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Fundamentalists embrace Quiverfull, reject birth control
November 16, 2006 |
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Quiverfull wives are expected to welcome as many babies as God sends them.
Some Quiverfulls have their sterilizations reversed. Blessed Arrows a sterilization reversal ministry pools the money of the faithful to fund reversals for those who can't afford the procedures--so that the "beneficiaries" can have as many children as the Ultimate Birth Controller sees fit.
"Our bodies are meant to be a living sacrifice," write the Hesses. Or, as Mary Pride, in another of the movement's founding texts, The Way Home: Beyond Feminism, Back to Reality, puts it, "My body is not my own." This rebuttal of the feminist health text Our Bodies, Ourselves is deliberate. Quiverfull women are more than mothers. They're domestic warriors in the battle against what they see as forty years of destruction wrought by women's liberation: contraception, women's careers, abortion, divorce, homosexuality and child abuse, in that order. [...] Instead of picketing clinics, Pride writes, Christians should fight abortion by demonstrating that children are an "unqualified blessing" by having as many as God gives them. Only a determination among Christian women to take up their submissive, motherly roles with a "military air" and become "maternal missionaries" will lead the Christian army to victory.
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Big Christian families rarely pass on that trait.
Posted by: Plexius on Nov 16, 2006 6:50 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Posted by: Plexius on Nov 16, 2006 6:50 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having a large brood is no guarantee of loyalty to your creed. A friend of mine is one of eight children from a religious, protestant household. None of these children, now adults, had more than three offspring. My friend complains a lot about never getting much quality time with her father due to his workload supporting the family. Also, she was constantly embarassed at the grocery where she had to fill two carts every week. And there were constant shortages. Most of these adult children rarely or never go to church. The one who does is an extreme fundamentalist who can't find a church to take him due to his behaviors. And they don't all vote for conservative candidates, either. So much for this family's contribution to the Christian army.
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