...CSRansom wrote:The church will not change its stance on contraception, because it cannot. It has rigorously defined its position on the issue. Contraception is seen as wrong because it closes off the procreative aspect of sexuality. It denies a good thing of part of its goodness, and evil is a deficiency in proper goodness. Therefore, contraception is evil.AndrewJ wrote:Religion or faith or life itself should be about finding your own path, the one thats right for you not the one thats right for the person next to you. Thats what I don't like about organised religion, especially Christianity, the Dogmatic laws are just too much sometimes. Not many people take them seriously anymore. Apparetnly John Paul II was close on reforming the churches stance on Contraception. I think if anyone was gonna do it, it should of been him. I hope its delt with soon but the new Pope is very different and hes only gonna be around for 10-15 years, too short a time maybe to change the churchs stance on contraception. It would help the AIDS crisis as Africa is the hardcore stronghold of Christianity now, the West has turn away from the Church because of issues such as abortion and contraception, i think it discourages to many young people who dont want their lives to be dictated by Religon.
Secondly, JPII was about as far as they get from overturning the church's stance on the issue. He wrote an entire book about the way marriage should be seen by Catholics. One of the main themes was about contraception and why it is wrong. In other words, Pope John Paul II was not about to "reform the church's stance on contraception."
About the AIDS crisis in Africa, Uganda used to be the country which had the highest AIDS rate on the continent. About 20 years ago, it started to teach abstinence and fidelity, not safe-sex or contraception. It is now one of the only countries in Africa where AIDS is declining. In 1991 in Uganda, the HIV rate was 15%, by 2001, the rate was 5%. That is the greatest decrease in HIV infection in world history. In the countries where contraception is promoted, the AIDS epidemic is of greater prevalence than in any other countries. In 2001, Kenya had a HIV rate of 15%, Zimbabwe a rate of 32%, and Botswana a rate of 38%. That seems to be pretty good evidence that it will not solve the AIDS crisis, and that safe-sex isn't so safe.
How would you respond to such "logic" in backing up the pro-abstinence/anti-contraception mindset? I hear that Bush's abstinence plan is failing miserably, but I haven't anything to show for that right now.CSRansom wrote:I think I mis-wrote last time. I would say that contraception is an evil. It is a bad thing to use. I would relate the use of contraception to self-inflicted blindness. That statement requires quite a bit of explanation though.HanameHime wrote:Do YOU really believe that contraception is evil, just by that logic?
The eye is meant to be used for sight. This is obvious from its structure and function. It contains a lens, which projects light onto light receptive cells. The cells then change the light to electrical impulses which pass through nerves which go into the brain and cause an image to be recognized. In short, eyes are for seeing.
Now, it is better for an eye to fulfill its purpose of seeing than to be blind. It could even be said that sight is a natural good, and blindness is a natural evil, or a deficiency of goodness proper to the object. It is in this sense that blindness is evil. It does not allow the eye to do what it is supposed to do. As I said, however, it is not moral evil, but natural evil. It is something that can happen naturally. It is not by a choice that this evil happens it is by nature. A definition of moral evil is then, the action/choice of a conscious being which causes/creates natural evil. Causing one's own blindness or another's blindness with the intention to do so is therefore a morally evil act.
Now to relate all of this to contraception. The reproductive organs in humans are meant to be used for reproduction as the name suggests. They produce haploid cells, which, when combined, produce a human embryo which will develop into an adult human being, if circumstances allow. The natural way for these haploid cells to do this is through sexual intercourse. Impotence would be an example of natural evil in this case: it does not allow the haploid cells to combine. One of many examples of moral evil, in this case, is contraception. It is meant to make the sexual act impotent. It is meant to neuter. It denies the reproductive organs from causing reproduction. It is moral evil to choose to use contraception. It closes reproduction to reproduction.
So to answer your question...Yes I really do believe that contraception is evil, just by that logic.
If there are any that are Catholic, do you follow this same ideal to the T, or is there room for leniency since people are going to keep screwing for pleasure so long as orgasms exist?