Which brings me back to the purpose of the thread.
We can debate Onan, I doubt we will agree.
And so the topic is avoided . . the first scriptural proof we presented. . . just dismissed. . . like that . . out of hand. . . .
However, it seems that the RCC and Orthodox are practacing situational ethics in regards to NFP. If there is a GOOD reason for NFP, or any form of birth control, it isn't considered sin, but if it doesn't have the stamp of approval, it is sin.
Again, do you think God would prefer starvation to sterilization?
that right there is a perfect example of situational ethics.
Situational ethics is where one's ethics change with the situation.
The Catholic Church does not change its ethics depending on the situation. All other Christian groups do . . .
The question is really, does God prefer sin to starvation . . .
Situational ethics says yes . . . .
The Catholic Church says no. . . .
In fact, the scriptures denounces putting one's belly over what is right . . look at Esau who sold his birthright for food .. .
You don't have to go to third world countries to find hunger, there are plenty of families who have less than enough to eat here. Adding children would be far from a blessing.
According to whom? Someone sitting in a comfortable chair who lives in a society in which comfort and pleasure take precedence over right and wrong? Where situational ethics runs rampant, who argues for making people more comfortable even if it means they engage in sin that is abhorent to God to do so?
Fertility is not the problem here . . sin is . . sterilization is not going to fix the problem of sin that has led to such situations developing in areas of the world . . it is only going to compound sin with sin . .
This situational ethics argument would argue that the end justifies the means .. .
Such an argument is fundamentally anti-Christian.
I have no argument with the idea that they are hungry due to the greed of our nations, but the family is powerless to change that, yet are expected that they should be open to as many kids as natural relations without any NFP or otherwise will produce.
And so rather than send in food, the answer is to send in contraceptives . . .
No answer has been forthcoming in this thread yet to the obvious problem already exposed once . .
How does one get contraceptives into those who supposedly need them if one can't get food into them?
If one can get food into them, why does one suppose they need to get contraceptives into them?
Totally illogical and nonsensical line of argumentation -
all this line of argumentation is nothing more than one huge Logical Fallacy:
APPEAL TO EMOTION:
Description of Appeal to Emotion
An Appeal to Emotion is a fallacy with the following structure:
- Favorable emotions are associated with X.
- Therefore, X is true.
This fallacy is committed when someone manipulates peoples' emotions in order to get them to accept a claim as being true. More formally, this sort of "reasoning"
involves the substitution of various means of producing strong emotions in place of evidence for a claim. If the favorable emotions associated with X influence the person to accept X as true because they "feel good about X," then he has fallen prey to the fallacy.
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/appeal-to-emotion.html
Other logical fallacies also apply in relation to this one above.
Citing strict abstinence to avoid pregnancy doesn't cut it either, it violates our command to come together except in prayer in fasting, in so doing preventing temptation.
Not at all. There is no command to come together excpet in prayer or fasting, otherwise, we would never be able to work or participate in any other activity.
Also, the notion of children being brought in to this world being viewed as burden rather than blessing makes me shudder. Someone practices NFP, and ends up pregnant, AGAIN, despite their best efforts.
Logical fallacy the conclusion does not follow .. non sequitor.
This is nothing more than an attempt to turn an argument made against contraception, as contraception views children as a burden at the time one is contracepting (otherwise, one would not be contracepting), on its head and misapply it to those who reject contraception.
No child should be unwanted,
That is the argument used by abortion activists . . no child an unwated child . .
abort an unwanted child.
The contraceptivists say no child an unwanted child . .
contracept the unwanted child. . .
However, in opposition to the two above responses, we see this:
NFP activists say no child an unwanted child .. Lord, if it be thy will, we will welcome a child with open hearts and arms.
IMHO, yet that is what getting pregnant while using NFP would make the child.
Logical Fallacy . . ignores facts in evidence. Assumes facts not in evidence.
In fact, it is what getting pregnant while using contraception would make the child - unwanted.
(although this is not accusing that the child would not be loved. It's just stating that the initial reaction, and underlying current would be OOPS!)
Assumes facts not in evidence.
It is merely the response of the using contraception that is being projected onto the NFP user . . .
It is how the one using contraception would react . . .
.