Following is the last of a six-part series on contraception.
In the 1960s, the Church faced increasing pressure regarding the use of
contraceptive means with the marketing of the anovulant pill. In response,
Vatican Council II stated in Gaudium et Spes, "In questions of birth
regulation, the sons and daughters of the Church, faithful to these
principles, are forbidden to use methods disapproved of by the teaching
authority of the Church in its interpretation of the divine law (No.51).
However, Pope Paul VI had transferred the investigation of new questions
concerning this matter to a special commission (originally established by
Pope John XXIII in March, 1963) for the study of population, the family, and
births. The Holy Father would then review their findings and render
judgment. The commission included married couples and those of various
competencies in this field. Select bishops were also asked for their views;
other bishops voluntarily submitted them.
On July 25, 1968, Pope Paul VI issued Humanae Vitae which upheld
the consistent teaching of the Church based on natural law as well as divine
revelation: "Each and every marriage act must remain open to the
transmission of life" (No.11).
Our Holy Father has continually repeated the Church's teaching. In
Familiaris Consortio, he lamented the signs of a "disturbing degradation
of some fundamental values" evident in "the growing number of divorces, the
scourge of abortion, the ever more frequent recourse to sterilization, the
appearance of a truly contraceptive mentality" (No.6).
Interestingly, Pope Paul VI prophesied grave consequences from
contraception: increased marital infidelity and a lowering of moral
standards; increased lack of respect for women, including seeing a woman as
a sex object and as an instrument to satisfy sexual pleasures rather than
seeing her as a partner in marriage; and the danger of empowering public
authorities to regulate the lives of others. Thirty years later, these
warnings have become realities: Statistics show the rapid increase of
divorce, from a rate of 25 percent in 1965 to 50 percent in 1975 during the
first five years of marriage. By the year 2000, 50 percent of American
teenagers will have lived a significant part of their lives without a father
figure. Moreover, Dr. Robert Michaels of Stanford University found a direct,
positive correlation between the growing rate of divorce and the rate of
contraception. (Interestingly, couples who use Natural Family Planning have
a much lower divorce rate: 0.6 percent according to the Couple to Couple
League, and 2-5 percent according to research conducted by California State
University.)
Any person can attest to the deterioration of the moral quality of
television and movies during this time, as evidenced by shows like "Friends"
or "Sex in the City." Pornography has become increasingly prevalent, with
630 million pornographic video rentals reported each year in the United
States. The availability of pornography and sexual contacts through the
internet is alarming.
The separation of the unitive from the procreative aspects of marital
love, and the removal of marital love from marriage itself has made "sexual
love" simply recreational and promiscuous. Many government-sponsored high
schools in particular have inculcated the attitude among students that they
can have "safe sex," thereby obfuscating any responsibility for a child, or
any thought of disease or any other consequence. In the United States, 100
high schools have clinics which distribute condoms, and 300 high schools
without clinics make condoms available through counselors, nurses, teachers,
vending machines, or baskets (2002 The National Campaign to Prevent Teen
Pregnancy). 50 percent of current high school teens will lose their
virginity during high school (The Center for Disease Control and Prevention,
2001). If statistics hold true, 840,000 teens will become pregnant this year
(Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 1997). In 1995, 32 percent of
all newborns were born to unmarried mothers (1995: Monthly Vital
Statistics Report). On the other hand, 98 percent of all abortions are
performed for elective, non-medical reasons, i.e. "the unplanned pregnancy"
(Abortion: Some Medical Facts). Are not all of these statistics
correlated and together show the erosion of the sanctity of human sexuality,
marriage, and marital love?
Crimes of rape continue to rise each year. The news is replete with cases
alleging sexual harassment and sexual abuse, even among clergy. The rise of
the "same sex marriage movement," the adoption of children by homosexual
couples, testifies to the loss of understanding of God’s design for marriage
and the family.
Procedures involving in vitro fertilization, artificial insemination, and
surrogate motherhood are increasingly available. Moreover, research for
cloning, including the cloning of a human being, continues.
The intrusion of government into family planning has become more
prevalent. Some municipal or state governments, as Maryland and Kansas have
tried in the past, have attempted to begin programs which pay women to use
Norplant (the five-year contraceptive implanted in a woman's arm) to control
the pregnancies of teenagers and welfare recipients. Foreign countries like
Peru have introduced sterilization programs and have compelled poor citizens
to be sterilized. Mexico’s National Commission for Human Rights on Dec. 16,
2002 lamented that health organizations in all 31 of that country’s states
have imposed contraceptive devices on the native population and peasants.
International policy set by the affluent Western nations to help developing
Third World countries oftentimes include mandatory population control
provisions, including artificial birth control and abortion.
Ironically, even the forecast of the future has changed. One generation
ago, Paul Ehrlich in his book The Population Bomb warned that
overpopulation would "kill the planet." Contraceptives were hailed as the
remedy for this pending doom, and Humanae Vitae was derided. Now we
find ourselves in a different situation. The Population Division of the
United Nations published its report "World Population Prospects: The 2002
Revision," projecting a decline in world population: two years ago, the
Population Division projected a world population of 9.3 billion people in
2050; now it projects 8.9. It also projects that the fertility levels in
most developing countries will fall below the replacement rate of 2.1
children during this century, and by 2050, population levels in more
developed countries will have already been declining for 20 years. For
instance, the Population Division forecasts by mid-century a 14 percent
reduction in population in Japan, and 22 percent in Italy; moreover, the
population in Europe will decline from 726 million people to 632 million.
With forecasts of higher life expectancy, more elderly and less young, now
the population planners are asking, "Who will take care of the elderly?
Where will taxes come from to support social programs?" Now countries like
France give tax incentives to families to have children to reverse their
declining population.
Little wonder, Pope John Paul II declared Pope Paul VI's Humanae Vitae
a "truly prophetic proclamation" (Familiaris Consortio, No.29). The
time has come to return to the Lord and His truth regarding human sexuality,
marriage, and marital love.
Interestingly, Dr. William May in 1968 signed a statement with numerous
other theologians dissenting from Humane Vitae. He has long since
recanted. In 1988, on the 20th anniversary of the encyclical, he said, "I
was beginning to see that if contraception is justifiable, then perhaps
artificial insemination, test-tube reproduction, and similar modes of
generating life outside the marital embrace are morally justifiable too....
I began to realize that the moral theology invented to justify contraception
could be used to justify any kind of deed. I saw that it was a
consequentialist, utilitarian kind of argument, that it was a theory which
repudiated the notion of intrinsically evil acts. I began to realize how
truly prophetic the Pope had been, and how providential it was that he had
been given the strength to resist the tremendous pressures brought to bear
upon him" (Columbia). Now fifteen years later, articles concerning in
vitro fertilization, surrogate motherhood, and cloning appear regularly in
the news media. One has to ask, "Where are we headed as a society?"
Pope Paul VI concluded Humanae Vitae with the statement that the
Church is to be "a sign of contradiction." So indeed she is in upholding the
sanctity of marriage and the error of contraception. Yes, the Church is
going against the popular culture of the age. Nevertheless, St. Paul's words
originally addressed to the Romans should resound in our own ears: "Do not
conform yourselves to this age but be transformed by the renewal of your
mind, so that you may judge what is God's will, what is good, pleasing and
perfect" (Romans 12:2).