Good to know on the quotes.
You seem to think that the immoral aspect comes from not wanting to conceive a child right at that point in time, but that is not where it comes in. The morality comes from the means used to prevent conception.
If you want to make the the argument ABC = wrong on its own merits, that is fine. You originally made the argument instead about pleasure of sex and procreating. You seem to be in denial that NFP is
primarily used to avoid conception, period. And a couple on NFP is just a free to have carnal, thoughtless sex as anyone else. Especially if they are good at it! (NFP that is) You drew this idea about pleasure and procreation. Totally separate from an overall discussion on ABC, per your last sentence above.
My comment comes from the very nature of what is happening, and does indeed assume that the married couple will want to engage in sexual relations. On the one hand, you have the need to consider what is happening with the wife’s fertility–would this be a time in which to engage in marital relations, or abstain? Does the reason still exist, or still exist in the same intensity in which it existed the previous month? Etc.
More speculation. Take any of the Catholic couples that had two kids in a row and no more for 20+ years of fertility and nothing that you just said would apply. At all. Your scenario can be accurate, surely. But common? Ehhhh, signs point to “no”.
With abc, the action is automatic and involves no reflection.
I wouldn’t say speculation, but definitely loaded. I will agree that ABC can make the pregnancy question an automatic assumption, and easier than NFP. However, the same can be said of NFP as well. You seem to think otherwise, but have not shown how this to be the case.
Ill just skip over the whistle part…
In the same way, I think that considering what is involved, that there are certain conclusions which can be drawn in a general way. My idea is that NFP, by its very nature of requiring abstention from an act which is desirable, would tend to lead the couple away from a contraceptive mentality. ABC does not have this *inherent *attraction toward reconsideration of the decision to forgo conception, and thus more easily leads to an abc mentality.
Yes, I will agree that it is likely easier to slide into a contraceptive mentality with ABC, sure. How much easier? Ehhhh, don’t know.
I’m not sure what you are referring to by the part of your statement which I bolded, and can’t figure out how they relate to your previous comments about my “assigning thoughts to other people.”
In short, I still contend that a couple using NFP can do all the things you spoke of originally. The parts about “stealing” and “evil”, etc. You seem to think they have this innate morality that prevents this. I disagree and think it is highly speculative. When you assign these properties to couples using NFP, and other negative properties to couples using ABC, you are, in fact, telling us what is in other peoples minds when in reality you have no idea whatsoever.
Look, at the end of the day, I think both are used with a contraceptive mentality. I don’t have the foggiest idea how people deny NFP is used as such. I am not interested in longwinded theological posts concerning this. Do Catholics use NFP, by and large, to avoid pregnancy? YES. If it didn’t prevent conception, NO ONE WOULD USE IT!!! Yes, it can help get pregnant too, i agree. But that is a side point, and we all know it.
Again, if people have a theological objection to ABC, that is great, and I have no disagreements at all. I don’t know how anyone would. But as soon as you bring it down to earth that all changes. Things like: Respect for women, levels of intimacy, reasons for delaying/avoiding, unitive properties, etc. All these things are unique to each and every couple. It bugs me to no end when someone tries to tell a couple what that couple is feeling. Or how much they respect their wife. Or how moral their reason for not wanting kids is. And tying it back to birth control. Absolutely baffling.
Sorry, rant over…