Archive for the ‘Theology’ Category

1 Breastfeeding and the Theology of the Body

Thursday, August 1st, 2013

For World Breastfeeding Week (WBW), August 1-7, 2013, I have chosen to use my chapter on “Breastfeeding and the Marriage Act” in my book, Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood.  It is the only source I know that relates the theology of the body to breastfeeding.
____________
Many comparisons can be made between the marriage act and the act of breastfeeding. In pointing out such similarities, I don’t mean to denigrate the sacrament of Matrimony. God established marriage from the beginning of the human race, and Christ raised marriage between two Christians to the level of a sacrament. The marriage act is of utmost importance and value; in it, a man and wife become co-creators with God in bringing children into the world. Experts who study the health of society speak about the importance of the strength and permanence of the husband-wife marital relationship as well as the importance of how parents, especially mothers, raise their young. In addition, many acts involving service or gift of self to others (such as teacher to students or priest to parishioners) also have avenues for comparison. This is an area where I hope future theologians will develop deeper thoughts concerning maternal nursing.

I offer eleven simple points of comparison between breastfeeding and the marriage act, in the hope of further elevating the importance of each:
. They are voluntary acts between two persons.
. Both acts are normally essential for life.
. The woman offers her body to her husband in the marriage act and to her baby in the breastfeeding act.
. Both acts in Scripture are used to describe God’s love for his people.
. Both acts involve love through intimacy, physical closeness, and emotional bonding.
. Both acts normally involve physical pleasure.
. Both acts can impact the health of a family and thus society.
. Both acts ought to involve a gift of self to another.
. The Pope’s theology of the body applies to both acts.
. Each act involves a love that unifies the two persons.
. Both acts have two orders, the order of nature and the personal order.

Sheila Kippley
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood
Sophia is offering a 25% discount to any order for Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood (paperback and eBook) during World Breastfeeding Week, August 1-7.  Offer expires Aug. 7, 11:59 PM.  Use promo code WBW25 when ordering.  Get this book for yourself, a priest, a seminarian, an expectant mother and religion teachers.  A priest in Wisconsin gives this book to all moms with whom he prepares for a baptism class and for marriage prep.
At www.lulu.com get a 25% discount during World Breastfeeding Week (Aug. 1-7) on The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding and Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing.

 

Natural Family Planning: Find a Priest and Become an NFP Teacher

Sunday, October 7th, 2012

There are couples who want to help others in their Church.  There are also priests who desire to help couples follow Church teaching on love, marriage and sexuality.  These priests who desire the right kind of natural family planning (NFP) instruction for their engaged and married couples might consider making the NFPI course required for their engaged couples preparing for marriage.

Some folks believe that you should not teach the engaged anything about NFP.  But where else will they learn about spacing their babies naturally through eco-breastfeeding?  This is part of God’s plan which involves little instruction and no abstinence.  Where do they learn about being generous in having children?  Where do they learn about the covenant theology of marriage (a way to teach the theology of the body that the couple can easily remember)?

Try to find a priest who wants to make a good NFP course a normal requirement for his engaged couples and become an NFP teaching couple.  Unfortunately, if your priest does not make the course required, then you will probably have no one to teach. Church bulletin announcements rarely bring in anyone to your classes.  The teacher training is free and can be done online.

For more information about becoming an NFPI teacher, contact NFPI.

For learning the method well, read carefully Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach—doing the work as you progress—or take the online home study course.

This is a vitally important ministry.  To learn why, watch this video.

Sheila Kippley
Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor

Theology of the Body easily explained

Friday, July 29th, 2011

In his Letter to Families from Pope John Paul II, published in February 1994, almost 10 years after the last TOB lecture, “Responsible Fatherhood and Motherhood,” the Pope wrote:

“In the conjugal act, husband and wife are called to confirm in a responsible way the mutual gift of self which they have made to each other in the marriage covenant.  The logic of the total gift of self to the other involves a potential openness to procreation: in this way the marriage is called to even greater fulfillment as a family.” (emphasis his, n.12, “Responsible Fatherhood and Motherhood.”)

When I read this some 15 years ago, I was delighted.  Since well before Humanae Vitae I have been advocating the covenant theology of sexuality as an understandable way to explain and defend the received teaching affirmed by that encyclical.  The key idea can be stated in 17 words:  “Sexual intercourse is intended by God to be at least implicitly a renewal of the marriage covenant.”  It seems to me that the Pope was saying essentially the same thing.  Obviously, the concept that the marriage act ought to be renewal of the marriage covenant lends itself to considerable expansion about what is actually entailed in that covenant—such as fidelity, permanence, and not only basic openness to life but a call to generosity, and the love so well described by St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 13.  I submit that in his 1994 teaching, Pope John Paul II gave us an authoritative and summary interpretation of his Theology of the Body.

I understand the “renewal of the marriage covenant” concept to mean that anticipation of the marriage act ideally would focus attention on the marriage covenant.  For example, it might elicit an examination of conscience such as “Is there anything in my behavior to my spouse today or during the last week that reflects the self-giving love I promised on our wedding day?  Have I taken my spouse for granted?  Have I done anything that my spouse would recognize as caring love?  Etc.”  That’s the ideal.  More practically, “Have I done anything that contradicts our marriage covenant?”  By the way, the words “at least implicitly” are very important.  The spouses do not have to be thinking in these terms.  If the spouses have not done anything to contradict the marriage covenant, such as contraceptive behaviors, they are at least implicitly renewing it.

While the culture places almost exclusive emphasis on copulation under any circumstances—with mutual consent as the only proviso, the “renewal of the marriage covenant” places the emphasis on the marriage covenant and the meaning and the challenge it offers from the wedding day till death parts the spouses.  I think that’s exactly what the Pope was saying in 1994.  At the least, it offers educators the opportunity to teach these things in a way that can be easily understood and remembered.

For more information on the covenant theology of sexuality, read Sex and the Marriage Covenant.

John F. Kippley