|
|
|

How
do you connect the dots from contraception to
abortion?
|

“All through the history of Christianity, contraception was
considered, along with abortion, as an intrinsically evil
undertaking, and if done with free will and sufficient
reflection, always a mortal sin, placing one's salvation in
eternal jeopardy. This was the consistent teaching of all
the fathers and doctors of the Church, even in the doctrines
and moral teachings of those Christians who, in the course
of history, were separated from Rome and the See of Peter,
as the Eastern Orthodox, and later, the various Protestant
groups were. The teaching about the evil of contraception
was maintained.” Bishop Fabian W. Bruskewitz Speech on
Humanae Vitae, 2003
• 1930: The Lambeth Conference. Anglican bishops approve use
of contraception by married couples under certain
circumstance. Other protestant denominations one by one
gradually followed.
• 1936: The United States Circuit Court of Appeals in the
“United State v One Package” made it possible for Doctors to
distribute condoms across State lines. Up until that time
the “Comstock Act” in 1873 had made all forms of
contraception illegal and it was a Federal offense to
disseminate birth control through the mail or across State
Lines. Soon after, 24 States enacted their own version of
Comstock Laws to restrict contraceptive trade on the State
level.
• 1957: The Pill becomes approved by the FDA for the control
of menstrual disorders and many women obtained prescriptions
for it on that basis. Research to develop the pill had been
started by Gregory Pincus in the early 50’s supported by
donations from Katharine Dexter McCormick and Margaret
Sanger.
• 1960: The Pill is approved for Contraceptive use by the
FDA. But, thirty six states still had the Comstock statutes
on the books prohibiting or restricting the sale and
advertisement of contraception. A new wave of Feminism was
growing that seemed to be further sparked in 1963 by Betty
Freidan’s book The Feminine Mystique.
• 1965: Based on the Right to Privacy found in the Due
Process clause of the 14th amendment, the U.S. Supreme Court
struck down the States Comstock Laws in the Griswold v
Connecticut decision and the Pill as well as all
contraception became easily accessible to married couples.
Some states retained ineffective laws against distribution
of contraceptives to unmarried persons. By 1965, 53% of
Catholic wives aged 18 to 39 had used contraception of some
form whereas that number had been 30% in 1955. - Catholics
and contraception: An American History
• 1968: Groups of theologians publicly refused to accept
Pope Paul VI’s teaching of the immorality of contraception
in Humanae Vitae. These theologians laid claim to a person’s
“Conscience” as being the supreme subjective norm of
morality and thus justified use of the Pill; even though the
Church teaches that “Conscience” as a moral compass has to
be educated to the level of understanding Divine Law and
Natural Law and could otherwise be erroneous (Bishop
Bruskewitz). Also, in the interim period between 1960 and
1968, many Catholics had assumed the Church’s position on
the Pill eventually would be favorable based on the opinions
of prominent outspoken Catholics.
• 1972: In the Eisenstadt vs. Baird the U.S. Supreme Court
extended its holding in the Griswold decision to unmarried
couples, whereas the "right of privacy" in Griswold only
applied to marital relationships. The argument for
Eisenstadt was built on the claim that it was a violation of
the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
deny unmarried couples the right to use contraception when
married couples did have that right.
• 1973: In the Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton decisions, using
the framework of the personal right to privacy of the 1965
Griswold decision, the Supreme Court legalized abortion
throughout all nine months of Pregnancy.
• 1992: In the Casey decision the Supreme Court reaffirms
its support for abortion citing Stare Decisis (precedent of
the Roe v Wade decision) and also citing the need to
maintain the right to abortion, justified by the reliance of
society on abortion as a backup to failed contraception.
“Growing use of the contraceptive pill in the 1960s helped
usher in an era of what proponents called “free love,” more
accurately called “sex without regard for consequences.” The
idea took hold that sexual activity could be separated from
responsibility for children and pursued simply for pleasure.
The result was an increase in premarital and extramarital
sex, divorce, sexually transmitted disease, and (ironically)
out-of-wedlock childbearing. The family that provides a
fitting context for welcoming new life was weakened, and
abortions increased.” The Prevention Deception: How not to
Reduce Abortions: Richard Doerflinger, USCCB 2007
An estimate for 1966 is that there were 125,000 illegal
abortions in the U.S. that year (PhysiciansForLife.org). But
now we have over one million Legal surgical abortions yearly
as well as a much larger number of chemical abortions.
Walt Hill: Placentia, CA, November, 2007
- back to
Q & A --
|
|