Testifying before Congress about religious liberty last February, William Lori, archbishop of Baltimore, proffered an analogy. The government would not force a kosher deli to serve ham sandwiches, Lori observed; so why force Catholic hospitals to provide their employees with contraception coverage?
I was surprised that a bishop would make this comparison—and certain that Aquinas would have been shocked. Catholics traditionally have seen the prohibition against contraception as a moral norm binding on all human beings, like prohibitions against murder, theft, and lying; by contrast, the laws of kashrut are cultic precepts that bind only Jews. But then I began to wonder whether Lori was on to something. From a sociological perspective, the prohibition against contraception does seem to be morphing from a universally applicable moral norm into a cultic norm that marks and defines Catholic identity—one strict form of it, anyway—within a broader pluralistic culture.
Traditionally, Catholics don’t build religious identity around adherence to absolute negative moral norms, but rather view those norms as the foundation of an acceptable moral identity. Yet many Orthodox Jews (especially those living in pluralistic societies) do build their identity around the laws of kosher, measuring their religious and communal commitment through their recognition of ritual laws of purity and contamination.
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Thanks to John Paul II’s “Theology of the Body,” a small but dedicated group of Catholics appears to be structuring their family lives around the prohibition of contraception. In treating that prohibition as the linchpin of a faithful Catholic life, including faithfulness to divinely ordained gender roles, they are transforming the prohibition into a religious identity marker. If their blogs are any indication, Catholics who publicize their commitment to this church teaching tend to see those who don’t follow it as inauthentic Catholics. That is more akin to a cultic judgment than a moral one. Significantly, no one talks about the prohibitions against stealing, lying, or murdering this way. Someone who commits murder would be labeled a sinner or a bad Catholic—not an inauthentic one.
The similarities go further. Conformity to cultic norms generally takes a great deal of thought and vigilance, and Natural Family Planning demands ongoing vigilance in ways analogous to keeping kosher. Just as there are competing rabbinical schools, there exist NFP experts, as well as study groups and manuals, to address technical questions. Not surprisingly, enterprising adherents to both Jewish dietary prohibitions and the Catholic ban on contraception have invented smartphone apps to make conformity easier.
In contrast, I’m not aware of an app for “not killing”—or “not stealing,” for that matter. That’s because most people don’t spend too much time thinking about whether and how to conform to basic moral prohibitions. In fact, the more fundamental the moral prohibition, the less time we ought to think about it. We would worry greatly about someone who said, “I want a promotion. I could kill my boss and take her job... but that would be wrong.” Killing the boss is or should be unthinkable.
A critic might object by noting that some Catholics forgo both birth control and NFP, “leaving room” for God to plan their family. But this approach is also strikingly inconsistent with the way negative moral prohibitions operate in the Catholic tradition. After all, no one says, “I’m leaving room for God to plan my career, so I’m not going to steal my coworker’s ideas.” In the Catholic moral framework, the point of negative moral absolutes is to conform to God’s law, not to leave room for divine providence to operate. Our tradition does not frame the relationship of God’s will and human activity in this mutually exclusive way.
Can’t the norm against contraception be both a universal moral norm and a cultic Catholic one? From a sociological perspective, pulling this off would be tricky. General moral norms are meant to gather all people together into the same moral community, highlighting commonality. (Think, for example, of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.) Cultic norms, by contrast, emphasize differences among subcommunities, focusing on what sets them apart.
A hundred years from now, no one will remember the political skirmishes around religious liberty during the 2012 presidential campaign. But some future historians of Catholic moral theology might point to Bishop Lori’s testimony as a turning point, marking the moment when the church’s official teachers began to concede that the prohibition against contraception could plausibly be defended no longer as a matter of a universal moral law, but only as a cultic precept binding on Catholics. Four decades after Humanae vitae, that prohibition looks increasingly like a form of Catholic kashrut.
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@Thomas Hockel
Your argument that the moral choice (e.g. of contraception or NFP-PC) is rooted in natural law is an old argument that most theologians have abandoned. This old argument was criticized as legalism and physicialism and this lead to a "new natural law theory" that was also criticized which did not lead to a consensus of argument. After more than 20 years of debate, including other moral theories such as proportionalism-consequentialism, John Paul II wrote Vertitatis Spendor in 1993.
This document moved beyond the traditionalist view of natural law as the non-violation of natural ends, and beyond the question of a certain technique of birth regulation. JP II used a different approach to the important areas of natural law, moral action and intrinsically evil acts which differ significantly from appeals to nature in much of tradition. With respect to the moral specification of the contraceptive act, John Paul II offered this interpretation of Aquinas in VS 78:
The morality of the human act depends primarily and fundamentally on the object rationally chosen by the deliberate will, and that object is the proximate end of a deliberate decision, which determines the act of willing on the part of the acting person.
Unfortunately, the object as the proximate end of a deliberate decision is unsubstantiated because VS 78 is primarily based S.T. I-II, q. 18, a. 6 which never mentions the concept of a “proximate end”. The “proximate end’ is mentioned in S.T. I-II, q. 1, a. 3, ad. 3 but the example Aquinas uses demonstrates that the proximate end of the act of killing a person can either be moral or immoral based on the remote end to safeguard one’s life or as an act of vengeance. In this case, the so-called proximate end does not specify, but the so-called remote or agent’s end. There is also the specific problem with the definition of terms such as object to determine what morally specifies a human, voluntary action.
This position, VS 78, also discounts the role of reason and deliberation in choosing an appropriately right means-to-end, asserting that it is distorted reason and not an act of virtue if one rejects PC for good reasons (i.e., the ‘good reasons’ for avoiding fecundity promulgated by Pius XII in his Address to the Midwives). Therefore to assert that VS 78 is the absolute moral truth is highly controversial.
Contraception is not sinful nor is it like murder or adultery. It is a distortion based on the culture of the Catholic Church that feared any disagreement with past papal encyclicials or pronouncements would undermine the credibility of the magisterium. It is indeed a cultural marker but not solely a marker. There is some truth in Humanae Vitae, but not the complete moral truth. This is a complex subject. However, Aquinas's understanding of natural law was not based on the non-frustration of natural ends.
It seems to me that the difference between the use of contraceptive pills and 'natural familly planning' is essentially a difference between chemistry and physics. In both the intention is the same, to avoid pregnancy. One uses hormones to chemically regulate a woman's body, the other uses themometers, clocks, witching sticks (but never, presumably, alternatives to fully consumated vaginal intercourse). The intention is the same and the mechanisms only variations of the same thing -- keep the sperm from meeting up with the fertile ovum. So what's the difference?
Late to the party here but I felt the need to weigh in on this.
This issue is what is seriously causing me to consider leaving the church altogether. I have a feeling that some would be all to happy to see me leave. My choice to not have children was based on matters of conscience I will not get into here, but they were and are serious matters. We are taught that we cannot violate our conscience and I will not do so. It God judges me unfavorably in the end then I will leave that decision to him.
What I find reprehensible is that contraception always comes up in this "culture of death" talk. Who have I killed? So not having a child is tantamount to killing one now? This is starting to sound like the talk of a fertility cult instead of a religion. The church has no business getting involved in the intimate details of my committed monogamous marriage - a commitment that I also take very seriously.
I do understand and actually respect some of the underlying philosophy concerning natural law and the like. But the ability to act according to conscience, and not just submitting to instinct/nature/etc. is an integral part of bring human as well. The argument of course is that my conscience is obviously not properly informed. Does the church seriously believe that there are never valid reasons a person would decide not to have children, and that any decision to not procreate is sinful? I find this bizarre and completely removed from my life experience. Maybe it really is time for me to go.
It is heartening to see so many new voices emerging to challenge the myth that the sexual revolution and contraception have been a good thing for society.
Collen Carroll Campbell, "What Women Want"
http://www.wf-f.org/12-2-Campbell.html
Rita Joseph, "Serving an Epidemic of Sexual Excess: Free Contraceptive Coverage -- A Bad Joke Played on Women"
http://www.wf-f.org/12-2-Joseph.html
Jennifer Fulwiler, "The Contraception Trap":
http://www.ncregister.com/blog/jennifer-fulwiler/the-contraception-trap/#ixzz1sixRqAcS
1Flesh:
http://www.1flesh.org/category/arguments/
Mary Eberstadt, "Has the Sexual Revolution Been Good for Women? No.":
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304724404577297422171909202.html
Lila Rose, "Battle hymn of the anti-abortion feminist:"
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0412/74739.html
Tom Hoopes, "The Truth About Natural Family Planning:"
http://www.kofc.org/en/columbia/detail/2012_07_nfp.html
Mister H, "Why the Catholic Church Opposes Contraception:"
http://allhands-ondeck.blogspot.com/2012/02/why-catholic-church-opposes.html
Janet Smith, with the classic "Contraception, Why not?"
http://shop.mycatholicfaith.org/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=17
Michael Giesler, "Contracepting America: the real war on women"
http://lifesite.net/news/contracepting-america-the-real-war-on-women
Laura Locke, "The Dark Fruits of Contraception"
http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/contraception%E2%80%99s-dark-fruits