Jennifer J;6844224:
But there is no RENDERING of the sex act as infertile in a normal cycle. A couple is simply infertile at various times, it’s a normal part of all women’s cycles.
This is the convoluted thinking that I mentioned earlier. Here is my counter - statement:
The sex act
is rendered infertile in practice and in intent (although the inate fertility of the sperm or egg is unaffected) when limited to infertile times during the monthly cycle.
Again I say it is disingenuous to claim the act is not infertile when that is clearly the intent of the timing.
All forms of contraception have as their goal to RENDER the act nonprocreative.
My counter-statement:
All sex acts timed to coincide with the woman’s infertile period have as their goal to RENDER the act non-procreative.
Abstinence doesn’t render the act nonprocreative because there is no act.
I agree.
The knowledge of being fertile or infertile doesn’t change the act–if it’s done in a procreative way, then it is ordered to procreation.
I disagree with your definition of procreative as being unrelated to fertility. It makes no sense from a literal or biological definition. It’s not pro-creation like pro-life.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary online
Procreate
transitive verb
: to beget or bring forth (offspring) : propagate
intransitive verb
: to beget or bring forth offspring : reproduce
The NFP usage of the word procreative, implying openess to life, is a definition designed to distract from what NFP is really doing - rendering the timing of the sex act to be non-procreative (an infertile act - sex timed so as to avoid reproduction).
Effectiveness rates have nothing to do with the licitness of the act.
**I agree. Licitness is determined by the Church. But you are trying to misdirect the point I was making about openess to life./**QUOTE]
I’m not trying to duck further debate but I have to go somewhere.
It’s not convoluted, nor is it redefining procreative because I don’t rely soley on the Webster’s dictionary, but rely on what the Church has said on the topic. Sex that is performed without interference is by definition procreative–but it doesn’t have to be fertile. It’s an attempt to describe that the act COULD produce life all things being equal (various factors affect fertility, not just the presence of egg and sperm). This is why infertile people can get married licitly. I know I’m repeating myself. Openness to life is not the best description for what is happening. The sex act must be ordered to life or ordered to procreation. 2 ways of saying the same thing. Open to life is to flimsy and confusing. It leads to the jump that you made–that condoms (a barrier) are more open to life. No way.