I notice no one seems to be bringing up the question about couples planning for when one of them becomes ill and is unable to have sex for a protracted time, or couples planning for what happens when expected conception doesn’t occur. These are by no means uncommon situations. But no, the assumption is that everybody just carries on like bunnies and if a kid somehow doesn’t appear then something bad must be going on.
All of that must be someone else’s assumption, because it’s certainly not mine. I
do make the assumption that, generally speaking, newlywed couples have relations, and they have them often. That’s just what most people do. There are exceptions. I never said there weren’t. But I certainly don’t assume that when children don’t come, something sinister is going on. I think something like 10 percent of all couples are naturally infertile. And people absolutely
do need to consider how they will react, how they will handle it, if they get married and cannot have relations for an extended period of time. People moan and groan about the periodic abstinence required by NFP, but there are far worse things that can happen in couples’ married lives.
As far as the whole contraception/
Humanae vitae thing goes, basically what we get from the pastoral side of the Church is…
crickets. Somebody has to speak up and call bullfeathers on the silence. I’ve been “speaking up” for over 40 years, and I will only stop when the mortician glues my fingers together and puts that little plastic doohickey in my mouth to close it once and for all.
The most recent study I read, said that 92 percent of American Catholics don’t agree with
Humanae vitae. That’s 92 percent too many. Contraception,
in the objective order, is mortally sinful. Paul VI wouldn’t have urged couples who fail to implement the Church’s teaching, to avail themselves of the Sacrament of Penance, if it weren’t. Venial sins can be forgiven without sacramental absolution.
As I always tell my son, when I reiterate Church teaching on faith, morality, or piety to him, fifty trillion years from now, you’ll thank me for telling you all this. He doesn’t have many other people in his life who will.