J
JohnDamian
Guest
Kissing is not a sexual act. In many cultures it is fine for people to kiss others they don’t know; or even others of the same gender. Grand/Parent’s often kiss children. So kissing is not a sexual act. If people are sexualising kissing it may only be as a unitative part of the marital union; and not to be committed as a fornication or adultery etc.Okay. Now, why isn’t kissing wrong? What’s the logical reason? And, more importantly, why are female and male genitalia essential for the form of the action be properly ordered, yet, as in the case of a sterile couple, sperm and egg are not?
Now; female and male genetalia are rather essential to the natural procreative process; however if there is some unwilled obstruction such as infertility; or a (previous/confessed) vasectomy on behalf of the man this frustration of the process is not a willed one. Wheras; it requires the will to use a contraceptive; it requires also the will to specifically stimulate organs in un-natural places. The lack of sperm and egg does not damage the union if it is not done on purpose; for example - Abraham’s wife was supposed not to have fertility; yet by an act of a miracle she conceived. As I demonstrated above; being Catholic and believing in miracles is enough justification to warrent a moral embrace even if one is doubtful about the ability to procreate – clearly; if we believe in God and Miracles; we can see through the example of Sarah that God may ordain it prudent to allow the woman to conceive naturally; so – so long as we are not wilfully frustrating the union we are not abusing the sexual functions.
Absolutely! The sterile person can consumate the marraige; being open to (unlikely) possibility of a child; wheras an impotent person cannot consumate a marraige at all. See Section 3 of said Canon : *sterility neither forbids nor invalidates a marriage. *The sterile on the other hand, while having an involuntary impediment to procreation, can still be unopposed to it, and they can still consummate the marriage. They do everything correctly, but something that’s not their fault, nor inherent in their form, is blocking them from procreation.
An impotent person can enter into a valid marraige; a marraige is only invalid once it has been delcared such by the Church; ie; any children of such a marraige would be legitamate and not illigitemate; and other marital functions such as kissing and co-habiting would not be illegal.It’s an undeniably “anti-family” policy, not to mention “anti-adoption,” also. A couple who would adopt a Catholic child and raise that child Catholic, and they are forbidden from a sacramental marriage? That seems to add insult to injury. I wonder how many Catholics leave Rome for Protestantism because of this arbitrary rule. One would think the Church would be encouraging eligible couples to get married, not seeking out criteria that excludes those who would uphold “family values.”
A person can also make such a marraige a valid marraige see Can. 1163.