Jenna said:
Wow. I didn't follow how all of that ties into being selfish. Maybe you should rethink some of the statements before you hit the 'reply' button, eh? Not everyone needs to have a large brood of children to have a loving and sacrificial relationship. I understand that you are gung-ho for NFP, but that doesn't mean that people who don't have children back to back are any less learned in the ways of being selfless and giving. After all, Jesus has no record of marriage or children, and there has never been a soul who could compare with his selfless act. The gifts come from God, not a persons ability to procreate. While I'll agree that children teach us many lessons in patience and giving, they are meant to be a blessing, not a rule by which to measure someone's success in their marriage.
First part...yeah..sorry...i am watching the kids and trying to reply ( actually provide a synopsis of a 250 page anthropological work) and working on a paper review...you get the idea.
I never said that you have to have a large brood of children. My main concern is that the first commandment of God is to be fruitful and multiply and many couples deliberately delay having kids or severly limit the number of kids for selfish reasons (RV's, Vacations, Fancier homes, Success in career etc).
As to Jesus this is where it becomes really cool when we have kids. Jesus is the Bridegroom and the church (us Christians) is the Bride. So, when we marry our spouses we are to imitate Christ and give ourself without selfishness. We are to model Christ to our spouse, strive to be better than ourself and lead our spouse to heaven (away from sin and the devil).
So, how do we give ourself unselfishly? By being generous to God's first commandment. Now, we still have use of Christian prudence that says if we would starve, be unable to function, a severe health risk might be posed or some other serious consequence of another pregnancy then we can avoid.
What is really cool is that God built into a woman a way of tracking and knowing her fertility with a very high degree of accuracy. It does also take some sacrifice in not having sex whenever you want (an act of respect for how God designed your spouse)...but staying up late talking (to each other), praying (with each other), etc can be beneficial to a marriage. God killed Onan for not following through with the way he designed the marital act (Genesis 38:10).
How many kids isn't a measure of how successful a marriage is but how generous the couple is. Openess to life is one way to measure how generous in God's will (the first commandment) we truly are. That is what makes a marriage successful. Make sense?
Couples who use NFP experience a 0.6% to 5% divorce rate depending on the study you look at. If you look at society you get about a 50% divorce rate? The difference is generosity in God's will and trusting God.
Under the Mercy,
Matthew
P.S. I do hope I didn't offend you.