
Natural Family Planning
By Fr. William P. Saunders
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 7/31/03)
Following is the fourth in a six part series on
contraception.
While condemning the use of contraception, the Church
also recognizes that some couples face serious situations in their marriage
and family which move them to postpone a pregnancy, even indefinitely. To
assist couples, the Church implores couples to turn to a natural method of
regulating births, which God Himself has designed as part of the
reproductive system. This method is simply called Natural Family Planning.
Actually one of the earliest forms of natural family
planning is breast feeding. If a woman breast feeds her baby consistently,
she probably would not conceive for 18-24 months. Actually, many tribal
people naturally regulate births this way.
In the 1930s, Calendar Rhythm was developed. This method
was effective if the woman had regular cycles and if she was properly
instructed. Actually, rhythm is about as effective as condoms or other
barrier methods of birth control. Nevertheless, Calendar Rhythm was
unreliable for many couples. Perhaps this unreliability is why many joked,
"What do you call a couple who uses rhythm? Answer: Parents."
However, modern Natural Family Planning is technically
called the Sympto-Thermal Method. This method relies on three signs of
fertility in the woman: basal temperature pattern, cervical mucus pattern,
and physical changes in the position of the cervix. These three signs inform
a couple when the wife is in ovulation and possibly could conceive a child
if the couple engages in marital love. Ironically, while many doctors
prescribe artificial means to prevent a pregnancy, they prescribe the
techniques of Natural Family Planning to help a couple who is having trouble
conceiving a child identify the period of ovulation and thereby know when
the possibility of conception is the greatest. Moreover, if one is worried
about effectiveness, the Sympto-Thermal Method is proven to be as effective
as the Pill and more effective than barrier methods if used properly.
Immediately, some people may honestly ask, "What is the
difference between Natural Family Planning and other forms of contraception?
Both seem to do the same thing." While both means may have the same intent —
postponing pregnancy — the difference lies in the means themselves. With
Natural Family Planning, couples keep their covenant of life and love
intact. They use only the means given to them by God, which are intrinsic to
whom they are. In expressing their marital love, they are mindful that this
action not only unites them as husband and wife, but also may participate in
God's creative love. Rather than suppress and ignore one dimension, they
respect both dimensions.
Therefore, if they decide for a serious reason to
postpone a pregnancy, then both husband and wife make the decision and both
share in the sacrifice of not expressing their marital love during the
period of ovulation. Natural Family Planning is also safe, and the burden is
shared by both husband and wife. Moreover, the couple is open to the
providence of God's will: if a child should come who "was not planned," so
be it— that is God's will and God's gift; whereas with contraceptives, where
the couple has everything nicely planned and is in control, the surprise
pregnancy oftentimes spells disaster. Remember that one of the arguments for
legalized abortion is to correct "unplanned pregnancies."
Pope John Paul II addressed the anthropological and moral
differences between contraception and Natural Family Planning in
Familiaris Consortio: "The choice of the natural rhythms involves
accepting the cycle of the person, that is the woman, and thereby accepting
dialogue, reciprocal respect, shared responsibility and self-control. To
accept the cycle and to enter into dialogue means to recognize both the
spiritual and corporal character of conjugal communion, and to live personal
love with its requirement of fidelity. In this context the couple comes to
experience how conjugal communion is enriched with those values of
tenderness and affection which constitute the inner soul of human sexuality,
in its physical dimension also. In this way sexuality is respected and
promoted in its truly and fully human dimension, and is never 'used' as an
'object' that, by breaking the personal unity of soul and body, strikes at
God's creation itself at the level of the deepest interaction of nature and
person" (#32).
Actually, Natural Family Planning has had great
successes. For example, in 1960, the government of Mauritius, a small island
country in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar, wanted to commence a major
contraceptive campaign to control the population. The bishop published a
pastoral letter denouncing these plans. After discussing the issue with
government officials, in 1963, an education program was started for Natural
Family Planning. Doctors educated training couples who in turn taught the
method to other couples. Today they train 2,000 couples each year. Each
parish has a special program for educating couples in preparation for
marriage, and 85percent of couples married in the Church complete that
training. In all, 20 percent of women of child-bearing age use Natural
Family Planning, of whom Hindus and Moslems account for 62percent. Moreover,
artificial methods are on the decline. The effectiveness of Natural Family
Planning has been a convincing argument against legalizing abortion in the
country. What Bishop Margeot fears today is the coalition of governments —
America, Japan, and Northern Europe — and foundations — Rockefeller and
Packard — who are striving to impose artificial birth control throughout
Africa, which in each case has eventually led to abortion.
While this column cannot give a full explanation of
Natural Family Planning, any couple who is interested or has questions
concerning the Church’s teaching ought to take the course. Couples preparing
for marriage are especially encouraged to do so. Rather than just brush
aside the Church's teaching, investigate the teaching and inquire about
Natural Family Planning. Ask the couples what the difference between the two
methods actually is. Courses for Natural Family Planning are offered
throughout the Diocese of Arlington.
Oftentimes, people think that Natural Family Planning is
ineffective. If used properly, Natural Family Planning is almost 100 percent
effective with a .004 pregnancy rate (U.S. Department of Health, Education
and Welfare (1978)) versus "the pill," which is 97 percent effective, or the
condom, which is 79-88 percent effective (Contraceptive Technology).
Nevertheless, this whole issue concerns that covenant
love between husband and wife, and God. It deals with the creation of life
in union with God. While some individuals like to cite statistics for
effectiveness, no method is 100 percent effective; however, with Natural
Family Planning the couple has a trust in God’s will and providence that is
absent from other means. Couples who use Natural Family Planning do not
speak of "unplanned pregnancies," because they know that the act of conjugal
love may bring about life. Also, while the divorce rate in the United States
hovers around 50 percent during the first five years of marriage, those who
use Natural Family Planning have a divorce rate of about 0.6 percent
according to the Couple to Couple League, and 2-5 percent according to
research conducted by California State University, attesting to the strong
covenant love shared by these couples.
Therefore, concerning the regulation of births, Vatican
II stated, "It is the married couple themselves who must in the last
analysis arrive at these judgments before God" (Gaudium et Spes,
#50). However, any faithful Catholic must first take into account the
teaching of the Magisterium. As has been emphasized, marriage is serious,
marital love is serious, the creation of life is serious. The means of
contraception are intrinsically evil (Catechism, #2370). Thereby the
violation of marital love through the use of contraceptive practices is
objectively a serious, mortal sin. Granted, grave circumstances may exist
which in turn may reduce the culpability of a couple in this matter. If a
couple is struggling with this issue, I advise them to see a priest or talk
with one of the couples who teaches Natural Family Planning. Oftentimes, the
teaching couple has used the artificial means and can best explain to
another couple the differences between the methods and guide them through
this issue.
Nevertheless, no one cannot cavalierly dismiss the
consistent teaching of the Church on this issue. We cannot simply consider
good intentions or motives. Moreover, we cannot just go to the "Yellow
Pages" to find the priest or theologian who will give us the answer we want
to hear. We have to be honest and wrestle with the truth and by the grace of
God conform to it. As Pope John Paul II asserted, "As Teacher, [the Church]
never tires of proclaiming the moral norm that must guide the responsible
transmission of life. The Church is in no way the author or the arbiter of
this norm. In obedience to the truth which is Christ, whose image is
reflected in the nature and dignity of the human person, the Church
interprets the moral norm and proposes it to all people of good will,
without concealing its demands of radicalness and perfection" (Familiaris
Consortio, #33).
Fr. Saunders is pastor of Our Lady of Hope Parish in Potomac Falls and a
professor of catechetics and theology at Notre Dame Graduate School in
Alexandria.
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