Sadness over NFP misuse/misunderstanding

  • Thread starter Thread starter Alexander_Smith
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Right, so total abstinence ISN’T sinful for just/serious/grave reasons for the same reason that periodic abstinence isn’t sinful for just/serious/grave reasons.
NFP isn’t periodic abstinence, it just happens to use it as part of the program. The aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the martial act during infertile times ONLY. Please do not confuse the issue, or we will get sidetracked.
 
NFP isn’t periodic abstinence, it just happens to use it as part of the program. The aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the martial act during infertile times ONLY. Please do not confuse the issue, or we will get sidetracked.
Wait, wait, wait… so now you’re back to questioning whether it’s LICIT or not?

I’m confused… because I’m fairly certain NFP IS defined as periodic abstinence… recourse to the infertile phases… it’s in church teachings… right??? We’ve gone over this one…

Okay Alexander… help me out here because it’s driving me nuts…
What exactly are you arguing? Do you agree with the church teaching or not? Are you questioning church teachings? Are you trying to make sure every couple throws caution to the wind?
I can’t get a good grasp of what you really think… 🤷
 
I know that it is however the main page and you have to go kind of deep into the links to get a discussion. All I’m saying is if the main overview page from USCCB doesn’t include it, it can lead to the impression that teachings may be incomplete.
usccb.org/prolife/issues/nfp/index.shtml
Actually this is the main page on NFP… you posted the link for “Basic Information” which was under another header… deeper down… let’s not ADD confusion into this discussion.

Note, the VERY TOP LINK on the left is called “Church Teachings”… notice the PRIORITY!

The SECOND LINK is “What is NFP?”… and under THAT was your “Basic Info” link…
 
NFP isn’t periodic abstinence, it just happens to use it as part of the program. The aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the martial act during infertile times ONLY. Please do not confuse the issue, or we will get sidetracked.
NFP is called Natural Family Planning sometimes called fertility awareness. It is information of physical signs that a woman presents during her fertility cycle: mucous, basal body temp, and cervic position and perhaps a fertility monitor–depends on which form you use. The application of NFP is periodic abstinence–deciding whether to have sex or not based on physical signs and whether a couple has serious/just/grave reasons. That’s what this discussion is about. Infact, this is what the Catechism calls it…periodic continence…it is not contraception.

I’d like you and Momar to stop telling me what to discuss and what not to discuss. These are main points in the discussion of the licit use of periodic continence…
 
Wait, wait, wait… so now you’re back to questioning whether it’s LICIT or not?

I’m confused… because I’m fairly certain NFP IS defined as periodic abstinence… recourse to the infertile phases… it’s in church teachings… right??? We’ve gone over this one…

Okay Alexander… help me out here because it’s driving me nuts…
What exactly are you arguing? Do you agree with the church teaching or not? Are you questioning church teachings? Are you trying to make sure every couple throws caution to the wind?
I can’t get a good grasp of what you really think… 🤷
Eh what? I wasn’t even making an argument. I was just saying that the aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the marital act during infertile times ONLY. Not the periods of abstinence between, not the use of NFP for conception.

The way I see it,
NFP is abstinence punctuated by periods of “green days” where a couple can engage in the martial act with no risk of pregnancy, as long as they gauge signs correctly.

Abstinence is NO intercourse until the aggravating situation, or medical problem is cleared up.
NFP is called Natural Family Planning sometimes called fertility awareness. It is information of physical signs that a woman presents during her fertility cycle: mucous, basal body temp, and cervic position and perhaps a fertility monitor–depends on which form you use. The application of NFP is periodic abstinence–deciding whether to have sex or not based on physical signs and whether a couple has serious/just/grave reasons. That’s what this discussion is about. Infact, this is what the Catechism calls it…periodic continence…it is not contraception.

I’d like you and Momar to stop telling me what to discuss and what not to discuss. These are main points in the discussion of the licit use of periodic continence…
Signs that are used to determine “green” days.

Couples that use NFP for avoidance monitor such signs because they still want to engage in the marital act, but they don’t a pregnancy to be a result of those acts.
 
NFP isn’t periodic abstinence, it just happens to use it as part of the program. The aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the martial act during infertile times ONLY.
There is NO period of time in NFP during which the man is infertile.
There is NO period of time in NFP during which the woman is infertile. If the spouses happen to have the same blood type and similar body chemistry, the woman’s mucus can nourish and keep those sperm alive indefinitely.

NFP at its best ONLY gives an educated *guess *as to a likely period of highest fertility of the woman, but ANYTHING and EVERYTHING (sleep, light, diet, stress, schedule changes, illnesses, allergy, and natural hormonal changes) can mess that body and that educated guess up completely in an instant…… as also unnatural hormonal changes from foods, toxins, and hormonal residuals from animal feed in meats and dairy can mess that up in an instant.

Your argument is laughable.

Oh, and by the way, you do realize that fertility is a joint thing, don’t you? And so if you’re concerned about the birth rate dropping off you really need some serious study on the subject of pesticide and herbicide residues and hormonal residues in food netatively affecting male fertility and increasing the incidence and transmission of transgender genetic injury in the population.
 
There is NO period of time in NFP during which the man is infertile.
There is NO period of time in NFP during which the woman is infertile. If the spouses happen to have the same blood type and similar body chemistry, the woman’s mucus can nourish and keep those sperm alive indefinitely.

NFP at its best ONLY gives an educated *guess *as to a likely period of highest fertility of the woman, but ANYTHING and EVERYTHING (sleep, light, diet, stress, schedule changes, illnesses, allergy, and natural hormonal changes) can mess that body and that educated guess up completely in an instant…… as also unnatural hormonal changes from foods, toxins, and hormonal residuals from animal feed in meats and dairy can mess that up in an instant.

Your argument is laughable.

Oh, and by the way, you do realize that fertility is a joint thing, don’t you? And so if you’re concerned about the birth rate dropping off you really need some serious study on the subject of pesticide and herbicide residues and hormonal residues in food netatively affecting male fertility and increasing the incidence and transmission of transgender genetic injury in the population.
I’m not arguing the science, I’m arguing the intent, and if what you say is true, than why do so many Catholics and NFP teachers boast about how effective NFP is for avoiding pregnancy?

And yes I’m fully aware of the bolded statement.

Oh and:
The first phase is the first infertile phase, or the first safe period, when the woman is unlikely to fall pregnant. This starts on the first day of the woman’s period and ends on the earliest date from which sperm could survive long enough to fertilize the egg. This first safe period is short because sperm can survive for up to seven days after intercourse and a woman may ovulate early. Therefore, unprotected intercourse during this first phase may result in pregnancy.

The fertile phase is the time when a woman is most likely to fall pregnant. Couples not wishing to become pregnant, should avoid intercourse during this time or use other methods of contraception such as condoms. If pregnancy is desired then this is the time when a woman is most likely to conceive. The fertile phase lasts from the end of the first phase until 24 hours after ovulation.

The second infertile phase or safe period when a woman is less likely to fall pregnant is more predictable than the first phase. This phase lasts from the end of the fertile phase until the beginning of the woman’s next period.

Accurately identifying the time of ovulation is the cornerstone of natural family planning. The three principal methods of calculating when ovulation is likely to occur are:
 
NFP is called Natural Family Planning sometimes called fertility awareness. It is information of physical signs that a woman presents during her fertility cycle: mucous, basal body temp, and cervic position and perhaps a fertility monitor–depends on which form you use. The application of NFP is periodic abstinence–deciding whether to have sex or not based on physical signs and whether a couple has serious/just/grave reasons. That’s what this discussion is about. Infact, this is what the Catechism calls it…periodic continence…it is not contraception.

I’d like you and Momar to stop telling me what to discuss and what not to discuss. These are main points in the discussion of the licit use of periodic continence…
No need to get testy. It was my suggestion to play the why game and you took me up on it but all you did was cut and paste prepared statements. My game, my rules. If you don’t want to answer questions or discuss that way, fine.
 
I’m not arguing the science, I’m arguing the intent, and if what you say is true, than why do so many Catholics and NFP teachers boast about how effective NFP is for avoiding pregnancy?
Because they’re trying to convince women that marrying doesn’t sentence one to a lifetime of abject slavery and they’re trying to convince married women not to abstain from sex with their husbands for the rest of their lives after going through pregnancy and childbirth.

Don’t you know that anyone who challenges the effectiveness of NFP as a contraceptive because they’ve gotten pregnant while practicing NFP to avoid gets written off entirely by the NFP educators as “not having practed NFP correctly?”
NFP data is just great, NFP is surely reliable, sure it is…
just as long as you’ve written off all those cases where it DIDN’T work as “these people did not practice NFP* CORRECTLY* because if they HAD practiced it CORRECTLY they would NOT have gotten pregnant!” It is laughable.
If I had a dollar for every woman who practiced NFP correctly and got pregnant and was written off as “not having practiced NFP correctly” I’d have a fat piggy bank!

Ha! The best of the best of the best physicians and tests and all the rest all shook their heads and told me there was NOTHING ON THE FACE OF THIS EARTH that could determine when I was or was not “fertile” because of “pseudo-fertility.” “Pseudo-fertility” is REAL. It is everywhere. It DOESN’T fit the model. Human bodies are human bodies. They are NOT theoretical models.
If you give women hormones to fit the model…
If you eliminate all women whose bodies don’t fit the model…
of course your model is good… your cannot be beat! Because you’ve eliminated everything that challenges it and proves that it isn’t the last word… on anything.

Oh yes, the Pope Paul VI Institute thinks they’ve got things figured out…
yeah, sure they can fix psuedofertility and pseudoinfertility… by administering hormones to “balance” one’s cycle so it “fits” the model of what a woman’s body is theoretically supposed to look like…
with those same hormones they use in birth control pills…
and they’ll use progesterone in pregnancy too to prevent miscarriage…
in spite of the fact that miscarriage is a natural phenomenon for which the body may have a very good (but unknown) reason (beyond “your hormones don’t seem to match the model…”
and in spite of the fact that those hormones go right through the placenta to the baby…
including a male fetus, bombarded with female hormones…
 
Because they’re trying to convince women that marrying doesn’t sentence one to a lifetime of abject slavery and they’re trying to convince married women not to abstain from sex with their husbands for the rest of their lives after going through pregnancy and childbirth.

Don’t you know that anyone who challenges the effectiveness of NFP as a contraceptive because they’ve gotten pregnant while practicing NFP to avoid gets written off entirely by the NFP educators as “not having practed NFP correctly?”
NFP data is just great, NFP is surely reliable, sure it is…
just as long as you’ve written off all those cases where it DIDN’T work as “these people did not practice NFP* CORRECTLY* because if they HAD practiced it CORRECTLY they would not have gotten pregnant!”
If I had a dollar for every woman who practiced NFP correctly and got pregnant and was written off as “not having practiced NFP correctly” I’d have a fat piggy bank!

Ha! The best of the best of the best physicians and tests and all the rest all shook their heads and told me there was NOTHING ON THE FACE OF THIS EARTH that could determine when I was or was not “fertile” because of “pseudo-fertility.” “Pseudo-fertility” is REAL. It is everywhere. It DOESN’T fit the model.

Oh yes, the Pope Paul VI Institute thinks they’ve got things figured out…
yeah, sure they can fix psuedofertility and pseudoinfertility… by administering hormones to “balance” one’s cycle so it “fits” the model of what a woman’s body is theoretically supposed to look like…
with those same hormones they use in birth control pills…
and they’ll use progesterone in pregnancy too to prevent miscarriage…
in spite of the fact that miscarriage is a natural phenomenon for which the body may have a very good (but unknown) reason (beyond “your hormones don’t match the model…”
and in spite of the fact that those hormones go right through the placenta to the baby…
including a male fetus, bombarded with female hormones…
Um, I take it you don’t approve of NFP then? I don’t understand what you’re arguing about? Do you think I’m trying to promote NFP, or perhaps you think Catholics should be using ABC?
 
The more a person is in control of their reproduction the less they are trusting in God to gift them with life if it is His will to do so. The same argument that is often made about ABC.

The people who trust in God are the ones who are most likely to recognize they are not in control at all. That is just a truism. Please don’t read any conclusion about my position on ABC/NFP into it.
This is not reflective of Catholic teaching on free will and divine providence. Please consult the Catechism–and, more directly related to this topic, Karol Wojtyla’s “Love and Responsibility”. NFP using couples display no less trust in God than couples who choose not to use NFP to plan their families.
ABC is evil because it separates the unitive and procreative. Now take that a step further - why is it evil to separate the unitive and procreative? Isn’t it because it interferes with the God designed process that leads to conception, i.e. it controls birth (actually conception)? I can think of no other reason why it would be evil.
Birth control/the regulation of births is not illicit. Read Humanae Vitae.

Contraception and artificial methods of birth control are illicit because they distort the marital act. They distort the marital act by, as you said, separating the unitive and procreative purposes of that act.

God has ordained unitive and procreative purposes for sexual intercourse; we can see His design reflected in the natural law. God has designed sex to unite spouses and to potentially bring about new life. Observing men and women, we can see that they are united in one flesh and emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically bonded by sex (just one example of this is the release of oxytocin, the “bonding hormone” when a woman is sexually aroused).

By examining God’s creation–our bodies–we can also see His design of both male and female fertility. We discover that while men are always fertile, women are not always fertile (even though females of other species are always fertile, for some reason God’s design of the human female only involves her ovulation once every 28 days or so). Over time we have learned more about God’s natural design for female fertility. If you believe that God intended for every act of sexual intercourse to lead to conception, then you’ve got to say that He “messed up” in designing the female human body. The reality is that every act of intercourse cannot realistically lead to conception, but our responsibility as men and women living in accord with the natural law and who respect God’s design for our bodies is that we must conform our actions to the purposes that God clearly intends for us.
NFP isn’t periodic abstinence, it just happens to use it as part of the program. The aspect of NFP we are discussing is the use of the martial act during infertile times ONLY. Please do not confuse the issue, or we will get sidetracked.
Periodic abstinence and having sex during the infertile period are two sides of the same coin when we’re discussing using NFP to avoid pregnancy. You can’t talk about “sex during the infertile period” and not acknowledge periodic abstinence. Using NFP to avoid pregnancy REQUIRES that the couple abstain from sex. Why are you so eager to gloss over this?

At any rate, what can possibly be wrong with the marital act during the infertile period? Are you suggesting that husband and wife are sinning when they share the marital embrace?
 
This is not reflective of Catholic teaching on free will and divine providence. Please consult the Catechism–and, more directly related to this topic, Karol Wojtyla’s “Love and Responsibility”. NFP using couples display no less trust in God than couples who choose not to use NFP to plan their families.

Birth control/the regulation of births is not illicit. Read Humanae Vitae.

Contraception and artificial methods of birth control are illicit because they distort the marital act. They distort the marital act by, as you said, separating the unitive and procreative purposes of that act.

God has ordained unitive and procreative purposes for sexual intercourse; we can see His design reflected in the natural law. God has designed sex to unite spouses and to potentially bring about new life. Observing men and women, we can see that they are united in one flesh and emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically bonded by sex (just one example of this is the release of oxytocin, the “bonding hormone” when a woman is sexually aroused).

By examining God’s creation–our bodies–we can also see His design of both male and female fertility. We discover that while men are always fertile, women are not always fertile (even though females of other species are always fertile, for some reason God’s design of the human female only involves her ovulation once every 28 days or so). Over time we have learned more about God’s natural design for female fertility. If you believe that God intended for every act of sexual intercourse to lead to conception, then you’ve got to say that He “messed up” in designing the female human body. The reality is that every act of intercourse cannot realistically lead to conception, but our responsibility as men and women living in accord with the natural law and who respect God’s design for our bodies is that we must conform our actions to the purposes that God clearly intends for us.
By way of response I am reposting part of an exchange from #369 which addresses some of your topic and never got answered by the person I was responding to. Perhaps you can. My responses are in bold.

It’s wrong to separate the unitive and procreative aspects of sex because to do so distorts the meaning of the act.

**Why? **

NFP does nothing to the ACT. Each act is a whole and completed act of sex, ie conception could occur. The knowledge of fertility or infertility doesn’t change the act.

**But the acts themselves are taken out of the context of the overall fertility cycle making the “conception could occur” statement rather disingenuous. On the one hand there is this strict insistence on the sex act being exactly as God made it, meaning no barriers or interference with fertility. OK. But a strict insistence on God’s original design for sex falls away when it comes to timing. Now, an exception to the design is allowed. Seems very inconsistent to me.

Couples will naturally, by God’s design of of our biological urges, have sex at varying times and frequencies throughout the woman’s cycle, which is the way conception naturally occurs. The sexual relationship of a couple is more than just each individual act, just like their marriage is more than just a single day. I don’t see how the totality of the actions and intentions can be discounted this way.

Please understand where I am coming from here. I am not taking sides or advocating ANYTHING. I am picking apart the flaws that I see in this whole NFP philosophy. **
 
usccb.org/prolife/issues/nfp/index.shtml
Actually this is the main page on NFP… you posted the link for “Basic Information” which was under another header… deeper down… let’s not ADD confusion into this discussion.

Note, the VERY TOP LINK on the left is called “Church Teachings”… notice the PRIORITY!

The SECOND LINK is “What is NFP?”… and under THAT was your “Basic Info” link…
Come on that is a links page to a bunch of boring sounding stuff. Can you admit that the main most reader friendly page that has a section titled “Who can use NFP” could have been better written to include something about discernment? Do you think that many husbands will get beyond the basic info page (they should but will they)?
 
By way of response I am reposting part of an exchange from #369 which addresses some of your topic and never got answered by the person I was responding to. Perhaps you can. My responses are in bold.

It’s wrong to separate the unitive and procreative aspects of sex because to do so distorts the meaning of the act.

**Why? **

NFP does nothing to the ACT. Each act is a whole and completed act of sex, ie conception could occur. The knowledge of fertility or infertility doesn’t change the act.

But the acts themselves are taken out of the context of the overall fertility cycle making the “conception could occur” statement rather disingenuous. On the one hand there is this strict insistence on the sex act being exactly as God made it, meaning no barriers or interference with fertility. OK. But a strict insistence on God’s original design for sex falls away when it comes to timing. Now, an exception to the design is allowed. Seems very inconsistent to me.

Couples will naturally, by God’s design of of our biological urges, have sex at varying times and frequencies throughout the woman’s cycle, which is the way conception naturally occurs. The sexual relationship of a couple is more than just each individual act, just like their marriage is more than just a single day. I don’t see how the totality of the actions and intentions can be discounted this way.

Please understand where I am coming from here. I am not taking sides or advocating ANYTHING. I am picking apart the flaws that I see in this whole NFP philosophy.
How is God’s design “excepted” by the timing of sex? Where does God command that married couples have sex at certain times? Where does His design indicate that they ought to have sex at certain times rather than others?

Again, God’s design of female fertility is such that a woman is not fertile for most of her cycle. You seem to be suggesting that God messed up in designing women in such a way…🤷

Finally, what you are talking about–“intent” and “totality of actions” have NOTHING TO DO with the licitness of NFP. That is why the teaching documents on this topic speak of not frustrating the purposes of each per se act–each act IN ITSELF. A problem of “intention” and “totality of actions” can occur–every NFP “proponent” on this thread has admitted as such. But even a sin of selfishness or a lack of discernment on the part of an NFP using couple avoiding pregnancy does not affect the objective morality of NFP, nor does it suddenly transform NFP into ABC.

OBJECTIVELY, NFP and ABC use are NEVER the same.
SUBJECTIVELY, NFP use can be abused, in much the same way that ABC is subjectively “justified”.
 
I’m not arguing the science, I’m arguing the intent, and if what you say is true, than why do so many Catholics and NFP teachers boast about how effective NFP is for avoiding pregnancy?
Because, if a couple has serious/just/grave reasons to avoid then they need a licit means of doing so that is relatively effective. The Church outlines two such methods. Total abstinence and NFP. Total abstinence is not a “good” in marriage. The church teaches that marriage is a sacrament and the marital act is a renewal of the sacrament; thus a “good.” So when a couple has serious/just/grave reasons to avoid, NFP is a licit option to be employed during such times for the good of the couple.
 
Um, I take it you don’t approve of NFP then? I don’t understand what you’re arguing about? Do you think I’m trying to promote NFP, or perhaps you think Catholics should be using ABC?
I had 5 kids using NFP correrctly. I almost died having the last one. My body does NOT meet any NFP model other than “your body is in a permanent state of pseudo-fertility.” As a nursing mother of 5 I refused to take natural or artificial hormones to force it to meet the model.
My husband got himself sterilized rather than face complete abstincence for the rest of our lives at age 32 after I almost died in childbirth. The Catholic teaching hospital, the pastor, and the assistant pastor all advised it because there was ZERO chance that I would ever survive another pregnancy and I had 5 children under the age of 9 to raise. They all concurred that I had “more than proven” that I was “open to children in marriage” as the Church requires, and that I would be grossly irresponsible if I didn’t go along with my husband’s choice of sterilization.

I regard your arguments over what’s in the hearts and minds of theoretical people theoretically using NFP with theoretically lacking intentions as completely ridiculous.
There is NO such thing as ANY “guaranteed infertile” period of time using NFP. NFP uses theoretical models and comes up with odds of fertility based on those theoretical models, and they’re throwing out all data that doesn’t fit the model.

People use NFP to figure out their bodies and the relative odds of achieving pregnancy at any given time so that they can make joint decisions about intercourse considering the needs and feelings of both spouses, particularly the needs and feelings of women, which have been traditionally subjugated to the needs and feelings of men.

If you come from a family that hasn’t modeled partnership between spouses such that you have no experience with spouses making joint decisions and taking joint responsibility for things, NFP will of course look like some sort of strange science experiment to you compared to “the traditional method” of child spacing.

Under the traditional method of child spacing, after so many kids the wife’s health and sanity demanded complete abstinence and so the husband traditionally would nightly go down to the tavern and take up drinking, with occasional incidences of frustrated wife beating and marital rape, and/or visiting the local prostitutes. That has been the traditional family planning method for the last 2000 years.
If you and your spouse are good with that one, heck, who’s to challenge it? Go for it. You said you wanted to do things just like your parents did and as all the generations past.
Likewise, if couples get together and discuss their bodies and charts and want to make joint decisions on their intimacy, as you say their “science experiment”… who’s to challenge it?
 
No need to get testy. It was my suggestion to play the why game and you took me up on it but all you did was cut and paste prepared statements. My game, my rules. If you don’t want to answer questions or discuss that way, fine.
I’m not testy (though I am a bit busy with family/dinner/kids/etc), this is NOT your game. This is a discussion among many people and asking/answering Why? to everything does nothing to answer the question as there is never an end to WHY? (I have SIX children, I know all about the game). I didn’t take you up on it. I answered your question with official Church teaching. You just don’t seem to like what it says.

🤷
 
How is God’s design “excepted” by the timing of sex?

God designed a full monthly cycle of fertile and non fertile periods. NFP only makes use of part of the cycle for the marital union. There is nothing inherent in God’s design to indicate this was what He intended His children to do.

Where does God command that married couples have sex at certain times? **Where does His design indicate that they ought to have sex at certain times rather than others? **

Exactly! His design did not make the fertile and non=fertile times inherently obvious. Perhaps it was not His intention that His children would be splitting up the month into sex / no sex periods instead of following the natural rhythym of their biologically driven desires.

Again, God’s design of female fertility is such that a woman is not fertile for most of her cycle. You seem to be suggesting that God messed up in designing women in such a way…🤷

Where on earth did you get such an idea from anything I posted?

Finally, what you are talking about–“intent” and “totality of actions” have NOTHING TO DO with the licitness of NFP. That is why the teaching documents on this topic speak of not frustrating the purposes of each per se act–each act IN ITSELF. A problem of “intention” and “totality of actions” can occur–every NFP “proponent” on this thread has admitted as such. But even a sin of selfishness or a lack of discernment on the part of an NFP using couple avoiding pregnancy does not affect the objective morality of NFP, nor does it suddenly transform NFP into ABC.

Since when has the Church ever divorced a person’s intent and totality of actions from morality? The insistence that having sex without a barrier or a pill, etc. somehow makes things OK IN ITSELF while ignoring the larger picture of what is actually going on is one of the things that I have been saying makes no sense. I don’t care if it’s what the Church teaches - I am saying that it IT MAKES NO MORAL SENSE. Insisting that the only licit way to have sex is without some barrier to conception while ignoring that the timing of NFP is also a barrier to conception IS INCONSISTENT on it’s face.

OBJECTIVELY, NFP and ABC use are NEVER the same.
SUBJECTIVELY, NFP use can be abused, in much the same way that ABC is subjectively “justified”.
I am going to sum up:

As Alexander pointed out a while back:
quote from #357
If therefore there are well-grounded reasons for spacing births, arising from the physical or psychological condition of husband or wife, or from external circumstances, the Church teaches that married people may then take advantage of the natural cycles immanent in the reproductive system and engage in marital intercourse only during those times that are infertile, thus controlling birth in a way which does not in the least offend the moral principles which We have just explained. (20)

The first part specifically states that the simple desire to space births is not enough reason to resort to NFP. In other words, unless you have well-grounded reasons to space births, you cannot use NFP. There must be an actual problem that would cause the couple to have to resort of NFP. This further reinforces my opinion that NFP is the exception, not the rule.

As I wrote previously:

I believe NFP is the Church’s answer to a contraceptive minded and sexually obsessed culture which demands to control the number and spacing of children while still being able to enjoy sex only for pleasure and avoid prolonged periods of total abstinence.

IMO this is the reason for the inconsistency between the statement that the procreative and unitive aspects of intercourse should never be separated and the practical separation that occurs in NFP. The disconnect between the theology and the practice is obscured by the NFP philosophy that declares intentional and prolonged infertile sexual relations are “ordered to procreation” simply because there is no barrier to fertility in use with each carefully timed sex act, while ignoring the reality of the overall contraceptive practice taking place and the practical effect of separating the 2 aspects of intercourse.

I believe the practical end result of NFP leads many Catholics to see it as a contraceptive practice and to reject as hypocritical the teaching that NFP is OK and ABC is not.
 
I believe the practical end result of NFP leads many Catholics to see it as a contraceptive practice and to reject as hypocritical the teaching that NFP is OK and ABC is not.
Those “many Catholics” who see NFP as a contraceptive practice haven’t long (or perhaps ever) practiced NFP or they would know that NFP doesn’t work as a contraceptive practice.
 
I am going to sum up:

As I wrote previously:

I believe NFP is the Church’s answer to a contraceptive minded and sexually obsessed culture which demands to control the number and spacing of children while still being able to enjoy sex only for pleasure and avoid prolonged periods of total abstinence.

IMO this is the reason for the inconsistency between the statement that the procreative and unitive aspects of intercourse should never be separated and the practical separation that occurs in NFP. The disconnect between the theology and the practice is obscured by the NFP philosophy that declares intentional and prolonged infertile sexual relations are “ordered to procreation” simply because there is no barrier to fertility in use with each carefully timed sex act, while ignoring the reality of the overall contraceptive practice taking place and the practical effect of separating the 2 aspects of intercourse.

I believe the practical end result of NFP leads many Catholics to see it as a contraceptive practice and to reject as hypocritical the teaching that NFP is OK and ABC is not.
Alright, I think I see why you are confused. The Church teaches that one may regulate births with “well grounded” reasons, The Church also teaches that you cannot separate the unitive and procreative purpose of the marital act. You see NFP (as always used?) as separating these too purposes by allowing the unitive without the procreative.*
(maybe a better summation would be you see a contradiction in the teaching that we are called to responsible parenthood and being called to be “procreative”) Am I correct in this summation?

Maybe it will help if we also state that the church views the marital act (in and of itself) as a good within marriage. I understand that at no time you said that a couple must not have sex during the infertile phase and must have sex during the fertile phase. But if we take your logic to its logical end, that is where we end up. If a couple has any knowledge of the woman’s cycle (which you don’t need to specifically need NFP*) they then they must either have sex during their fertile phase or not have sex at all that cycle in order to make sure they are not using that knowledge in a contraceptive manner.

Or we could say that if a woman knew she was infertile she could never get married because she would never be open to life during her marriage, (which actually denies the direct intervention of God in the lives of Sarah and Elizabeth in the bible). Because she and her husband would be using sex (consummation is required in most marriages) only for the unitive and not the procreative purpose.
2360 Sexuality is ordered to the conjugal love of man and woman. In marriage the physical intimacy of the spouses becomes a sign and pledge of spiritual communion. Marriage bonds between baptized persons are sanctified by the sacrament.
2361"Sexuality, by means of which man and woman give themselves to one another through the acts which are proper and exclusive to spouses, is not something simply biological, but concerns the innermost being of the human person as such. It is realized in a truly human way only if it is an integral part of the love by which a man and woman commit themselves totally to one another until death."
*If you read the catechism, it specifically defines “ordered to procreation” to mean within the specific act and uses this phrase which might be helpful “each and every marriage act must remain open to the transmission of life” CCC 2366. Open to the transmission of life is different than just being “open to life” or being “procreative” as you define it.
Exactly! His design did not make the fertile and non=fertile times inherently obvious. Perhaps it was not His intention that His children would be splitting up the month into sex / no sex periods instead of following the natural rhythym of their biologically driven desires.
*Before I even learned NFP I knew when I ovulated, ovulation in a woman is not unobservable (sorry about the double negative/ is observable) without a thermometer or any other specific NFP practice. Many women have “middlesmirch (sp?)” Where they have cramp like pains during ovulation. I had very noticeable mucus discharge associated with my ovulation, still others are very regular and could rely on just counting day to know when they ovulated.Therefore ovulation is inherently obvious in some women.

I hope this helps.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top