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Beyond the Liberal/Conservative Divide on Contraception: The Wisdom of Practitioners of Natural Family Planning and Artificial Birth Control
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 March 2013
Abstract
The article argues that contemporary dialogue on sexuality and contraception represents a new way of approaching Christian sexual ethics. Through an analysis of the experiential reflections of practitioners of natural family planning and artificial birth control, it shows that both sides seek the following goods: self-giving, relational intimacy, mutuality, sexual pleasure, and a strong connection between sexual and spiritual experience. It claims that while each side has distinctive insights, their shared concerns offer a way beyond the post-Humanae Vitae tension on sexual ethics. In this new dialogue, proving HV right or wrong will be much less important than helping Christian couples develop their sexual relationships in the context of their commitment to Christian discipleship.
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References
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9 Ibid. This is a popular version of the principle of totality, proposed as an alternative to act-centered moral analysis.
10 Ibid., 78–79.
11 Ibid., 91.
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13 After listening to the lay women of the Commission, one bishop commented, “This, is why we wanted to have couples on our Commission” (McClory, 106).
14 Ibid., 90. The final vote of the entire commission was fifty-eight to four.
15 Ibid., 103–04
16 Ibid., 107.
17 Of course, a worldwide survey of Catholics has not yet been done. It is possible that such a survey would reveal a greater diversity than the current data suggests.
18 Ibid., 110–11.
19 Ibid., 145.
20 Ibid., 141.
21 Ibid., 140.
22 Eighty seven percent of Catholics agreed with this statement in a 1993 Gallup poll (Los Angeles Times, 7 January 1993, p. E6). Vincent Genovesi reports that only about 4% of couples use NFP, In Pursuit of Love: Catholic Morality and Human Sexuality, 2d ed., (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1996), 206.Google Scholar The pro-NFP Couple to Couple League believes the figure may be even lower, perhaps three percent. See John Kipley, “How Many?” available at ccli.org/articles/howmany. See also, Fehring, Richard and Schlidt, Andrea Matovina, “Trends in Contraceptive Use Among Catholics in the U.S.: 1985–1995,” Linacre Quarterly 68/2 (May 2001): 170–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Seventy percent of Catholic couples did not use contraception in 1955; see Kelly, 188, relying on demographic research from 1973.
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60 Traina, 273.
61 Ruether, 150.
62 Traina, 280.
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85 Ibid., 150.
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88 Whiteheads, 12.
89 Ibid., 17.
90 On this theme, see also, Nelson, James, Between Two Gardens: Reflections on Sexuality and Religious Experience (New York: Pilgrim, 1983)Google Scholar and Ferder, Fran & Heagle, John, Your Sexual Self: Pathway to Authentic Intimacy (Notre Dame, IN: Ave Maria, 1992).Google Scholar
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97 See Portier, William, “Here Come the Evangelical Catholics,” Communio 31/1 (Spring 2004): 35–66.Google Scholar
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