NEW
PILL PROMISES NO MORE PERIODS. WHAT ARE THE
CONSEQUENCES? |

Promoters of a new pill claim that a woman’s periods can be
eliminated forever. But does it stop ovulation also? Can
a woman get pregnant? Dr. Mary Martin M.D., FACOG explains:
“ Of course there is ‘escape ovulation.’ No woman is
perfectly compliant with medication. OCP's require the dose
to be taken at the same time of day, every day and assumes
that absorption and distribution of the drug will always be
uniform. Admittedly, taking the pill for such long periods
of time decreases the chance of pregnancy because of the
chronic suppressive effects on ovulation, but the definition
of when life begins has now been changed to facilitate the
agenda of the contraceptive mentality. Chronic thinning of
the endometrial lining will most likely prevent implantation
if escape ovulation occurs. The potential to prevent just
one life from coming to fruition should be reason enough to
avoid Lybrel.”
A
New York ad promoting sales for the pill cites certain
advantages. Now a woman can avoid having a monthly reminder
of her biological clock. But this is part of a woman’s
femininity. A woman’s fertility expresses itself in a
monthly cycle of ovulation and menstruation. That is the
way God designed Eve and all her daughters. Fertility in a
woman is one of her features which makes her so attractive
to men. It has been this way for millennia.
Of
course, every married woman wants some control over her
fertility. She wants to space her children responsibly,
having as many children as she and her husband can provide
for. Good reasons exist for spacing pregnancies, and
sometimes avoiding pregnancy for an indefinite period of
time. This is the role of NFP. But to reject one’s
fertility completely is contrary to the way God designed us.
Our
fertility is a good thing, not a bad thing; a sign of
health, not of a disease. It should be treasured as a part
of our makeup as bodied-persons, as either a male-person or
a female-person, fertile and sexual. Just as we should not
turn against our bodily health, so also we should not turn
against our fertility.
I am a
celibate person. As a Benedictine monk and a Catholic
priest, my calling in life requires that I forgo having a
spouse, enjoying the spousal act, and taking on the
responsibilities of a husband and father. Instead, God has
asked me to be totally available to honor and glorify Him
through a commitment of service to his people. Celibacy is
a gift God gives to some “for the sake of the kingdom.”
Already in this world the celibate gives a real (vs.
symbolic) witness to what our status will be in Heaven,
where there will be no giving and receiving as experienced
now in marriage. Celibacy is closely related to what Jesus
asked Peter: “Do you love me, Peter? ... Then feed my
sheep.” As a celibate male-person, I experience the same
desires and attractions of any healthy man. But my calling
in life requires total abstinence from the spousal act.
A
celibate person treasures the gifts of human fertility,
spousal love and family life. These are endowments of the
human race, completely necessary for the continuation of the
race. A lot of my time as a priest, monk, and moral
theologian is spent in helping others discover the value of
their sexuality and fertility, and how to live it in a fully
human manner.
The
New York ad asks: “Will this mean a whole new relationships
with your boyfriend, your co-workers, your boss?” Perhaps
the ad is referring only to the “bad moods” frequently
associated with PMS, the mood swings caused by powerful
hormonal changes in the woman’s body. But the ad is also
suggesting that the “liberated” woman is now able to share
her intimacies with whomever she chooses, since there will
be no pregnancies. Happily married young wives explain to
me why this makes no sense. A woman, as God designed her,
wants to know that she is unconditionally accepted by the
person to whom she gives herself completely. She needs
total unconditional acceptance of herself, just as God made
her, which includes her fertility.
A
woman wants to be respected for her own dignity, for the
person God designed her to be. A career is part of the
picture, but undeniably present are her powerful instincts
to be a spouse and mother. A woman wants to be appreciated
as a woman, for her feminine genius, for the complementarity
she brings to a successful marriage and family. Asking a
woman to sacrifice her fertility and much of her feminine
mystique in exchange for a career is asking too high a
price. If the “new freedom” means easy availability for
casual recreational sex, then it is full of illusions.
There is no dignity in easy availability. There is no deep
level emotional bonding in easy sex. There is no
satisfaction in a relationship which could end at any time
when fickle moods and interests change. And there is no
freedom when a woman cannot just be herself as a female
bodied-person.
The
new pill is a good example of the limits to technology. We
can develop new generations of pills which suppress
fertility with an iron grip. But we don’t have a clue about
the correct use of this technology. We can’t explain how
and why these new contraceptives will make us 1) become
nobler persons, 2) make us more capable of offering the
total gift of ourselves to the one we love, or 3) satisfy
our deeper hungers for bonding and intimacy.
Cordially yours,
Fr.
Matthew Habiger OSB www.nfpoutreach.org
mhabiger@kansasmonks.org
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