Protestant change on Contraception

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patricius79

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the Reformers condemned contraception very strongly, like the Catholic Church and the ECFs

what led to the Protestant reversal on this beginning in 1930 and how has this affected Protestantism?
 
You speak of Protestants as if they were one church. They are not, they are composed of over 1,000 DIFFERENT faiths.

Most of them have no problem with contraception at all.

To write as if protestantism was some monolithic entity is simply wrong.
 
I can only speak for my denomination…the LCMS. We have no issue with Barrier Methods of Contraception as they prevent egg and sperm from meeting. However once they meet, they are a life and hands off.

I am married to a Catholic Man, and while personally I have no issue with barrier methods, we practice NFP. For several reasons…one, I respect his beliefs and since the easiest barrier method is a condom probably not going to happen. Two, NFP forces a marriage to be about more than just sex and physical contact, it makes you find other ways to be emotionally and spiritually intimate and I believe this is extremely healthy for any marriage. There has to be more than chemistry holding a couple together.
 
Two, NFP forces a marriage to be about more than just sex and physical contact, it makes you find other ways to be emotionally and spiritually intimate and I believe this is extremely healthy for any marriage. There has to be more than chemistry holding a couple together.
interesting. thank you
 
See , A Short & Surprising History of Protestantism & Contraception*, by***Allan Carlson **** in Touchstone Magazine.%between%%between%*
*
  • Note that the author is not a Catholic; so hopefully is unbiased. [Allan Carlson is President of The Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society in Rockford, Illinois (http://www.profam.org/”]www.profam.org*). His books include Conjugal America: On The Public Purposes of Marriage* and The Natural Family: Bulwark of Liberty. He is married and has four children and is a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He is a senior editor for Touchstone.]*
…As late as 1874, the average Anglican clergyman in England still had 5.2 living children. In 1911, however, just three years after the bishops had condemned contraception, the new census of England showed that the average family size of Anglican clergy had fallen to only 2.3 children, a stunning decline of 55 percent. The British Malthusian League—a strong advocate of contraception—had a field day exposing what it called the hypocrisy of the priests.
As the league explained, the Church of England continued to view contraception as a sin, and yet its clerics and bishops were obviously engaging in the practice. Apparently only the poor and the ignorant had to obey the church.
There was not much that Anglican leaders could say in response. This propaganda continued for another two decades, and soon some Anglican theologians were arguing that Britain’s poverty required the birth of fewer children.
Pressures culminated at the 1930 Lambeth Conference, where bishops heard an address by birth-control advocate Helena Wrighton on the advantages of contraception for the poor. On a vote of 193 to 67, the bishops (representing not only England but also America, Canada, and the other former colonies) approved a resolution stating that:
In those cases where there is such a clearly felt moral obligation to limit or avoid parenthood, and where there is a morally sound reason for avoiding complete abstinence, other methods may be used, provided that this is done in the light of the same Christian principles.
 
I think there are a lot of things that have played into this, and come out of it. All round, there have been a lot of questions around questions of sex and sexuality in the 20th century. I wouldn’t say that all of those questions have been bad. Also, there have been technological changes that have had an impact as well. And I’m sure that social changes that make having large families more difficult have had a part too.

And whole the Catholic Church has been firm, I’m not sure that it is accurate to say they have been successful at convincing Catholics that contraception is wrong - even many that are pretty serious about their religion.

I’m not sure that we are in a position to really tease out all the threads of this question - I think we may be too close to it to see the factors clearly Our understanding of sexuality has become quite warped, or we are being reactionary to that warped understanding, it is hard to understand all the elements.
 
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