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Reproductive Justice and Gender

Catholics and Contraception

By Kathryn Joyce, RH Reality Check. Posted April 24, 2008.


The Catholic church's anti-contraception stance continues to harm women around the world, even while the majority of Catholics reject it.
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In the midst of the wall-to-wall press coverage of Pope Benedict XVI's visit to the U.S. last week, The New York Times paused to note that many American Catholics pay little heed to papal authority, and instead bestow on the pope a particularly American commendation: They'd love to sit down and chat with the man, Catholic to Catholic. However homey the image, a stained-glass rendition of the favored American method of choosing a president (sans beer), the Times also pointed out, in explaining the lack of official Church data on how Americans really feel about the authority of this or any pope, that the Church is not a democracy. And, despite how nonchalantly many Americans speak about the relevance of the Vatican on their lives, the effect of a hierarchy headed by a man who built his career on opposition to liberation and feminist theology is real, and renders liberal or pro-choice Catholics today dissenters criticizing doctrine from outside the Church.

While Benedict pointedly neglected to address the issues those dissenters press on -- the bans on contraception, condom use, gay and lesbian rights, and ordination of women -- the unbending position of the Vatican was made clear during a 60,000-person mass at Yankee Stadium on Sunday, where he reminded the throngs of faithful that obedience as a Catholic is non-optional.

"Authority. Obedience. To be frank, these are not easy words to speak nowadays, especially in a society which rightly places a high value on personal freedom," he told the crowd, continuing to cite the scriptural lesson that "true freedom" comes from turning from sin, from "self-surrender" and "losing ourselves": an emphasis on hierarchy and submission more common to fundamentalist Christianity and orthodox doctrine across denominations than within the heterogeneous Catholic church itself.

It's also an unsubtle reminder that, however much American Catholics may disdain the 40-year old order of Humane Vitae -- that "each and every marital act must of necessity retain its intrinsic relationship to the procreation of human life" -- following their own consciences on matters of artificial contraception is still an act of rebellion.

An immediate outpouring of dissent greeted the document in 1968, when 600 theologians protested the ruling, Rosemary Radford Ruether, a feminist theologian at the Pacific School of Religion, recalled on a conference call convened by Catholics for Choice to commemorate the document's fortieth anniversary. These theologians, she explains, were responding to the real consequences of Natural Family Planning -- the only method of birth control the Church had allowed since 1930, when it banned condoms and diaphragms in a renewed emphasis on Augustine's anti-contraception teachings -- in Catholics' family life, where the anti-contraceptive emphasis "almost began to seem the point of being a Catholic." As representatives of lay Catholic couples testified to the 1966 Catholic Commission on Birth Control, the pressures of following NFP, and abstaining during infertile periods, led to great marital discord for Catholic couples. The priests on the Commission were shocked by the experiences of the laity, and voted overwhelmingly to recommend that birth control be allowed for married couples. A small group of anti-contraception dissenters created a second "minority report" for the pope, calling the Commission's conclusions threatening to the Church's authority, as the Church could not admit to having "so wrongly erred during all those centuries of history." Four years later, it was this dissenting point of view that was reinforced in Humanae Vitae.

Today 97 percent of sexually active Catholic women use some form of contraception at some point, and, Radford Ruether says, many Catholic priests don't press the issue, considering it a "teaching that has not been received" by the people. Indeed, in 1974, 83 percent of Catholics said they disagreed with Humanae Vitae, and in 1999, according to the National Catholic Reporter, 80 percent of Catholics said they believed they could practice birth control and remain "good Catholics" (presumably leaving the remaining 17 percent guiltily disobedient). But despite this 40-year disconnect, which many theologians agree has led to greater skepticism about Church infallibility than acceptance of contraception ever could have, calls to liberalize the doctrine are repeatedly shot down with what theologian Anthony Padovano calls "incredibly inflated language," such as Pope John Paul II's assertion that questioning the ban on contraception was equivalent to questioning the holiness of God.


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See more stories tagged with: religion, catholic, contraception, birth control, catholicism, pope, reproductive justice

Kathryn Joyce is working on a book about Christian conservative women, to be published by Beacon Press.

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Catholic Spin on "1984"
Posted by: Xynyx on Apr 24, 2008 4:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"true freedom" comes from turning from sin, from "self-surrender" and "losing ourselves"

There it is, folks. The Catholic Church adheres to the assertion, not that "Freedom is Slavery", but that "Slavery is Freedom".

Awesome.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Catholic Spin on "1984" Posted by: pfeifer999
» RE: Catholic Spin on "1984" Posted by: pfeifer999
» RE: Catholic Spin on "1984" Posted by: pfeifer999
» RE: Catholic Spin on "1984" Posted by: bobtr900
Personally
Posted by: JSquercia on Apr 24, 2008 7:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Personally I think if Pope John had lived the church would have changed their position as the majority had recommended .Instead Pope Paul sided with the minority who had remained in Rome while the others were sent home . There is an extremly difficult to find book on the Death of Pope John Paul the first among its conclusions were that he was murdered for his soon to be enacted Sweeping reform of the Vatican Bank and his decision to change the church's position on Birth Control .
The irony of the whole thing is that the inventor of the PILL Dr John Rock was a devout Catholic who saw this as a perfectly acceptable way to avoid having children . The ridiculous statement about each act of sex should remain open to the possiblity of creating a child would seeem to condem those beyond child bearing years to living like brother and sister .The same fate would seem to apply to couples who are infertile regardless of reason. I myself take the position that the old Italian Woman took in the following joke . When asked how she felt about the Popes ruling on Birth Control her reply was " The Pope no Playah the Game , the Pope NO makah the rules "
The other thing that annoys me about the church is that once they change some ruling they act as if it was ALWAYS that way . Take married Priests Obviously the apostles were married men but that is just not spoken about

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Priests don't marry for financial reasons
Posted by: riotoustanpdx on Apr 24, 2008 9:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is true that the priests did marry for hundreds of years, and that the practice was ended by the church for several reasons. One reason, and a strong one, given for the ban today is that the congregations would have to support large families for the priests in the parishes, and the church members would have that financial responsibility.

Also, the Buddhists strive to be "free from desire" in order to attain enlightenment. There is little difference in this and the Catholic position of freedom; when "obedience" replaces individual, ego-centered desire both the Buddhist and the Catholic are closer to their goals.

Yes, there is freedom that comes from transcending the slavery of the ego.

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What really hurts women
Posted by: sadie2723 on Apr 25, 2008 6:51 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets look at what really hurts women. What really hurts women is telling them to take birth control at age 12 so that when they want to get pregnant later in life...they can't.

What really hurts women is telling them to take birth control and have sex with whoever they want so that they go in and out of relationships countless times without ever understanding love or sex.

What really hurts women is a group of people that encourage abortions on demand with no thought to what the woman goes through when she has one.

And, for that matter, what really hurts people everywhere is when sex out of marriage is promoted leading to AIDS proliferation and unwanted pregnancy.

So I guess what I am saying here is Viva Papa Ben. The Pope and I will keep praying for the people out there that just don't get it.

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» RE: What really hurts women Posted by: pfeifer999
» RE: What really hurts women Posted by: goatini
Pay , Pray and Obey
Posted by: JSquercia on Apr 25, 2008 10:09 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sounds as if the Pope wants to return to the good old days where the Congregation was told to Pay , Pray , and Obey . That may have worked in prior times but no longer . God gave us a brain and it is imperative that we use IT.

As for the idea about Birth Control the Genie is out of the bottle .I too share the idea that promiscuous sex is far too common and certainly that children and i DO mean CHILDREN are engaging in sexual activity way too young
I have heard that the teens of today think that a Kiss is far more intimate an Act than
Oral Sex which some regard as little more than a handshake . That is just so sad .

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