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Catholic Natural Family Planning Perspectives
a Catholic Mom Column by Sara Fox Peterson

Archived Catholic Natural Family Planning Columns from Sara Fox Peterson:

The People Who Actually Do This
Sweetness and Light
Freeing Our Consciences
What if It's Too Late?
What's the Difference

Medical Exceptions
Waiting
Fear Not - Five Resolutions for a New Year
An Open Question
Catholic Contraception?
Contraception, Lies and the Truth

Natural Family Planning - Why Not?

Sara can be contacted by email at sfp@thosepetersons.com - please indicate "NFP" in the subject line of your email.

What is NFP?

Every fertile woman experiences recurring signs of her fertility. Natural Family Planning (NFP) teaches a woman to recognize and record these signs so that spouses can identify the days in each cycle when conception can occur and plan the timing of their marital relations according to their desire either to avoid or achieve pregnancy.

Looking for more information on Natural Family Planning?  Visit our Natural Family Planning Resource Center.

Natural Family Planning Method Comparison - a comprehensive comparison of natural family planning methods 

Not on the Same Page (Part I)

It’s no secret that husbands and wives sometimes disagree. And with the ever widening gap between Catholic teaching and our cultural attitudes towards sex, marriage and family planning it should be so surprise that Catholics – particularly those married to non-Catholics - frequently find themselves deeply at odds with their spouses over these issues. These are difficult disagreements, especially when one feels as though she must choose between pleasing God and pleasing her spouse.

A friend of mine once wrote about approaching all decisions – big or small – while looking through her ‘Vocation Goggles’. I picture these as looking sort of like binoculars and working by allowing me to see my relationships and commitments sorted by priority.

My first priority - my most important relationship – is that I am a child of God and a professed Roman Catholic. As such, I believe that the Catholic Church teaches the truth and that “the Roman Pontiff and the bishops are ‘authentic teachers, that is, endowed with the authority of Christ, who preach the faith to be believed and put into practice’” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2034). When I look through my vocations goggles, then, I can see that no matter what the consequences, I must obey God’s laws as expressed in the official teachings of the Catholic Church. Husbands and wives are to love each other as Christ loves each of us, but since all human love is a reflection of God’s love, we cannot really love anyone unless we love and obey God first.

My second priority is my vocation as a married person. Note that my vocation is NOT to be a mother. Children are the fruit of marriage for “by its very nature the institution of marriage and married love is ordered to the procreation and education of the offspring and it is in them it finds its crowing glory” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 1652), but the marital relationship must come first and, just as a tree will not bear healthy fruit unless it is fed and watered, my love for my husband and my commitment to feeding and watering our marriage must be second only to my love for and obedience to God.

Facing disagreements with a spouse about family planning comes down to keeping these priorities in their proper order. These struggles seem to fall into two general categories – disagreement over the number and spacing of the couple’s children and disagreement over how to space or limit the number their children. I will address the issue of disagreeing over the number or spacing of children in my next column, so for now let’s just look at how to proceed when one’s spouse disagrees over the necessity of using NFP - and only NFP - when pregnancy is not desired.

Harmony within marriage is good – very good – but, as the saying goes, the end does not justify the means. Or, as the Church puts it, “an evil end corrupts the action, even if the object is good in itself . . . one may not do evil that good may result from it” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 1755-1756). Contraception and sterilization are always evil and so it is never acceptable for me to cooperate with either even if refusing to do so causes a great deal of disharmony in my marriage.

Likewise I am never obligated to use contraception or agree to sterilization out of obedience or in submission to my husband. Without discussing the issue of submission in marriage in any detail, it is enough to note that no authority can ever be higher than God and we are never obligated to obey anyone who instructs us to disobey God or His Church.

Ideally a Catholic’s obligation to use only NFP to avoid pregnancy would be something discussed, understood and agreed upon before the couple was married – while there was still time to call off the wedding if it became obvious that remaining faithful to Church teaching and marrying this particular person would be incompatible. In reality, however, it often happens that people marry and then experience a conversion some years later, either to Catholicism from another faith or to a fully-lived Catholic faith from one that was less serious. Conversions are always difficult and converting to whole-hearted acceptance of the Church’s teachings on sex and family planning is no different.

Here are 5 suggestions for easing the conversion to NFP: 

  1. First, last and always - pray.  Seek the intercession of St. Joseph and of our Blessed Mother.  Pray for yourself as well as your husband and ask for humility, for courage, for wisdom and for patience and tenderness towards him.  Have faith that whatever you suffer in obeying God, He can use to transform the hearts and lives of the people you love - especially those of your spouse.
  2. Take your spouse's concerns seriously.  It is normal to be uncertain about something new and to have concerns about whether NFP will be effective, whether the abstinence will be too difficult, etc.  Let your husband know that he is welcome to express his concerns and that you and he will investigate them together.  Suggest attending an NFP class or meeting with a certified NFP instructor and make sure he knows that he can ask as many ‘tough’ questions as he would like (Don't worry, NFP teachers are very used to answering these kinds of questions).
  3. Show him how much you love him.  If the abstinence is a concern for your husband do everything in your power to make him feel loved and attended to and cared for in non - sexual ways during the times when abstinence is necessary - hire a babysitter and take him out to dinner at his favorite restaurant, rent his favorite movie (even if you hate it), cook his favorite dinner (ditto), give him a back rub (in the kitchen if necessary to avoid undue temptation), ask him about his job or his hobby or whatever you know he would like to talk about and really listen while he talks.  And then, when the time of abstinence ends, make intimacy your top priority and be available as often as he is interested.  In other words, love him selflessly, the way God loves him, and expect that love to open his heart to God’s grace in a way that nothing else can.
  4. Keep discussions of WHETHER to avoid having another child and HOW to avoid having another child completely separate.  It can be very tempting to 'sell' NFP by saying something like, 'But I really wouldn’t mind if we had another baby' or, ‘What’s the worst that could happen?  Another baby wouldn’t be so bad, would it?’  But if your husband is concerned about the effectiveness of NFP, he needs to know that he can trust you to take his need to avoid pregnancy seriously and do your part to make NFP work.  Make sure he knows that you understand how important it is to him not to have another child and that even if you don’t agree, you will respect his wishes.
  5. If necessary, seek professional help.  Hesitancy, concerns, anxiety and questions are normal when one spouse is convinced that NFP is the only morally acceptable option and the other is not, but outright refusal to discuss NFP, hurtful sarcasm, derision or coercive insistence on the continued use of contraceptives are neither normal nor healthy.  There is something very wrong in a marriage where one’s beliefs are not respected or where one is not free to say, 'no' to sexual relations for a week or so each month and if you find yourself in either of these situations marriage counseling is definitely called for (an excellent resource for marriage counseling, by telephone, that is completely faithful to the Church's teachings can be found at http://www.exceptionalmarriages.com/services.htm ).

And if despite your best efforts and all of the above suggestions you cannot reach an agreement? Well, this remains one of the most difficult and painful marital situations that there is and there is no easy answer. A Catholic does not sin in continuing to have marital relations with a spouse who demands contraceptives provided that the Catholic does not in any way condone or cooperate with their use. That is, a Catholic may never take the pill, insert a diaphragm or allow herself to be sterilized in response to her husband’s demands, but if he insists on wearing a condom each time they are intimate or is sterilized himself over her clear, consistent objections then she is not morally responsible for his actions. But one is also not morally obligated to continue to have marital relations under these conditions. As Christopher West explains in his book, Good News About Sex and Marriage; "Various consequences of [refusing marital relations if a contraceptive is used] need to weighed, but forcing a spouse to cooperate in objectively sinful behavior is abusive, and you are in no way obligated to submit to it. Out of concern for yourself, and him, you may want to know that you are not available to be treated as a thing for his sexual 'relief', all the while loving your husband and helping to experience a change of heart" (p. 129).

May Divine Truth enlighten all of our hearts and enliven all of our marriages!


For additional "cyber-support" you are also most welcome to join in the discussions in the Catholic Mom Community's NFP Forum - http://p205.ezboard.com/fcatholicmomcommunityfrm63
 

 

Looking for more information on Natural Family Planning?  Visit our Natural Family Planning Resource Center.

copyright 2004 Sara Fox Peterson

Sara Fox Peterson is a stay-at-home mom and certified teacher of the Billings Ovulation Method of Natural Family Planning.  She holds a BS in biology and an MS in human physiology, both from Georgetown University, and lives in Maryland with her husband and two sons.
 

 

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