I commend you on that. It’s one of the reasons I returned to the Catholic Church.
First, I think you should go about this whole question in a different order, rather than starting by thinking that you don’t want a bunch of children. You had a logical, solid reason for choosing the Catholic faith, much the same as mine. My thought process, from there was that if God created the Catholic Church, maybe I better think a little more deeply before I just dismiss its teachings and fill them in with what the world tells me.
That, of course, is what landed me in the position of being one of those women who has lots of children!
But you’re making assumptions about these women. Some may just love having lots of children, and that’s fine. Some may simply have chosen to follow the Church’s teaching and may end up with a lot of children or not. Honestly, I have tons of friends who never touch birth control and only have two or three children. They just don’t get pregnant. So a Catholic wife who doesn’t use birth control does
not mean you’ll end up with a bunch of kids.
You state you don’t want a bunch of kids. I never set out to have this many, but sometimes, we find ourselves with blessings we didn’t realize would be blessings. No, I didn’t
want as in plan, as in deliberately have, this many kids. But I’m so grateful that things went according to God’s plans instead of mine.
You’re also making lots of assumptions about those families with lots of kids. Have them casually??? Well…what in the world does that even
mean? As in, dancing down the yellow brick road totally unaware of what another pregnancy and another child means? Living in denial and rose-colored glasses? No, I doubt anyone is doing that. That most definitely does not describe me. However, I also believe that a church created by God and nurtured by 2,000 years of great minds and great saints has something to teach me, and I chose to step out in faith. It has been a great lesson in trust and faith, in seeing how, time after time, God has provided and cared for me. I have learned things I never would have learned had I not stepped out in faith in this area. I have become a person I never would have become, and I’m grateful to God for that, to my children, to my friend who challenged me to
live the Catholic faith I claimed to believe. And, of course, I love each and every one of the kids dearly and am so grateful I have each one, especially knowing they would not exist, had I followed the way of the world.
You make the assumption that people with lots of kids can afford all sorts of things. Some can, some can’t. But they’ve made a choice that being open to life is important to them. No, I can’t afford to send my kids to college. Right now, one is going to school on a full academic scholarship and has come up with a plan to get through grad school, too, without loans. Another is going on a half scholarship, working on campus and during the summer, and fully intends to put himself through law school. I have no doubt he’ll do it. My kids are learning the value of hard work and the great confidence and self-respect that comes with that.
I also think it’s interesting that money concerns you when you are looking at possibly having the income of two doctors. If anyone could support a large family, it should be you.
What will become of her is whatever she decides will become of her. Does she value following the Catholic Church’s teaching on artificial birth control? If so, she may simply not get pregnant often.
Or she may have 14 or 16 children. And yes, you absolutely can be a doctor with a large family. The most beautiful Catholic family I ever knew, with ten children, had a mother who was a doctor and raised a stellar, beautiful family. I know a Catholic mother of 6 who worked at NASA and currently run multiple businesses and web sites on political issues. I know a mother of 8 who runs at least two businesses on the internet. I know a mother of more than that who plays a dozen instruments and has published two novels that sell well and get excellent reviews.
I myself started my master’s degree when I was pregnant with my 6th child and finished it right on target with my class…while pregnant with twins.
Maybe she’ll have many children and be able to continue a prestigious career. Maybe she herself will decide at some point that she
wants to focus on her children. Maybe she’ll have a husband who makes juggling career and children possible or maybe she’ll have a husband who fully supports her (possible) wish to spend more time with kids. It may be at some point that a prestigious career is simply no longer her highest priority, and I, personally, don’t think it should be. It’s not what we take into eternity; it’s not what God will judge us on.
No, it doesn’t.
See, here’s where you sound dismissive…‘women that are just so into having children all the time.’ It’s dismissive of those women and dismissive of the value of motherhood and of the children themselves.
However, you are in luck. It’s fairly obvious (unfortunately, from my perspective) that many women who call themselves Catholic have no intention of being open to more than two or three children. But even if that weren’t the case, there are definitely women who want to be open to life and follow the Church’s teaching, but also have plenty of interest and intellect.
I think why it sounds so dismissive is because you seem to be implying that ‘women who want lots of kids’ and ‘women with interests and intellect’ are mutually exclusive. That just isn’t so.