Continued from above
No, you really haven’t. You have brought in lots of other issues, but failed to address your first point. Ill repeat it here: *Using artificial birth control to frustrate the ends of the marital act while enjoying its pleasures is wrong. The pleasure is secondary, a gift to help unify the married couple. To take advantage of the pleasure without accepting the demands of the act is like stealing: taking something without paying for it.
The difference between using NFP and abc is that the former requires abstaining from the act when there is a serious reason to postpone children. It is moral to abstain from sexual activity because then you are also refraining from the pleasure.
Preventing procreation is not evil; taking the pleasure while avoiding conception is, because sexual activity and procreation need to be kept together.*
You haven’t shown how NFP doesn’t allow a couple to “take advantage of the pleasure without accepting the demands of the act”.
You are considering an overall look at the matter, whereas each act must be taken into account individually when considering sinfulness. Take a fire fighter who sets fires on various occasions: 1. during a training; 2. as a fire break in a forest fire; and 3. for his uncle who wants to collect the insurance on his business.
Only *one *of these is wrong; *however, *the fact that the other two occasions were all right does not mitigate the wrongness of the last fire-setting, does it?
In the same way, the *use *of abc to prevent conception is the wrong or sinful act, which of course cannot occur without actually having sex, because if the person using the abc were not at least having the intention of having sex, there would be no need for the abc, would there?
With NFP, there is no act of using abc, and there is no sex act to be frustrated because sex is abstained from during the period of fertility.
In other words, it is perfectly all right for a married couple to engage in the marital embrace at any time. And it is perfectly all right for the two to decide together to abstain at any time. Their having sex during the period of non-fertility is not wrong, nor is their abstaining during the fertile period wrong.
You haven’t shown how abstaining one night leads you to not “take pleasure while avoiding conception.”
You are considering this as an overall thing, whereas it is the individual acts as individual acts which are what need to be taken into account.
It is not wrong to want to avoid conception for a time, and it is not the desire or intention to avoid conception which is the problem. Where the problem lies is in *frustrating *the end or goal of the individual act as opposed to *avoiding *the act.
It seems you are drawing some very fine and predetermined lines to make a definition fit. “Preventing procreating is not evil; taking the pleasure while avoiding conception is.” Come on. NFP is basically DEFINED in the second half of that statement.
Not at all. NFP is the avoiding of the pleasure when conception might occur rather than the taking of the pleasure when conception might occur but using some artificial means to prevent it.
Look at it this way: say the average woman has 21 days of non-fertility and 7 days of quite possible fertility. The contraceptive mentality whines, but I don’t wanna take 7 days off! The NFP mentality says, we will abstain for 7 days. (By which I do not mean to imply that every abc user is whining that, nor that every NFP user is saying that… just talking about the mentality.)
I don’t think this will go anywhere.
I think that you are saying that you do not see the sin in the use of abc on an individual basis, and I will agree that that can be difficult to understand. I think that you might be able to understand the issue of the contraceptive mentality, but that you do not understand it, and I think that not every user of abc has that mentality.
I think you disagree with ABC because it is an artificial way to prevent pregnancy, it interferes with correctly ordered union, and the Catholic Church has taught against it since its inception.
I believe that all these things are true, yes.
That is absolutely fine with me.
But you do not believe that they are true, do you?
But stop trying to tell others what is in their own head. Or blaming them for the breakdown of society. Or whatever other things you think you know about them.
Here I am not telling others what is in their heads, because I am not saying that every user of abc has a contraceptive mentality. And along with that, I am not blaming each individual user of abc for the breakdown of society. I believe that there are many people who use abc who do not have a contraceptive mentality; but at the same time, I see that there is a contraceptive mentality in many people in our society, what I think used to be called a Playboy (referring to the magasine) mentality: that people “should be freeee to have sex…” which really means, that they should be able to have sex, under any circumstances, without concern wrt the possibility of creating a new human being. There are plenty of abc users who *do *have a contraceptive mentality, and I imagine that there are people who do not use abc who also have that mentality.
I think I have covered (and please excuse any reptitiousness) all your points except one, which was not in this post, and so I will look for it later and reply to it.