| God,
Sex, & Babies:
What the Church Really Teaches about Responsible Parenthood
by Christopher West
In my experience sharing Catholic teaching on marital love
and sexuality around the world, one thing is certain: confusion
reigns regarding Church teaching on responsible parenthood.
Perhaps the main problem is failure to grasp the profound distinction
between contraception and periodic abstinence or “natural
family planning” (NFP). While contraception is never compatible
with an authentic vision of responsible parenthood, the Church
teaches that NFP – given the proper disposition of the
spouses – can be.
As is always the case, erroneous thinking comes from both ends
of the spectrum. Failure to distinguish between contraception
and NFP occurs not only among those bent on justifying contraception.
It also occurs among those who think any attempt to avoid or
space children is a sign of “weak faith” or “lack
of trust in God.” Then there is another group of people
who accept the licitness of NFP but argue about what constitutes
a serious enough reason for using it.
A large book would be needed to spell out all the valid points
and counter-points necessary for an exhaustive treatment of
the issues. The goal of this article is simply to outline some
of the common questions pertaining to responsible parenthood
with the hope of bringing some balance to the discussion. We’ll
begin by outlining the inner-logic of the Church’s sexual
ethic.
Incarnate Love
John Paul wrote in Familiaris Consortio that “the difference,
both anthropological and moral, between contraception and recourse
to the rhythm of the cycle ...is much wider and deeper than
is usually thought, one which involves in the final analysis
two irreconcilable concepts of the human person and of human
sexuality.”[1] In brief, these “two irreconcilable
concepts” revolve around an “incarnate” versus
a “dis-incarnate” view of love.
“Love one another as I have loved you” (Jn 15:12).
These words of Christ sum up the meaning of life. Yet how did
Christ love us? “This is my body which is given for you”
(Lk 22:19). God’s love – an eternal, spiritual reality
– is made flesh in Jesus Christ. In other words, Christ’s
love is an incarnate reality and we’re called to love
in the very same way – with the unreserved gift of our
bodies.
In fact, the spiritual call to love as Christ loves is stamped
right in our bodies as male and female, in what John Paul II
calls “the nuptial meaning of the body.” The nuptial
meaning of the body is the body’s “capacity of expressing
love: that love precisely in which the person becomes a gift
and – by means of this gift – fulfills the very
meaning of his being and existence.”[2]
Man and woman express this bodily gift in numerous ways. But,
as the Holy Father states, this gift “becomes most evident
when spouses ...bring about that encounter which makes them
‘one flesh.’”[3] And St. Paul describes this
union in “one flesh” as “a great mystery”
that in some way images, proclaims, and foreshadows the union
of Christ and the Church (see Eph 5:31-32).
No higher dignity and honor could be bestowed on our sexuality.
God created us male and female and called us to “be fruitful
and multiply” as a sign of his own mystery of life-giving
love in the world. Yet, if we are to embrace this grand, sacramental
vision of our sexuality, we must also embrace the responsibility
that comes with it.
Ethics of the Sign
John Paul II says that we “can speak of moral good and
evil” in the sexual relationship “according to whether
...or not it has the character of the truthful sign.”[4]
In short, we only need ask the following question: Is this given
behavior an authentic sign of divine love or is it not? Sexual
union has a “prophetic language” because it proclaims
God’s own mystery. But, the Pope adds, we must be careful
to distinguish between true and false prophets.[5] If we can
speak the truth with the body, we can also speak against this
truth.
In order to be “true to the sign,” spouses must
speak as Christ speaks. Christ gives his body freely (“No
one takes my life from me, I lay it down of my own accord,”
Jn 10:18). He gives his body without reservation (“he
loved them to the last,” Jn 13:1). He gives his body faithfully
(“I am with you always,” Mt 28:20). And he gives
his body fruitfully (“I came that they may have life,”
Jn 10:10).
This is the love a couple commits to in marriage. Standing
at the altar, the priest or deacon asks them: “Have you
come here freely and without reservation to give yourselves
to each other in marriage? Do you promise to be faithful until
death? Do you promise to receive children lovingly from God?”
Then, having committed to loving as Christ loves, the couple
is meant to incarnate that love in sexual intercourse. In other
words, sexual union is meant to be where the words of the wedding
vows “become flesh.”
How healthy would a marriage be if spouses, rather than incarnating
their vows, were regularly unfaithful to them, regularly speaking
against them? Herein lies the essential evil of contracepted
intercourse. The desire to avoid a pregnancy (when there is
sufficient reason to do so) is not what vitiates the spouses’
behavior. What vitiates contracepted sex is the specific choice
to render sterile a potentially fertile union. This changes
the sign of divine love into a “counter-sign.”
Divine love is generous; it generates. And, to put it plainly,
this is why God gave us genitals – to enable spouses to
image in their bodies (to “incarnate”) an earthly
version of his own free, total, faithful, fruitful love. When
spouses contracept – that is, when they willfully defraud
their union of its procreative potential – they become
“false prophets.” Their sexual act still “speaks,”
but it denies the life-giving love of God.
Dis-incarnate Love
“To think that constraining the free flow of body fluids
impedes me from loving my wife is ludicrous.” This sentiment
– once angrily expressed in a letter I received –
typifies the “dis-incarnate” view of love used to
justify contraception. For this man, love is not revealed in
the body (and its fluids), but is something purely spiritual.
St. John’s admonition comes to mind: Beware of those
“false prophets” who deny the incarnation (see 1
Jn 4:1-3). Make no mistake – taken to its logical conclusions,
contraception implies the acceptance of a world-view antithetical
to the mystery of Incarnate Love, that is, to the mystery of
Christ.
Applying the same “dis-incarnate” view of love
to Christ, what are we to make of Christ’s blood shed
for us on the cross and given as drink in the Eucharist? Is
this “free flowing body fluid” not the definitive
accomplishment of Christ’s spiritual love for his Bride?
If Christ had withheld his blood in a mock crucifixion, would
this have sufficed? “Without the shedding of blood there
is no forgiveness of sins” (Hb 9:22). Similarly, without
the giving of the seed, there is no conjugal act. The spirit
is expressed in and through the body (and, yes, the body’s
fluids). It can be no other way for us as incarnate persons.
John Paul II explains: “As an incarnate spirit, that is
a soul which expresses itself in a body and a body informed
by an immortal spirit, man is called to love in his unified
totality. Love includes the human body, and the body is made
a sharer in spiritual love.”[6]
If contracepted intercourse claims to express love for the
other person, it can only be a dis-embodied person. It is not
a love for the other person in the God-ordained unity of body
and soul. In this way, by attacking the procreative potential
of the sexual act, contracepted intercourse “ceases also
to be an act of love.”[7]
Maintaining Respect for Incarnate Love
So, does respect for “incarnate love” imply that
couples are to leave the number of children they have entirely
to “chance”? No. In calling couples to a responsible
love, the Church calls them also to a responsible parenthood.
Pope Paul VI stated clearly that those are considered “to
exercise responsible parenthood who prudently and generously
decide to have a large family, or who, for serious reasons and
with due respect to the moral law, choose to have no more children
for the time being or even for an indeterminate period.”[8]
Notice that large families should result from prudent reflection,
not “chance.” Notice that a couple must have serious
reasons to avoid pregnancy and must respect the moral law.
Assuming a couple has a serious reason to avoid a child, what
could they do that would not violate the “ethics of the
sign”? In other words, what could they do to avoid a child
that would not render them unfaithful to their wedding vows?
I’m sure everyone reading this article is doing it right
now. They could abstain from sex. The Church has always taught,
teaches now, and always will teach that the only method of “birth
control” that respects the language of divine love is
“self-control.”
A further question arises: Would a couple be doing anything
to falsify their sexual union if they embraced knowing they
were naturally infertile? Take a couple past childbearing years.
They know their union will not result in a child. Are they violating
“the sign” if they engage in intercourse with this
knowledge? Are they contracepting? No. Neither are couples who
use NFP to avoid a child. They track their fertility, abstain
when they are fertile and, if they so desire, embrace when they
are naturally infertile. (For uneducated readers, I should add
that modern methods of NFP are 98-99% effective at avoiding
pregnancy when used properly. This is not your grandmother’s
“rhythm method.”)
People will often retort, “C’mon! That’s
splitting hairs! What’s the big difference between rendering
the union sterile yourself and just waiting until it’s
naturally infertile? End result’s the same thing.”
To which I respond, what’s the big difference between
a miscarriage and an abortion? End result’s the same thing.
One, however, is an “act of God.” In the other man
takes the powers of life into his own hands and makes himself
like God (see Gn 3:5).
The difference, as we’ve already quoted John Paul saying,
“is much wider and deeper than is usually thought.”
Indeed, the difference is cosmic. NFP enables a couple to maintain
respect for incarnate love. Such respect is the very raison
d’etre of NFP. Contraception “dis-incarnates”
love and, by doing so, “strikes at God’s creation
itself at the level of the deepest interaction of nature and
person.”[9]
Trusting in Providence
So what constitutes a “serious reason” for avoiding
a child? Here’s where the discussion typically gets heated.
Correct thinking (ortho-doxy) on the issue of responsible parenthood,
like all issues, is a matter of maintaining important distinctions
and carefully balancing various truths. Failure to do so leads
to errors on both extremes.
An example of one such error is the “hyper-pious”
notion that if couples really trusted in providence, they would
never seek to avoid a child. This simply is not the teaching
of the Church. As Karol Wojtyla (John Paul II’s pre-papal
name) observed, in some cases “increase in the size of
the family would be incompatible with parental duty.”[10]
Therefore, as he also affirmed, avoiding children “in
certain circumstances may be permissible or even obligatory.”[11]
We are certainly to trust in God’s providence. But this
important truth must be balanced with another important truth
if we are to avoid the error of a certain “providentialism.”
When the devil tempted Christ to jump from the temple, he was
correct to say that God would provide for him. The devil was
even quoting Scripture! But Christ responded with another truth
from Scripture: “You shall not put the Lord your God to
the test” (see Lk 4:9-12).
A couple struggling to provide for their existing children
should likewise not put God to the test. Today, knowledge of
the fertility cycle is part of God’s providence. Thus,
couples who make responsible use of that knowledge to avoid
pregnancy are trusting in God’s providence. They, no less
than a couple “who prudently and generously decide to
have a large family,”[12] are practicing responsible parenthood.
Selfishness: the Enemy of Responsible Parenthood
It’s certainly true that, like all good things, NFP can
be abused. Selfishness, as the enemy of love, is also the enemy
of responsible parenthood. It’s clear from the Church’s
teaching that frivolous reasons for avoiding children will not
do. Nor are spouses required to have a “life and death”
situation before they make use of NFP.
In determining family size, Vatican II teaches that parents
must “thoughtfully take into account both their own welfare
and that of their children, those already born and those which
the future may bring.” They must “reckon with both
the material and spiritual conditions of the times as well as
of their state in life. Finally, they should consult the interests
of the family group, of temporal society, and of the Church
herself.”[13] In terms of limiting family size, Humanae
Vitae teaches that “reasonable grounds for spacing births”
might arise “from the physical or psychological condition
of husband or wife, or from external circumstances.”[14]
The Church’s guidance is purposefully broad. Following
the Church’s lead, I don’t intend to spell things
out much further than this. It’s the duty of each and
every couple to apply these basic principles to their own particular
situations. Moral dilemmas are much “easier” when
others draw the line for us, but, as Vatican II says, “The
parents themselves and no one else should ultimately make this
judgement in sight of God.”[15] John Paul II adds that
this point is “of particular importance to determine ...the
moral character of ‘responsible parenthood.’”[16]
Therefore, the surprisingly widespread idea that a couple must
obtain “permission” from a priest to avoid pregnancy
is not only false, but betrays serious confusion about the nature
of moral responsibility. If a couple is uncertain of their motivations,
it’s certainly advisable to seek wise counsel. But the
Church places responsibility for the decision squarely on the
couple’s shoulders. If spouses choose to limit family
size, the Catechism only teaches that it “is their duty
to make certain that their desire is not motivated by selfishness
but is in conformity with the generosity appropriate to responsible
parenthood.”[17]
On this point, there is another more subtle and little discussed
form of selfishness that conflicts with responsible parenthood.
I once counseled a couple that had several children very close
together. The parents rightly recognized each child as a divine
blessing and did all they could to love and care for them. However,
the mother, emotionally drained since the third child, had been
desiring a larger space between babies ever since. It came to
light that the reason they didn’t space their children
was because the husband selfishly wouldn’t (or couldn’t)
abstain.
Here, what on the surface might pass as a generous response
to Church teaching, when looked at more closely, actually demonstrates
a failure to live Church teaching. The point is that in order
for parenthood to be “responsible,” the decision
to avoid sexual union during the fertile time or the decision
to engage in sexual union during the fertile time must not be
motivated by selfishness.
Killing versus Dying: An Analogy
The following analogy may help to summarize not only the important
moral distinction between contraception and NFP, but also the
necessary moral attitude that must accompany the responsible
use of NFP.
Our natural attitude towards others should be one that desires
their life and good health. Circumstances, however, could lead
us to have a righteous desire for God to call someone to the
next life. Suppose an elderly relative was suffering greatly
with age and disease. You could have a noble desire for his
passing. Similarly, a couple’s natural attitude should
be one of desiring children. Circumstances, however, could lead
a couple to have a noble desire to avoid a pregnancy.
In the case of the elderly relative, it’s one thing to
suffer with him while waiting patiently for his natural death.
In this situation there would be nothing blameworthy even to
be grateful for his death when it occurred. But it would be
quite another thing to take the powers of life into your own
hands and kill him because you cannot bear his sufferings.
Similarly, for the couple with a noble desire to avoid pregnancy,
there is nothing blameworthy in waiting patiently for the natural
time of infertility, and even rejoicing that God has granted
a time of infertility. But it would be quite another thing for
the couple to take the powers of life into their own hands and
render themselves sterile because they cannot bear the suffering
of abstinence.
With regard to attitude, it’s also possible that your
desire for your relative’s death might be unrighteous.
You may have some sort of hatred toward him that would lead
you to wish him dead. You may not kill him yourself, indeed
he may die of a natural cause. Nonetheless your rejoicing in
his death would be blameworthy. This is akin to a couple who
uses NFP with an unrighteous desire to avoid a pregnancy. Their
rejoicing in the infertile time would also be blameworthy because
it is motivated by a selfish, anti-child mentality.
In Conclusion
In this short article, I’ve outlined the basic logic
of the Catholic sexual ethic with the hope of bringing some
balance to the discussion of responsible parenthood.
In contrast to the world’s “disincarnate”
view of love, the Church teaches that matter matters. What we
do with our bodies expresses our deepest held convictions about
ourselves, God, the meaning of love, and the ordering of the
universe. When the Church’s sacramental view of the body
is taken seriously, we understand that sexual union is not only
a biological process, but a profound theological process –
“a great mystery that refers to Christ and the Church”
(Eph 5:31-32).
The Church’s well-balanced teaching on responsible parenthood
is a divine gift given to protect the supreme value of this
sign. Imbalances on both extremes must be avoided if we are
to ensure fidelity to the sign of marital love and an ever-clearer
proclamation of the divine mystery in the world.
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[1]Familiaris Consortio, n. 32
[2]Theology of the Body, January 16, 1980
[3]Letter to Families, n. 12
[4]Theology of the Body, August 27, 1980
[5]See Theology of the Body, January 26, 1983
[6]Familiaris Consortio, n. 11
[7]Theology of the Body, August 22, 1984
[8]Humanae Vitae, n. 10
[9]Familiaris Consortio, n. 32
[10]Love & Responsibility, p. 243
[11]Person & Community: Selected Essays, p. 293
[12]Humanae Vitae, n. 10
[13]Gaudium et Spes, n. 50
[14]Humanae Vitae, n. 16
[15]Gaudium et Spes, n. 50
[16]Theology of the Body, August 1, 1984
[17]Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 2368 (emphasis added)
© Christopher West. All rights reserved.
www.ChristopherWest.com
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