Is Natural
Family Planning a Heresy?
Attacks on
the Church's teachings on the transmission of human life usually come from
those who want to justify artificial contraception. This group denounces the
alleged "rigorism" or "obscurantism" of Popes Paul VI and
John Paul II, who have insisted, as have all their predecessors, that it is
always gravely sinful for spouses to interfere with the conjugal act to impede
the possibility of procreation.
But there is
a growing tendency among some to attack the teachings from the opposite
direction. This group denounces Paul VI, John Paul II, and "the
post-conciliar Church" for permitting and encouraging what is known
generically as periodic continence or natural family planning. As is well
known, these terms refer to the identification and exclusive use of the
naturally infertile period of the wife's cycle for having conjugal relations
when a married couple has sufficiently serious reasons for wanting to avoid
conception.
Ironically,
the latter group often joins forces with "progressive" dissenters in
claiming that there is no moral difference between NFP and the use of
artificial contraceptives. Using the same epithet employed by many of their
archenemies, they refer to NFP as "Catholic contraception," claiming
that if the Church were logically consistent, it would either allow all methods
of birth regulation or forbid all methods.
I should
begin by acknowledging that, in its milder forms — when it is directed more
against some modern pastoral policies and practices rather than at the Church's
authentic doctrine about NFP — the rigorist criticism seems reasonable and
just. From what I have seen and read in my years as a priest, I agree with such
critics that there is sometimes a one-sidedness or lack of balance among those
promoting NFP. Married or engaged couples often are taught the legitimacy and
the techniques of NFP with little or no mention of that other part of the
Church's teaching that insists that couples need "just reasons"
(Humanae Vitae 16; Catechism of the Catholic Church 2368) for using NFP if they
wish to be free from blame before God. (Indeed, I think we now need from the
magisterium some less vague and more specific guidelines as to what actually
constitutes a "just reason.")
Often such
couples hear nothing of the fact that "Sacred Scripture and the Church's
traditional practice see in large families a sign of God's blessing and the
parents' generosity" (CCC 2373). Still less frequently are they informed
that, according to the magisterium, frivolous or materialistic considerations
are in themselves inadequate criteria for deciding when NFP can be justified
(cf. Gaudium et Spes 50).
What
constitutes an official Vatican statement?
Having said
that, we must now point out the serious error of those who go much further than
simply to rebuke an unduly lax, permissive, and one-sided pastoral approach to
NFP and claim that the practice is in principle immoral and stands condemned by
the previous ordinary (or even extraordinary) magisterium of the Church. As we
will see, there was never a Catholic teaching against the use of periodic
continence. Practically as soon as the first rudimentary methods of estimating
the infertile period arose with the advance of medical science in the
mid-nineteenth century, the See of Peter immediately and explicitly gave its
blessing to this practice.
Ignorant of
this fact, some are now claiming that, from an orthodox Catholic viewpoint, the
very notion of regulating or planning births and family size is an affront to
God and betrays a lack of trust in his loving providence. They claim that
married couples are morally obligated either to engage in regular conjugal
relations without any intention of "planning" their family size (and
so leaving that entirely to God's providence) or, if they are convinced that
there are just reasons for avoiding another pregnancy, to abstain totally from
conjugal relations for as long as that situation lasts, without making any
attempt to identify and make use of the naturally infertile times of the wife's
cycle.
Perhaps the
most outspoken and uncompromising proponent of this view is Richard Ibranyi, a
prolific "sedevacantist" (he believes that John XXIII was the last
valid pope) whose booklets, bulletins, and web site articles denounce the
"apostate" Church of Vatican II and the "anti-popes" who
lead it. Ibranyi recently has published a booklet whose conclusions are
forthright and unambiguous: "All those who use Natural Family Planning
commit mortal sin. There is a natural law upon all men's hearts, and the
practice of NFP violates the natural law. Pope Pius XI [in the 1930 encyclical
Casti Connubii] teaches there are no exceptions and no excuses. No exceptions,
even if your priest or bishop says it can be used" (National Family
Planning Is Contraception [2002], 32).
Well, did
Pius XI in fact teach this? To answer that question, we first need to set Casti
Connubii in its historical context, as that encyclical was by no means the
first statement from the Vatican on this subject.
At this point
we need to clarify what sort of document does in fact constitute a genuine
Vatican intervention. Some rigorists, including Ibranyi, refuse to accept as
official — or even as authentic — any Vatican statement that is not published
in its official journal, the Acta Apostolicae Sedis. The error on this point
evidently is based on a misapplication of canon 9 in the 1917 Code of Canon Law
(paralleled by canon 8 in the 1983 Code), which states, among other things,
that "universal ecclesiastical laws" must be promulgated in the AAS
in order to be binding.
"Ecclesiastical
laws" are exercises of the Church's governing office. They are concerned
above all with practical decisions, establishing that something specific is to
be done or not to be done. Such decisions need to be distinguished form those
of the Church's magisterium, or teaching office, which are above all concerned
with the theoretical task of clarifying the difference between true and false
doctrine.
As anyone
familiar with standard Vatican procedures knows, since the AAS was established
by Pope St. Pius X in 1909 there have been many official statements and
decisions of the popes and Vatican congregations — including doctrinal
documents form the Holy Office and Sacred Penitentiary (which addresses moral
questions especially relevant to confessors in the sacrament of penance) — that
are not published in the aforesaid journal. Often they are sent privately by
Rome to bishops, and perhaps only years later get published in some Catholic
journal. Apart from "universal ecclesiastical laws," which do indeed
have to be published in the AAS, the inclusion or non-inclusion of other types
of papal and Vatican statements in the AAS is a measure not of their official
or non-official character but rather of the degree of public importance that
the Holy See attaches to them.
The Vatican
and NFP
Let us now
return to the subject of natural family planning. It was first necessary to
clarify the question about the necessity or non-necessity of AAS promulgation
in order to forestall a rigorist objection to the argument below. It so happens
that several key magisterial documents approving NFP were never published in
the AAS. And because they were never published even in the English-language
version of Denzinger (a key source of pre-Vatican II doctrine for laymen such
as Ibranyi, who publicly admits his ignorance of Latin), these decisions have
remained unknown to those Catholics who denounce NFP as a recent
"modernist" aberration or heresy. I have never seen any of those
decisions cited, or even referred to, in rigorist attacks on the use of periodic
continence.
The first
time Rome spoke on the matter was 1853, when the Sacred Penitentiary answered a
dubium (a formal request for an official clarification) submitted by the bishop
of Amiens, France. He asked, "Should those spouses be reprehended who make
use of marriage only on those days when (in the opinion of some doctors)
conception is impossible?" The reply was: "After mature examination,
we have decided that such spouses should not be disturbed [or disquieted],
provided they do nothing that impedes generation" (quoted in J.
Montanchez, Teologia Moral 654, my translation). By the expression
"impedes generation," it is obvious the Vatican meant the use of
onanism (or coitus interruptus, now popularly called "withdrawal"),
condoms, etc. Otherwise the reply would be self-contradictory.
The next time
the issue was raised was in 1880, when the Sacred Penitentiary issued a more
general response. The precise question posed was this: "Whether it is
licit to make use of marriage only on those days when it is more difficult for
conception to take occur?" The response was: "Spouses using the
aforesaid method are not to be disturbed, and a confessor may, with due
caution, suggest this proposal to spouses if his other attempts to lead them
away from the detestable crime of onanism have proved fruitless." (This
decision was published in Nouvelle Revue Theologique 13 [1881]: 459-460 and in
Analecta Iuris Pontificii 22 [1883]: 249.)
One could not
ask for a more obvious and explicit proof that more than eighty years before
Vatican II, Rome saw a great moral difference between NFP (as we now call it)
and contraceptive methods, which Catholic moralists then referred to as
onanism.
This was the
doctrine and pastoral practice that all priests learned in seminary form the
mid-nineteenth century onward. Before Pius XI was elected, Blessed Pius IX, Leo
XIII, St. Pius X, and Benedict XV all clearly approved of this status quo
established by their own Sacred Penitentiary and never showed the slightest
inclination to reverse its decisions of 1853 and 1880.
But what did
Pope Pius XI teach on the subject?
Achille
Ratti, the future Pius XI, was born in 1857, four years after the initial
Vatican permission was given for periodic continence. Like all other obedient
and studious priests of his era, Fr. Ratti would have learned and accepted this
authentic Vatican approved teaching that allowed NFP as a means of avoiding
offspring. It seems most unlikely that after being elected pope he would have
had any intention of condemning the practice. It is well known that the main
thing prompting him to speak out about contraception at all was that the 1930
Lambeth Conference of the Anglican Church had scandalized all morally upright
folks by teaching, for the first time in the history of those claiming the name
"Christian," that unnatural practices — i.e., onanism — could be
morally acceptable. Periodic continence simply was not the issue in 1930, and
Pius XI did not address that issue in Casti Connubii.
The clearest
proof that Ibranyi's interpretation of Casti Connubii — namely, that it
condemns NFP as just another form of contraception — is incorrect is that Pius
XI did not interpret his own encyclical that way. Only a year and a half after
it was promulgated, the Sacred Penitentiary yet again issued a statement on
periodic continence. This ruling was eventually made public in the Roman
documentary journal Texta et Documenta:
"Regarding
the Exclusive Use of the Infertile Period.
"Qu.
Whether the practice is licit in itself by which spouses who, for just and
grave causes, wish to avoid offspring in a morally upright way, abstain from
the use of marriage — by mutual consent and with upright motives — except on
those days when, according to certain recent [medical] theories, conception is
impossible for natural reasons.
"Resp.
Provided for by the Response of the Sacred Penitentiary of June 16, 1880"
(Texta et Documenta, series theologica 25 [1942]: 95, my translation).
Clearly, it
would be preposterous to plead that Pius XI "never knew" about this 1932
decision before his death seven years later. In all probability he was the
first to know about it. It would have been mailed out promptly to the bishops
of the world for the benefit of their moral theologians teaching future priests
in their seminaries. How could the only Catholic bishop in the world not to
know of this "heretical distortion" (in Ibranyi's view) of his
encyclical be the bishop of Rome? Approved moral theologians everywhere
continued to teach this settled and authentic doctrine about the legitimacy of
NFP.
If the Pope
had wanted to get a clear message to theologians and to the entire Church that
he was reversing the doctrine of his four predecessors, he would have used
different language than he does in Casti Connubii. For the sake of clarity, he
almost certainly would have used the terminology of the theologians of that
time: sinful onanismus on the one hand and on the other hand continencia
periodica or usus exclusivus temporum agenneseos to refer to what we now cal
NFP. He would have stated unambiguously that the latter as well as the former
was now to be judged sinful and unacceptable.
It is
interesting to note the difference in language between Ibranyi and Pius XI when
addressing this topic. Ibranyi's personal and un-Catholic doctrine repeats
words such as plan and goal. In Natural Family Planning Is Contraception, he
says that the essence of sinful contraception is "the desire to have
marital relations while having deliberately planned to prevent conception"
(7).
But nowhere
does Pius XI stress "plans" or "goals" to avoid having
children. He does not teach that such a "desire" or such a
"deliberate plan" is essentially sinful. What the Pope brands as
sinful is "frustrating the marriage act" (vitiando naturae actum) —
that is, "frustrating its natural power and purpose." But when
couples carry out conjugal acts on the infertile days exclusively, they are not
frustrating the natural power and purpose of those acts that they perform on
those days. Those particular acts do not have any natural (procreative) power
and purpose to begin with. You cannot frustrate a nonexistent power or purpose.
The point
comes through clearly in the most solemn passage of the encyclical. After
referring to the recent decision of the Anglicans to permit contraception, Pius
XI declares:
"The
Catholic Church, to whom God has entrusted the defense of the integrity and the
purity of morals, standing erect in the midst of the moral ruin that surrounds
her, in order that she may preserve the chastity of the nuptial union from
being defiled by this foul stain, raises her voice in token of her divine
ambassadorship and through Our mouth proclaims anew: Any use whatsoever of
matrimony exercised in such a way that the act is deliberately deprived of its
natural power to generate life is an offense against the law of God and of
nature, and those who indulge in such are branded with the guilt of a grave
sin" (CC 56).
I have used
the words deprived of at the point where standard English translation uses the
words frustrated in. This makes the Pope's true meaning a little clearer. The
Latin verb he uses here is destituere. As Latin dictionaries show, this verb,
when used with the ablative, as in this case (naturali sua . . . vi), means
precisely "to deprive of," "to strip," or "to
rob." In such constructions, the accompanying noun in the ablative case is
that thing of which the rightful owner has been "deprived" or that
has been "stripped" or "robbed" from him. Now, of course, you
cannot deprive anyone of something he never possessed to begin with. You cannot
rob a man with no possessions any more than you can strip him if he is already
naked. Likewise, as conjugal acts carried out precisely in the infertile period
do not have any natural procreative potential, it is obvious that they cannot
be deprived or robbed of that potential.
Even to this
day
Pius XI's
successor, Pius XII, confirmed yet again the moral acceptability of NFP for
serious motives, in two allocutions of 1951. Since then, of course, we have had
further confirmations of the doctrine from Paul VI (in Humanae Vitae) and John
Paul II (in Familiaris Consortio and many other statements).
We are
looking here at a long and unbroken tradition by which the See of Peter has
approved the use by spouses of periodic continence in order to avoid conception
when their personal circumstances truly constitute a just cause for that
avoidance.
Fr. Brian W.
Harrison, O.S., is a professor at the Pontifical University of Puerto Rico. He
writes frequently on matters of liturgy and canon law.
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