What is your opinion on the use of birth control in ANTICIPATION of being raped?

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If you were a Catholic medical provider in an area of the world like this, would you be willing to provide EC to a rape victim even if you couldn’t determine if ovulation had occured? (Give it the benefit of the doubt, so to speak.)
To clarify my earlier response: I meant to say “no” to the general notion of “giving it the benefit of the doubt.” But really I should have pointed out that your talking about “even if you couldn’t determine if ovulation had occured” is really not relevant to the moral issue. The relevant issue is whether it could be determined whether our actions might be hostile to a newly conceived human being.
 
As a matter of fact, during the civil war in the formerly Belgian Congo during the 1960s, nuns were prescribed the Pill for that very reason - they were in danger of being raped.
That is was well before Humane Vitae and at that time the full understanding of the morality of using the “pill” was not clearly well understood by everybody including Bishops, and that is why we got Humane Vitae. So we cannot use it as a reference for acceptance of behaviors as moral.
 
A local US exception (** I believe it contradicts Church teaching**) which is not universal in the Church. I have not heard the Pope say that is okay.
Would you be so kind to give a more detailed explanation of your thinking. I am not disagreeing with you, I just value your opinion and am trying to think more about this very specific scenario.
 
A local US exception ( I believe it contradicts Church teaching) which is not universal in the Church. I have not heard the Pope say that is okay.
Yeah, it’s tough. On one hand, the hierarchy of the Church does give the USCCB jurisdiction to make these kind of decisions, but on the other hand it seems to contradict the logic behind the moral theology.

However, I don’t think it directly contradicts any doctrine or statements made by the Pope. As pointed out in another thread, the disordered use of contraception specifically refers to sex within marriage.
 
A local US exception ( I believe it contradicts Church teaching) which is not universal in the Church. I have not heard the Pope say that is okay.
As someone pointed out in another thread, these kind of contradictions go away if you take “marital act” to mean sex within the context of marriage. In the other thread it is put forth that contraception outside of marriage is not itself necessarily disordered.
 
Prophylactic contraception - good phrase. I should’ve put that in the title of this thread.

My question is more about the unusual, extreme circumstances, not the average woman. Someone facing certain or near-certain rape, like some countries in Africa. In South Africa, 1 in 3 women has been raped! :eek: (news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/258446.stm)

I had never heard of these nuns in Central America taking prophylactic contraception. Was that allowed, or were they breaking the rules?
It was a dispensation given by their bishop. I forget the exact country and circumstances but they were not breaking the rules. I will look for the evidence.
 
An article by Jimmy Aiken

jimmyakin.typepad.com/defensor_fidei/2006/05/contraception_e.html

short excerpt
Here’s the Latin original:
Code:
Item quivis respuendus est actus, qui, cum coniugale commercium vel praevidetur vel efficitur vel ad suos naturales exitus ducit, id tamquam finem obtinendum aut viam adhibendam intendat, ut procreatio impediatur.
I’ve highlighted the words that the English translation gives as “sexual intercourse.” Even if you don’t have a background in Latin, the meaning of these words is pretty clear via their cognates in English. They literally mean “conjugal commerce” or–to make them slightly more idiomatic–“marital exchange.”

In any event, they don’t mean simply “sexual intercourse.” They mean a specific kind of sexual intercourse: Sexual intercourse which is conjugal or between married persons.
 
As someone pointed out in another thread, these kind of contradictions go away if you take “marital act” to mean sex within the context of marriage. In the other thread it is put forth that contraception outside of marriage is not itself necessarily disordered.
That is not correct. Consensual sex between a man and a woman is more uxorio and so even when it is wrong it is still subject to the same constraints. Rape by its own definition rejects the concept of consent from one of the two parties and so it is not anymore more uxorio.
 
The US Bishops allow the use of emergency contraception to prevent pregnancy for rape victims. The US Bishops require 1) a pregnancy test to make sure the woman wasn’t already pregnant before the crime and 2) an LH test to make sure she isn’t/hasn’t ovulated already. In this manner, the emergency contraception prevents conception from ever happening in the first place by preventing ovulation from occuring. See the below quote from the USCCB’s website:
I was wondering about that. The tests I mean. As I noted before, a woman is not pregnant until it implants - in other words, she could have conceived, but have a negative pregnancy test. You probably knew that; my question with the LH though is, if the LH level was high, how could you know if a woman is on the upswing of the LH surge or the downswing, without a previous specimen? Furthermore, some (most?) hospitals don’t test for LH on site, they send it out to reference labs. This takes several days so isn’t really helpful since emergency contraception works better the sooner after intercourse it is taken.
 
ABC for the purpose of preventing a pregnancy is NEVER acceptable and there are no exceptions to that (including the possibilty of rape).
Why? We have the teaching here from the bishops. Why would we not listen? The reason that ABC is sinful is not because the chemical compounds are intrinsically sinful, or that we have an obligation to produce children through rape. Rather, it separates the procreative function from sex. Making sex unholy. It is a given that rape is unholy and therefore rape does not require a procreative function.
 
A local US exception ( I believe it contradicts Church teaching) which is not universal in the Church. I have not heard the Pope say that is okay.
There is not such thing as a regional exception to moral law. This is the understanding of these shepherd and an application of moral law. It is their opinion of what Humanae Vitae teaches applied to this situation, just like your opinion that it does not teach it is your opinion. The encyclical did not address rape.
 
I was wondering about that. The tests I mean. As I noted before, a woman is not pregnant until it implants - in other words, she could have conceived, but have a negative pregnancy test. You probably knew that; my question with the LH though is, if the LH level was high, how could you know if a woman is on the upswing of the LH surge or the downswing, without a previous specimen? Furthermore, some (most?) hospitals don’t test for LH on site, they send it out to reference labs. This takes several days so isn’t really helpful since emergency contraception works better the sooner after intercourse it is taken.
The LH surge is very brief and usually lasts about a day, often less than that. And it can be measured with a rapid test. Even if there was a need for a lab, most hospitals have one.

I think I mentioned this in another thread, but ultrasound is another tool used to detect ovulation. In practice, I am not sure what a Catholic hospital actually does, but both of these tests can be done quickly and easily.
 
No wonder non-Catholics laugh at us.

We have a Church teaching that states the use of ABC to prevent pregnancy and also to prevent disease is forbidden and then a local group of bishops come alone and say well its okay if the pregnancy to be prevented would happen if a woman is raped.

Well I’m sorry but despite the tragic and devastating effect of a rape on a woman, if a pregancy happens it is not the fault of the new human life which should be protected.
 
No wonder non-Catholics laugh at us.

We have a Church teaching that states the use of ABC to prevent pregnancy and also to prevent disease is forbidden and then a local group of bishops come alone and say well its okay if the pregnancy to be prevented would happen if a woman is raped.

Well I’m sorry but despite the tragic and devastating effect of a rape on a woman, if a pregancy happens it is not the fault of the new human life which should be protected.
So what about the nuns in Bosnia or the Spanish nuns that were in the Congo? They are celibate and going to help destitute people. Should we just stop sending missionaries to warzones?
 
We have a Church teaching that states the use of ABC to prevent pregnancy and also to prevent disease is forbidden and then a local group of bishops come alone and say well its okay if the pregnancy to be prevented would happen if a woman is raped.
Given the principle of double effect, I actually find it easier to understand an allowance on condoms to prevent disease. But maybe in that case the Church was just taking a stand against freely passing them out.
 
Thistle
We have a Church teaching that states the use of ABC to prevent pregnancy and also to prevent disease is forbidden and then a local group of bishops come alone and say well its okay if the pregnancy to be prevented would happen if a woman is raped.
A condom itself is not “evil”. The use of a condom in marriage is intrinsically wrong because the intention is to thwart the procreative end of the marital act in marriage. From this, a condom in rape is “morally irrelevant.”

As Dr Jeff Mirus explains:
“The point to remember is that contraception is intrinsically evil only within marriage. Outside of marriage, sexual intercourse itself is intrinsically evil; outside of marriage, there is no marital act that must be kept open to life and love; outside of marriage, the morality of contraception must be determined on other grounds, namely extrinsic grounds.”
catholicculture.org/commentary/articles.cfm?id=179
 
I’ve heard of a few cases where the victim managed to talk the rapist into wearing a condom, according to the Jury, that was sufficient to prove that she “consented” and thus the rapist was free to go.

There are various therapies and medications that can be given that can, in a vaste majority of cases, prevent STDs from “taking”.

And not to be “nit picky” but you can’t tell if conception has taken place until there’s enough hormone for a blood test a few weeks later [some newer tests claim within one week]. But it can take between 24 - 72 hours for sperm to reach egg, so chances are good if teh woman gets the ECP before 24hours post rape she won’t have concieved.

The IUD? Why? Why insert a copper rod into aw oman’s body to prevent conception? Seems awfully invasive and “long term”.
 
If you click on the link I provided, it explains why it is not abortifacient. (Scroll most of the way down the page.) To many Catholics (and others I’m sure), since a new life is conceived (but then “dies”), it is abortion, which is an understandable mistake; and it really all comes down to semantics, not so much who is right or wrong. The fact is an abortifacient terminates a pregnancy. A woman is not pregnant until the fertilized egg implants. Perfectly fine for you to be against that, and consider it as “evil” as abortion, but I just wanted to point out the distinction that the medical community makes when labeling something abortifacient. The article explains it well.
There’s no such thing as 'fertilized egg" despite it falling into common usage. Once an egg is fertilised it is then called a zygote.

Yes, the IUD, pill et al are not abortifacient, because abortion is what ends a pregnancy and pregnancy starts at implantion. What those things DO this is end the life of a human being - you know, MURDER.

Besides, the medical community doesn’t even know how the IUD works, despite what some flashy pamplets say - I talked to a rep who sold the things once and he admitted this, in fact, most docs acknowledge it. Its like paracetamol, they have some ideas how it works, they knwo it works, but they’re not 100% sure how.
 
So what about the nuns in Bosnia or the Spanish nuns that were in the Congo? They are celibate and going to help destitute people. Should we just stop sending missionaries to warzones?
How about we just arm them with machine guns? That way they wont’ get raped in the first place.

No offence, but people going into those places know the risks. Local populace, okay, they can’t just get on a plane and fly out, but nuns goign in there, they know the risk and can leave if they want.
 
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