G
geebob
Guest
The value that the catholic church is denying is precisely what I described, INTRINSIC VALUE. You deny the value of sexual intercourse apart from procreation or (or oddly, the intension of procreation which I still find inconsistent with the value of sexual intercourse with couples who unable to concieve). Thus it’s value is not intrinsic. But this is ironically against experience and nature where sexuality can consistently be a bonding experience that is not immeadiately nor necessarily related to procreation.Quite the contrary. The Catholic view sees marital sexual relations as good. No one is stopping one from enjoying it. But it does have the possible consequence of children. And this you must be open to.
It was up to God to make us stewards of our bodies and so we are. It was up to God who made sexual intercourse with a degree of independence from procreation, and so it is not wrong for it to lack reproduction nor the intent given couples who cannot have children.That is true. But that should be up to God to decide not to you.
yes. it is up to God.
Many artificial forms of contraception leave open the possibility life. Does NFP via breast feeding even leave open the possibility of pregnancy? (I really don’t know). Even if one does use contraception that was 100 percent effective, they could still be open to life by not using it all the time. And the example nevertheless demonstrates that sexual intercourse has value apart from reproduction, that does not depend on it’s reproductive function and is thus not a sin.That’s not even in the least bit similar. When we say one should be open to life, we mean that it should be open to life where life is possible.
I have found people here so far uncommonly gentlemanly for internet discussions. I have a feeling I won’t be discussing things with you for long.That is a stupid argument
Not me. I don’t have a problem with contraception. I was drawing out the bad implications of the anti-contraception view.you are implying that infertile people should not even think of getting married because they are not open to life.
I just explained that the difference isn’t there. Many artificial forms of contraception ARE NOT 100 percent effective and very well leave one open to the possibility for life.You see there is a major difference there altogether. The selfishness of wanting pleasure at all times and not wanting the possible result of a child.
And again, we are back to the infertile couples who have that liberty of having pleasure all the time (heaven forbid, that pleasure should have God given intrinsic value) and are not in any realistic way open to producing a child.
from me:
and he didn’t make it necessarily and intrinsically connected with actual reproduction.
No he didn’t. learn basic biology. Infertile couples cannot reproduce but they have sex, thus sex is not necessarily connected with actual reproduction, and menopausal couples, couples with infertile men, couples where the woman has had a hysterectomy.from you:
Yes He did. Read the Bible.
And to add yet another example, with couples where the woman is already pregnant, sex has absolutely no reproductive value.
and you missed the reinforced point. reproduction is not necessary to sex. Bonding is accept when it is done sinfully outside of a monogamous relationship.According to His pleasure
And there, you don’t have it, you weren’t tracking the discussion and you missed the point that I was addressing.And there you got it. We can abstain from sex. God has not problem with that. God actually recommended it (if you read Paul).
Never said it was. Only that it is the necessary aspect.Sex’s value is not just for the "intense’ bonding experience.
We already can by abstaining from sex. The idea that any sexual experience has some specific yet to be created individual correspond to it is an unsupported speculation.Yes we are but we are not God so should not usurp the prerogative of deciding who will and will not be born.
I don’t see the absurdity. And I couldn’t tell that your example highlighted one.Take this absurd stand for exampe " I am against abortion but pro contraception".
That could be. I can’t take your word for it though.There was no ambiguity. A straight translation exhibits no ambguity. It is only the liberal translation that does.
The translations I consulted were not liberal. If translating it in the way you said makes it liberal, that says more about your judgement than what actually would constitute a liberal translation.
Having checked a few translations, there is less doubt in my mind about what the sin of Onan was.
You can abstain and that prevents life. Clearly it’s the sex that makes the difference.What we are saying is what you are doing to stop that act from bringing life is the sin.
contraception doesn’t prevent mutual gratification. And again, there is no difference in the intention here when using contraception vs. sex between infertile couples, and couples who are already pregnant. There is no openness to life in the sex act (since one is already on the way).Otherwise it is just lust and self gratification.
Ironically (though without addressing the topic), Paul says the cure for lust is sex within marriage. Thus lust within a marriage is just a category error.