Dear friends ,
This is an article by Fr. Frank Pavone (Priests for Life). You can see lots
of pro-life resources at http://www.priestsforlife.org

Birth Control and NFP: What's the Difference?

Tom and Jane have three children, and have determined that they cannot
adequately provide for any more at the present time. They know that
artificial means of birth control are morally wrong, and their priest
recommended that they use NFP (Natural Family Planning). Yet they do not
understand why NFP is OK if birth control is wrong. Don't they amount to the
same thing?
Actually, they don't. NFP is very different form other methods of birth
control. Here we will give some of the reasons; but first, a word about what
NFP is not.

NFP does not refer to the so-called "calendar rhythm method", which was
based on calendar calculations of a "normal" cycle. NFP, instead, is based
on direct observations of various signs that occur in a woman's body
(changes in the cervix, cervical mucus, and temperature) which tell her when
ovulation occurs. These observations are relatively easy to make, take only
a few minutes, and work even for irregular cycles. NFP is internationally
known and practical and has an extremely high effectiveness. The medical
principles on which NFP rests are being used by more and more doctors for a
wide range of purposes.

Morally speaking, then, what is it that makes NFP acceptable while
artificial birth control is wrong?

1) NFP does not separate sex from responsibility. The act of intercourse has
a twofold meaning: sharing of love and giving of life. Married persons who
perform this act must accept both sides of the coin. While not every marital
act will result in a child, it must nevertheless be open to the possibility
of life. The act will be "open" to life as long as the spouses do nothing to
"close" it. Here's the difference between artificial birth control and NFP.
In the first case, one does something (takes a pill, uses a condom, etc.) to
deliberately "close" the life-giving power of sexual intercourse. In NFP,
however, no such step is taken. The spouses do not act against their
fertility. They do not reject the link between the two meanings of sex (love
and life). They simply follow the natural patterns of the body's fertility
and infertility -- patterns placed there by God Himself. In the fertile days
of a woman's cycle, if there are serious reasons to avoid pregnancy, the
couple respectfully steps back from the act of intercourse. In using birth
control devices, however, they attack the meaning of the act -- they perform
the action of intercourse and then undo part of it. In NFP, instead, they
simply choose at times not to perform the action in the first place.

2) NFP is not just a "method" based on physiology. Rather, NFP is based on
virtue. It is based on sexual self-control, which is necessary for a healthy
marriage. There are times in any marriage when spouses have to put aside
their desire for sex because of sickness, fatigue, travel, or other reasons.
In a healthy marriage, love is shown in many ways, and not all these ways of
showing love are physical. In fact, to refrain from sex when necessary is
itself an act of love. Why? ...because in effect the spouses then say to
each other, "I did not marry you just for sexual pleasure. I married you
because I love you. You are a person, not an object. When I have sex with
you, it is because I freely choose to show you my love, not because I need
to satisfy an urge." Using NFP requires abstinence from intercourse during
the fertile days if a pregnancy has to be avoided. This actually can
strengthen the couple's sexual life. When the spouses know that they can
abstain for good reasons, they also come to trust each other more, and avoid
the risk of treating each other primarily as objects of sexual pleasure
rather than persons. Artificial birth control, on the other hand, gives free
reign to the temptation to make pleasure the dominant element, rather than
virtue. It encourages couples to think that sexual self-control is not
necessary. It can encourage them to become slaves to pleasure.
3) NFP puts the responsibility for family planning squarely on the shoulders
of both partners, because it requires communication and cooperation. Both
spouses need to know when the fertile days of the woman's cycle have
arrived, and then decide together what to do (depending on whether they are
trying to avoid or achieve pregnancy). To think that such communication and
cooperation make the sexual act less pleasurable (because less spontaneous)
is simply not true. To know with certainty what stage of the cycle one is in
can increase the pleasure and spontaneity of the act, since the spouses can
ignore worries about contraceptive failure or side-effects of the pill.
Artificial birth control, besides introducing these worries, also puts the
"contraceptive burden" on the shoulders of one, not both, spouses. It makes
it possible for a spouse to cut off the fertility of the act, even without
the consent of the other spouse. It can introduce division into the
marriage.

4) NFP is not just a means of avoiding pregnancy, as artificial
contraception is. Rather, it can also be used to achieve pregnancy since it
pinpoints ovulation. It is a wholly positive approach to the sexual life of
the spouses. It is clean, inexpensive, morally acceptable, and reliable.

As with anything good, NFP can be misused, if a couple has the wrong
motives. Married couples are called by God to cooperate generously in
bringing forth and educating new life. For a couple to decide that "we don't
want children at this time", there need to be serious, objective reasons
(health, finances, etc.). If the reasons are not objective but selfish, then
the couple cannot justify the avoidance of pregnancy just because they are
using NFP to do it. In this case they are not practicing "family planning",
but "family avoidance"!
There are differences between NFP and artificial birth control, but let
these suffice for now. As Pope John Paul II has explained, the difference
really rests on a person's answers to some very basic questions like, "What
is marriage?" What is sex? What is the human body? What is love?" Artificial
contraception distorts the meaning of all these things. It sees the body and
its sexual faculties as something to be "used", and it fails to acknowledge
God's place in love and marriage. NFP, instead, is a practice of virtue,
resting upon self-control, inner freedom, respect, trust, communication, and
reverence to God's plan for love and marriage. It enriches both love and
marriage. Every couple owes it to themselves to learn more about it!
-Fr. Frank Pavone


Love and Prayers,

Sunil Kumar  Nadarajan
Chicago, USA

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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