MOSAIC Spring 2018 | Page 12

it remains a problem. When limiting family size first became necessary, the only solution for faithful Catholics was obvious, though very difficult. When a couple had all the children they could deal with, they abstained from marital intercourse, and sometimes did so for many years. Marital intercourse is God’s gift to married couples that enables them to express and helps them live out their personal one-flesh unity. But when they cannot responsibly conceive a child because they need to meet their other responsibilities, they are obliged to abstain, despite the fact that abstaining for long stretches is difficult and tends to put pressure on a marriage. It’s worth recalling what St. Paul says: “Do not refuse one another except perhaps by agreement for a season, that you may devote yourselves to prayer; but then come together again, lest Satan tempt you through lack of self-control” (1 Cor 7:5). Of course, Paul also says later in the same letter, “God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your strength, but with the temptation will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it” (1 Cor 10:13). Still, it is not easy to be continent under such circumstances, and it began to seem to many people that to exclude Every major Protestant denomination eventually approved contraception, so that today only the Catholic Church proclaims the once universally accepted Christian teaching that contraception is intrinsically wrong. Contraception was not the only moral issue that societal changes gave rise to. The Catholic Church was also faced with the spread of divorce and the beginnings of societal approval of abortion. Indeed, the traditional conception of marriage as a whole was under attack. To provide a better treatment of those issues and to defend the Catholic teaching, therefore, Pius XI wrote the 1930 encyclical Casti Connubii. At this time, too, Natural Family Planning began to be introduced. Although Pius XI did not address it in his encyclical, he did reaffirm that sterile couples are entitled to exercise their conjugal rights, and in 1951 Pius XII said that for serious reasons a couple can have recourse to the sterile periods. Some Catholics, however, began to claim that married couples have a right to have sex whenever they want, and they considered the abstinence NFP requires to be a serious imposition. This situation, along with the widespread acceptance of contraception outside the Catholic Church, put growing pressure on the “God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your stre ngth, but with the temptation will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.” (1 COR 1 0 : 1 3 ) contraception even in dire circumstances unnecessarily burdened people, and from her earliest days the Church has sought to avoid adding burdens (see Acts 15:28; cf. Luke 11:46). The problem just described, which put great pressure on marriages and was widely experienced by Christians, led Protestant churches to give up on the previously universally accepted teaching, beginning with the Anglican Church’s Lambeth Conference in 1930. 10 Church to approve of contraception. During the period from Casti connubi to Vatican II—from the 1930s to the 1960s—there were important societal changes that increased this pressure. The Great Depression brought a tremendous economic setback that left many people without jobs. And the late 1930s brought a great disruption of life with many conflicts, culminating in WWII, which extended into the mid-1940s. During that period, the pressure that urbanization and Sacred Heart Major Seminary | Mosaic | Spring 2018 industrialization were putting on people to limit the size of their families was becoming ever stronger. When you are out of work, or at war, or displaced, it’s obviously not a good time to have children! The situation eased in the late 1940s and 1950s, followed by a baby boom. But by the time the 1960s arrived, many couples already had all the children they thought they could bring up and educate. The dissent that began to be manifested in the 1960s had no doubt been quietly brewing underground in the preceding decades, when the teaching was neither well taught nor wholeheartedly and universally accepted, as it had been before society began to change. Those who rejected the teaching needed arguments to justify their dissent, but they did not produce any new arguments. Instead, Catholic theologians essentially reiterated the utilitarian pro- contraception arguments made earlier by Protestants. What was Paul VI’s attitude toward contraception? He continued the Commission on Population, Family, and Birth Rate that John XXIII had initiated, and he waited quite some time before issuing Humanae Vitae. There is, however, no evidence to support the claim that Paul VI was in doubt about the Church’s teaching on contraception. He knew that Pius XI condemned contraception in Casti Connubii, and there is no reason to think he considered that teaching false or questionable. But he also wanted to help married couples in any way he could, and did not want to condemn anything the tradition did not require him to condemn. He was open to arguments defending the view that married couples somehow can practice limitation in ways not considered before and that are faithful to the tradition. But he was not convinced by theologians who argued using the Pill is not an instance of the contraception that had always been condemned. For this reason, when Paul VI reaf- firmed the Church’s traditional rejection of contraception, he defined it as “any ac- tion which either before, at the moment of, or after sexual intercourse, is specifi- cally intended to impede procreation” (Humanae Vitae, no. 14), thus making it