Archive for 2009

3. The right NFP course

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Part 3 of the right NFP course
The right kind of NFP course can and should teach the most basic lesson in morality “do good and avoid evil.”   Thus it can be an effective vehicle for bringing about authentic renewal within families, the Church and the culture.

      Do good by learning all three common God-given signs of fertility and knowing your times of fertility and infertility in normal cycles.
      Avoid evil by not engaging in contraceptive behaviors and the use of potentially abortifacient drugs and devices.
      Do good by being generous in having children, looking upon them as gifts from God, and bringing them up in the ways of the Lord.
      Avoid harm to your marriage by making sure that your marriage acts reflect the unreserved gift-of-self you vowed on your wedding day.
     Do good by caring for your babies with ecological breastfeeding, thus taking care of their psychological needs as well as providing optimum nutrition and postponing the return of fertility in a natural way.
     Avoid harm to your health by not using potentially harmful methods of birth control.
     Do good by believing that the Holy Spirit guides the Church through its Magisterium.
     Do good by joining the effort to build a culture of life.  Work with NFP International to spread all the goods news above.

What should couples learn in a well balanced NFP program?
What couples should learn is far more than just an inexpensive and effective method of spacing babies.   What they will learn in a well-rounded NFP program will include the following:

How the fertility-menstrual cycle functions
The common signs of fertility and infertility
The importance of well-balanced nutrition for healthy fertility
Natural ways to enhance fertility
The practical, health-related reasons for making the NFP-only decision
The moral and religious reasons for the NFP-only decision
The most accurate way to estimate the due date
Exclusive breastfeeding
Ecological breastfeeding
The return of fertility after childbirth
How to manage special situations
Rules for determining the least amount of abstinence consistent with the available evidence.

John F. Kippley
Sex and the Marriage Covenant
www.NFPandmore.org

2. The Right NFP Course

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Part 2 of the Right NFP Course
We think that every NFP program should mention morality, especially in connection with the abortifacient potential of hormonal birth control.  We have good reason to think that the idea of rejecting unnatural forms of birth control out of faith in the Spirit-led teaching of the Magisterium is lacking in some programs.
        We believe that the NFP course ought to be an agent of evangelization in the Church today.  Couples need to be affirmed in the Catholic belief that Jesus keeps his promises and that the Holy Spirit does lead the Magisterium to teach the truth. 

Serious reason.  The teaching of the Church is clear: NFP is not just a form of “Catholic birth control” to enable couples to fit in with the culture.  It calls for generosity in having children and teaches that couples need sufficiently serious reasons for using NFP to postpone and avoid pregnancy.  On the other hand, we regularly read criticisms that “NFP” seems to mean “Not For Procreation” to many couples.  We listened to a priest representing an NFP organization tell an EWTN audience that he is on a campaign to eliminate the use of the term “serious reason” from the NFP vocabulary, despite that terminology being in section 10 of Humanae Vitae. We view with caution the effort to explain this solely in terms of “just cause” because that can come across in today’s culture in the Church as “just cuz,” totally different from the use of “just cause” to flesh out the need for “serious reason.”
        We believe that the NFP course ought to address all these issues, teach the call to generosity, and explain the need for sufficiently serious reasons to use systematic NFP. 

John F. Kippley
Sex and the Marriage Covenant
www.NFPandmore.org

The Right Kind of NFP Course

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

A course on “Natural Family Planning” can mean distinctly different things, and thus there are considerably different NFP courses.  We believe that couples have a right to choose among morally permissible options.  To acknowledge that there is more than one morally okay option does not imply that every option is equally effective or good for their family.  The important thing is that in order to make such choices, couples have to learn enough to make evidence-based choices that are best for them. 

Two different forms of NFP.  Couples need to know that there are two distinctly different forms of natural family planning—ecological breastfeeding and systematic NFP.   

Ecological Breastfeeding (EBF) is the world’s oldest form of natural baby spacing.  It’s the form of nursing in which 1) the mother fulfills her baby’s needs for frequent suckling and her full-time presence and 2) in which the child’s frequent suckling postpones the return of the mother’s fertility.  Ecological breastfeeding is further defined by the Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding; these are maternal behaviors that assure mother-baby togetherness and frequent suckling.  Research-based evidence shows that mothers who follow these norms will experience an average of 14 to 15 months of breastfeeding infertility. 
        Ecological breastfeeding forms an integral part of the information couples deserve to know, and NFP International is currently the only American organization that teaches it as a form of NFP.     

The second form of natural family planning is Systematic NFP.  That refers to all those systems that are designed to determine the fertile and infertile times of the fertility-menstrual cycle.  Systems that teach all the common symptoms such as cervical mucus, waking body temperatures, and physical changes in the cervix are variations of the Sympto-Thermal Method, sometimes called the Cross-Check Method.  Systems that teach essentially only the cervical mucus sign are called variations of the Ovulation Method.  Some systems teach only variations of the original Calendar Rhythm first developed in the 1930s. Some systems also use high-tech tools to estimate the time of ovulation.  These are expensive and are not necessary in the use of NFP.  
        We believe that couples deserve to know all the common signs of fertility and infertility, and that’s why we teach the Sympto-Thermal version of systematic NFP. Only by learning how the common signs work together in a cross-checking way can couples make an adequately informed choice among the morally acceptable systems.

Estimating the date of childbirth.  The single best way to estimate the “due date” uses the temperature pattern associated with ovulation.  It does not require medical tests and expenses.  It is available to all those (but only those) who use the temperature sign.
        We believe that every couple deserves to know this due-date information.  Everyone concerned with reducing the cost of health care should be teaching this.

Motivation.  There are a number of reasons that lead couples to choose natural family planning.  Health.  Avoidance of risks of hormonal birth control.  Low cost and effectiveness.  Morality.  Faith.  All these reasons should be taught in an NFP course. 

John F. Kippley
Sex and the Marriage Covenant
www.NFPandmore.org