Archive for the ‘Sterilization’ Category

Why Catholic schools are closing?

Sunday, November 14th, 2010

Fr. Timothy J. Sauppé, a pastor of St, Mary’s Catholic Church in Westville IL,  explained to his parishioners his decision to close the parish school in May 2010.  There were two reasons:    “lack of incoming/retention of students and lack of income to both the school and the parish.”   But he added:     “Let me be frank, the problem here is much deeper than money and it is a problem not just at St. Mary’s but across our Western culture. The problem is cited in the concluding paragraph in my letter to Bishop Jenky:

Bishop, it is with a heavy heart that I request this of you. As you know, priests were not ordained to be closing grade schools but we were ordained to be Christ in the midst of sorrow and pain which will be happening as we come to accept both your decision and the inevitable that St. Mary’s Grade School is no longer viable. The efficient cause is simple….no children. The first cause is the habitual contraception and sterilization mentality of a good portion of married Catholic Christians–in short the culture of death. The final cause is the closure of Catholic Schools and parishes. Bishop, we need your leadership to address the contraception/abortion/sterilization mentality in as a forceful a way as soon as possible. This was my recommendation to the Meitler Study and it is my recommendation to you for the good of the Diocese of Peoria. May God Bless you in your ministry as our Bishop.

Sincerely yours in Christ Jesus and Mary,
Fr. Timothy J. Sauppé, pastor
St. Mary’s Catholic Church”

Another comment from Fr. Timothy J. Sauppé:  “The greatest challenge we have as priests is contraception.  It is killing our parishes left and right. As long as bishops and priests say nothing about contraception we will not grow as a Church or as a society.”  ( “Madonna Chapel: Fostering the dignity of Motherhood,” by Kate Williams, Canticle magazine, Jan/Feb 2010, p. 23)

Sterilization

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

    Someone asked me, “What IS compelling justification for sterilization?”  There is none.  What leads people to try to justify sterilization is fear.  Fear of another pregnancy and fear of the periodic abstinence involved in systematic natural family planning.  Just as perfect love casts out fear (1 John 4:18), so also perfect fear can cast out love, that is, what is supposed to be the self-giving love of the marriage act.
     In addition, each and every time the deliberately sterilized couple engage in the marriage act, they are engaging in an act of deliberately sterilized intercourse, defrauding the act of its built-in meaning as a renewal of their marriage covenant, for better AND for worse.  The contraceptive act of married spouses says, “We take each other for better but definitely and positively NOT for the imagined worse of possible pregnancy.”  That contradicts the built-in meaning of the marriage act and renders it dishonest.
     If a couple has been sterilized and are now repentant, they ought to have reversal surgery.  Then if they think they have sufficiently serious reasons to avoid pregnancy, they ought to monitor her fertility and abstain during the fertile time.  If health or finances or some other truly serious reason makes reversal surgery an extraordinary difficulty, they may not be obliged to have it, but they still ought to abstain during the fertile time as in the previous sentence. 
    This is not a harsh judgment.  It is simply realistic.  Most people would agree that repentance means having the attitude that “if I had it to do over again, I would not do it.”  With regard to sexual sterilization, that means they wouldn’t have undergone sterilization and would still be fertile.  If they had sufficiently serious reasons to avoid pregnancy, they would be monitoring her fertility and abstaining during the fertile time.  So my opinion above is simply saying that the repentant sterilized couple should be doing just what other couples are doing when they want to practice the morally right way of avoiding pregnancy.
    If you have not read it yet, I think you will like my work, Sex and the Marriage Covenant.  For example in Chapter 17, you will find my analysis of biblical texts that show that the Lord has condemned every form of sexual intercourse except the non-contraceptive act of spouses married to each other. Chapter 12, “The Sterilized Couple” is now available at our website under the title, “The Repentant Sterilized Couple.”
     Sex and the Marriage Covenant is a book that makes a good gift to a seminarian or a priest.
 
In the his service,
John F Kippley
NFP International
www.nfpandmore.org
Sex and the Marriage Covenant: A Basis for Morality (Ignatius)

The Repentant Sterilized Couple

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

The Repentant Sterilized Couple

Imagine that you had yourself sexually sterilized at a time when your faith was weak, and then something happened to wake you up.  You somehow heard that your Catholic Church taught that such behavior was immoral.  You realized you should not be receiving Holy Communion in such a state.  Then you learn about systematic NFP.  Now you are really mad.  Why didn’t someone tell you years ago?  You wish that you had never been sterilized.  You would like to have it reversed and then practice systematic NFP and periodic abstinence during the fertile time.  Then you learn about all the costs of reversal surgery, and you break out in a cold sweat.  You would have to put a second mortgage on the house, and you can barely make your current payments right now.  You have what many would say is an “extraordinary” financial burden to attempt to restore your fertility.  What can you do?  Are you required to abstain for the rest of your fertile years?  Or can you go to confession, confess the sin of mutilation, do the penance assigned by the priest, and have no change in your subsequent behavior?  Or after confession are you obliged to abstain during the fertile time, that is, practice systematic NFP for avoiding pregnancy?

Let us further imagine you find my book, Sex and the Marriage Covenant: A Basis of Morality.  Let’s imagine that the idea that the marriage act ought to be a renewal of your marriage covenant makes sense to you, and that you realize that contraceptive behavior contradicts this built-in meaning of the marriage act.  Then you read its chapter on “The Sterilized Couple.”  You read that well respected theologians of the recent past have taught that repentant sterilized couples should undergo reversal surgery and then practice systematic NFP if they had a serious reason to avoid pregnancy. 

Now it gets confusing.  You learn that some theologians say that if a couple have an extraordinary reason not to have reversal surgery, they don’t have to have the reversal surgery and they also don’t have to abstain during the fertile time.  To use the vernacular, all they have to do is confess it and they are “home free.”  Just a few prayers.  No reversal.  Continued sexual sterility.  No abstinence.  It sounds too easy to be true, and that’s my opinion. 

Why does it sound too easy to be true?  Can you think of any sin where repentance doesn’t call for a change in behavior?  More directly, can you think of any sexual sin where repentance does not involve a change of behavior?  Of course not.  So what is so special about the sins of sexual sterilization and consequent sins of contraceptively sterilized intercourse? 

I am convinced that repentant sterilized couples are obliged to practice the same marital chastity as normal fertile couples who believe they have sufficiently serious reasons to avoid pregnancy.  That means that they will practice systematic NFP with chaste abstinence during the fertile time.

In a previous discussion on this matter, I was accused of imposing an unnecessary burden on repentant sterilized couples.  This raises a question about my accusers’ attitude towards systematic NFP?  Do they think that the self-discipline of periodic abstinence is some sort of extraordinary burden?  A burden, yes.  Extraordinary, no.  Far from it, such self-discipline is the normal practice of every chaste married couple once they reach the point where they are still mutually fertile but think that God is not calling them to have any more children. 

In my opinion, the “too easy to be true” advice may be the single biggest reason why Catholics frequently resort to sterilization.  What comes across is a simple one-sin, one confession approach to a complex and enduring sinful situation.  “Get sterilized.  Go to confession.  Say your penance prayers.  And you are home free to have as much sterilized sex as you can.” 

Are the sterilized couples who take such an approach truly repentant?  Are some priests teaching such couples that the canonical penance—the few prayers usually assigned as penance—constitutes the true repentance called for by the Lord?  Doesn’t repentance mean “I wish I had not done it.”?  Doesn’t repentance also entail the attitude that “if I had it to do all over again, I wouldn’t do it”?  Applied to sterilization, doesn’t that mean that the repentant sterilized couple wishes they had not done it and would not do it over again?  And doesn’t that mean that they wish they were still fertile?  And if so, would they not be practicing systematic NFP if they had a sufficiently serious reason to avoid pregnancy?  And so, how could such a repentant couple or their consulting priest think that the obligation to abstain during the fertile time as part of their change of heart is somehow out-of-the-ordinary? 

Sometimes I wonder if those who think that my position is too demanding actually think that systematic NFP is too demanding for real men.  If so, that implies that those of us who have accepted it are really sort of an effete elite.  On the contrary, I suggest that the real men of the Church and of our culture are those who accept the great challenge of chastity in a sexually saturated society.  Most such men and their spouses readily admit that chaste periodic abstinence is difficult and that they need prayer and grace to live a life of Christian chastity.  Not easy but true. 

I am convinced that this “too easy to be true” confessional practice must be changed as part of the authentic reform and renewal needed in moral theology.

*  *  *

Allow me to suggest that you obtain and read Sex and the Marriage Covenant: A Basis for Morality.  I don’t know where else you will find a 20-page chapter supporting the argument that the repentant sterilized couple ought to practice systematic NFP.  Father Peter M. J. Stravinskas expresses the same conviction in The Catholic Answer Book (OSV, 1990).  My chapter not only quotes him but also addresses at some length the various objections to our common conviction.

Tomorrow: What to do for the next 40 years?

John F. Kippley
Sex and the Marriage Covenant