The very fact that the Bishops state that contraception is sometimes allowable means that it cannot be intrinsically evil. Contraception in the conjugal act can be intrinsically evil, but there is nothing conjugal about rape.
Yes and the distinction between abortifacient has to be made as the Bishops did.
I don't understand your question. What I do know is that some contraceptives are never abortifacient, some are in certain circumstances, and some always are.
Right. That means those that aren't can "sometimes" be used in instances that are not evil thus meaning such use is not intrinsic. The ones that ALWAYS are evil, are always evil. Its the "always" that makes their use intrinsic or not. There is a distinction in type that the Bishops make.
To clear up misconceptions (heh - conceptions) about the teaching of the Church.
Ah, well, it is confusing sometimes. Most people don't consider the distinction. Contraception is contraception to most people and Humane Vitae advises against artificial means for more than the reason that an abortifacient is an intrinsic, while a non-abortifacient may not be.
It is good to know what an abortifacient is. Any good NFP class should explain that.
Sort of. Abortifacients may be used, but only after it is made certain that they will not cause an abortion. Some medications both prevent conception and make the womb hostile to embryos. So long as there is reasonable certainty that conception has not taken place, these methods would be okay according to the USCCB's instructions to Catholic hospitals.
OK, but in that case, if such determination could be made, how could that use be claimed to as an abortifacient? Its my understanding that for an abortifacient to be an abortifacient it must destroy a life there by making it intrinsic. Mere prevention of life may not in all circumstances be evil thereby not an intrinsic. That does not make its use acceptable in most/all cases nevertheless.
Again, that's the reason. To spread truth and correct error.
Does this conclude your questioning?
Just want to be sure this isn't a quest to justify unnatural contraception simply based on the grounds that there are instances certain forms of artificial birth prevention are not intrinsically evil in all circumstances.
Certian forms are intrinsic. There is a difference that can depend on circumstances and either way, because x is sometimes permissible, does not mean that y is always permissible. Thanks for clearing that up. Now come to my ghetto thread. Lamont is bored.