Amid political
battle, Catholic bishops promote natural family planning
By LAUREN MARKOE
c. 2012 Religion News Service
Amid a battle with President Obama over a new contraception
mandate, the U.S. Roman Catholic bishops are promoting natural family
planning -- but will their flock take heed?
When the Obama administration in January announced that
employers will have to provide contraception coverage to their employees,
U.S. Catholic bishops took the lead in fighting the mandate.
Allied with other denominations, the Catholic hierarchy
has organized an energetic, nationwide effort to overturn this new federal
rule. The Catholic Church calls birth control a sin, even as many Catholics
practice it.
The bishops are hoping to change that with their Natural
Family Planning Awareness Week, an annual campaign that began July 22.
It's the church's only acceptable form of birth control, even as many
sexuality educators consider it relatively unreliable.
Natural Family Planning Awareness Week, then, may provide
a window into a church teaching that is helping to drive the most serious
standoff between the church and the federal government in decades.
Even the bishops acknowledge that the church's efforts
aren't winning many adherents to natural family planning, by which a
couple charts changes in a woman's body to determine when she is likely
to be fertile.
A 2011 survey shows that just two percent of American Catholic
women at risk of unintended pregnancy rely on the method. And an overwhelming
majority of U.S. Catholics reject the church's ban on artificial birth
control.
"Sadly, the majority of Catholics still do not know
about church teachings on married love nor understand why the church
considers artificial contraception immoral," said Bishop Kevin C.
Rhoades of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend.
"This, tragically, is due to inconsistent education and formation since
1968. Over the last 30 years, we have been striving to correct the situation," said
Rhoades, who chairs the Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life, and
Youth of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
The birth control ban was codified in Pope Paul VI's 1968 encyclical, Humanae
Vitae,
On Human Life. The Catholic Church continues to strive -- mostly alone.
It stands as the only major religious denomination in the nation to oppose
what it considers "artificial" contraception.
Conservative Protestant churches that ally with the bishops against the
mandate reject the requirement that their health plans include contraception
coverage. But that's different than rejecting contraception in principle
-- a question that for them, as for the vast majority of Americans, seems
to have been settled decades ago. Even for many Orthodox rabbis, there
is far more leeway on contraception than the Catholic Church allows.
Humanae Vitae, on the other hand, was written as oral contraceptives
came into widespread use. A papal commission on the subject suggested
that at least some forms of contraception might be deemed acceptable.
But as the papal encyclical makes clear, none are sanctioned except natural
family planning.
As Paul VI wrote, "an act of mutual love which impairs the capacity
to transmit life which God the Creator, through specific laws, has built
into it, frustrates his design which constitutes the norm of marriage,
and contradicts the will of the Author of life." While it prohibits
birth control in general, Humanae Vitae allows for natural family planning,
though the encyclical does not use the phrase.
Humanae Vitae inspires Bethany Meola, 27, who works in Washington, D.C.,
for the USCCB committee headed by Rhoades. Married a little more than
a year ago, Meola and her husband practice natural family planning and
are open about their hopes that it will help them conceive.
"It helps us to recognize and appreciate both dimensions of sexual love," she
said.
"The act that unites my husband and me in an incomparably intimate way
is also the act through which we will welcome a child into our family,
God willing, and become father and mother together. In other words, practicing
NFP has helped us to grow in awe and wonder at the amazing gift and power
of our sexuality."
Meola is on one end of the spectrum of American Catholics in her acceptance
of this church teaching. But for most Catholics, said Jon O'Brien, president
of Catholics for Choice, the church's rejection of birth control makes
little sense in their modern lives.
When Catholics go to their church for premarital counseling, and it's
time for the natural family planning discussion, "most people just
look at their shoes, pass the time and hope that the hour goes very quickly," said
O'Brien.
"And then we get back to our real lives where we use condoms, and we use
pills and we contracept as best we can in good conscience," he said.
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