bishops famously broke from Christian teaching when it approved “methods of conception control” other than abstinence for married couples burdened by the prospect of a baby. This was odd, because the previous Lambeth Conference of 1920 had uttered “an emphatic warning” that contraception was morally illicit. One might asked how human nature had changed in ten years…Pope Pius XI was upset enough about the Anglican shift to respond with the encyclical Casti Connubii, which confirmed the perennial teaching about contraception. He also reminded people that it was precisely because of the human tendency to rationalize private inclination that Christ had established a teaching Church. It is the Church, and not private judgment, that has been entrusted with revelation regarding faith and morals. Especially in the area of sexuality, where it is easy to make mistakes, a couple would, for their own good, want to consult the moral doctrine of the Church…The issue lay dormant among Catholics until the sexual revolution. When Paul VI’s Humanae Vitae (1968) confirmed the teaching on contraception, dissenting theologians opted for the self-defeating approach of the Anglicans. They slapped a “conscience clause” on the teaching. Hans Küng told an interviewer that Catholics should take the document seriously, but added that if a couple decided the teaching interfered with their pursuit of happiness, they should “follow their conscience.”