And people practised it, because it made sense to them. No one wishes to breed like mice, to get a new child every 9 months. They want a few children, properly spaced, so they can give good care to them. (In those societies where human labor is/was the cheapest one, and life expectancy was short, yes people had many children to make sure that at least a few of them will survive. That is not the kind of society we look upon as “ideal”.)
I guess I find it rather odd that it is the supposedly “primitive” people who value children and arrange society in a way that children can receive good care. Our society, otoh, does not value children, is not arranged so that children can receive good care, and in fact, having children is made difficult. Yet children are the future of our society–notice the absence of Shakers in our midst.
And in the meantime they refuse to practice abstinence or celibacy, because it does NOT make sense to them. There is nothing wrong with not having children and still have fun. Only [C]hristianity came up with that idea. And fortunately even most christians reject it.
Except that your form of “having fun”-- but apparently not “too much,” whatever that may be in your eyes-- is intimately connected with the generation of the future of society… so there is something wrong with “having fun” and not having children. I don’t see anything fortunate at all about societies having to import people to care for the elderly because those elderly had too few children to take care of them.
Of course it is not a good idea. But it only happens when those dumb teens do not use birth control. You cannot condemn a method for what happens if the method is not used.
OTOH, abc is not all that effective either. This
chart is from WHO and shows that even the Pill and implants have an annual 2-9% failure rate. (Note: I see the NFP rate differs from that normally used… here is
an article published by WHO which is clearer on the NFP numbers.)
And I can’t say that having an STD is exactly unharmful, and many of the contraceptive methods do not protect against STDs.
I keep hearing that without any justification. You complain about the results of the system when it is NOT used.
Ummmm, I think that Catholics see teen pregnancy as not the worst consequence of teen sexual activity. We do not “complain” about babies, altho we do complain about their being killed in their mothers’ wombs.
We do, however, *note *that there are problems with so many being raised outside of marriage. It is a hardship for the mothers, it enables a perpetual immaturity for men, and it is not the best situation for children.
We see that there is damage to the soul, to the conscience, and to the psyche from sexual activity outside of marriage and detached from the possiblity of conception. Unfortunately, since our society is not terribly interested in the effects of sexual activity apart from economic factors such as STDs and pregnancies. The one study I was able to find shows something of a link but not causality wrt sexual activity and depression.
Addiitonally, when people have access to birth control which they believe to be reliable, they are less likely to abstain from pre- and extra-marital sex. It is not the possibility of a baby’s conception which is the problem here, but the damage to marriage, both individually and collectively.