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Guest

A) it is not teaching - that implies doctrine. It is discipline - the rules of evidence.Please see the US Catholic , April 1997 issue, p. 6, “Annullments…” You can read here that since Vatican II, the presence of psychological factors has been accepted as grounds for annulments. In other words, the Church has changed her teaching on what constitutes proper grounds for annulments. She has now admitted the use of soft psychological factors, which were not admitted in 1930. Because of the watering down of the grounds for granting an annulment, the sannulment rate has shot up to about 50,000 per year in the USA at his time, from about 10 per year in the USA in the year 1930.
B) the term “soft” is perjorative in its tone and intent. Psychology has a great deal to do with the ability to form intent. Just because the world and the Chruch both knew less about psychology in the 1930s than it does today does not invalidate legitimate use of psychology.
Just because the Church did not have the tools to deal with an issue did not mean there was no issue.
In 1930, no mainline church allowed the use of contraceptives. All condemned it. In 1932, the Anglican/Epsicopalian Church, at he Lambeth Conference, allowed the limited use of contracpetives in marriage. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, research was conducted on hormonal control of ovulation, which lead to the Pill. By the time that Pope Paul 6th issued Humanae Vitae, the Pill was in widespread use, and lacking clear guidance prior to Humanae Vitae, amny theologians, bishops and priests had come to the conclusion thatit might be permissible. Its use was already prevelant within Catholic families prior to Humanae Vitae, which in part was why there was such a backlash against the encyclical.
Ignoring that change in both society and in Catholics leaves you blaming the Church for “relaxing” the standards of evidence. You seem willing to say that the rules are “soft”, but show no evidence of the illegitimacy. I would suggest you are looking in the worng place; that the Church is only dealing with a massibve wound created by the use of borth control (as well as other related and semi-related factors). You are ignoring the basic issue, which is intent. An I say that many, if not most couples getting married may not have the understanding of the sacrament, and the Church teachings on a lot of issues surrounding marriage, and that is why the increase, not the allowance of evidence previously not even known.