Monthly Archives: July 2008

On Human Life – 40 Years Later

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Perhaps no single teaching of the Catholic Church has ever evoked such uniform ridicule, laughter, vindictive taunts, as well as just plain old simple opposition as the famous Humanae Vitae (On Human Life), in which Pope Paul VI restated, despite enormous opposition from both within and outside of the church, the Church’s continual opposition to artificial contraception.

Now you may be tempted right now to simply stop reading, for any of a million reasons. I understand, because for much of my life I’d probably have had a similar reaction. But I’m going to ask you to be patient and at least read to the end. Perhaps, like me, you’ll find that the overwhelming weight of evidence might lead you to some, perhaps even shocking, new thoughts on the topic. I know that is exactly what happened to me over the past 30 years.

The encyclical itself was issued on July 25th, 1968, and to put it colloquially, all sorts of “stuff” hit the fan. Paul VI anticipated this, in fact, but was willing to do what he had to do. From Humane Vitae:

It is to be anticipated that perhaps not everyone will easily accept this particular teaching. There is too much clamorous outcry against the voice of the Church … But it comes as no surprise to the Church that she, no less than her divine Founder, is destined to be a “sign of contradiction.” She does not, because of this, evade the duty imposed on her of proclaiming humbly but firmly the entire moral law …

In preserving intact the whole moral law of marriage, the Church is convinced that she is contributing to the creation of a truly human civilization.

Outside the Church Humanae Vitae was taken as proof that the Catholic Church was doomed, clueless, flopping on the floor like one giant dying fish out of water, while inside the Church it was even worse – dissidents held up a desecrated Humanae Vitae as a sort of Confederate Flag, their own symbol of rebellion from a dying Union.

I grew up (particularly upon a radical re-conversion back to the faith in college in 1975) in the wake of Humanae Vitae, in the supposed bliss of the sexual revolution, when humanity would use it’s new scientific knowledge to finally fix all of the world’s suffering and give us all we could ever want.

Stuff like theology and dogma, the actual teachings of the Church? Well despite my new-found zeal for the faith I suppose that I really regarded this kind of stuff as really only suitable for zealots, for the really crazy ones. And Humanae Vitae? Well, it was sort of like peculiar behavior from a crazy older relative – if somebody pressed me on it, I’d try my best to smile, shrug my shoulders, maybe mumble and definitely try to change the subject.

One Crazy Thing and a Big Irony
Except here’s the really peculiar, almost funny (except for the disastrous consequences), and definitely crazy thing about Humanae Vitae, particularly when viewed with 40 years of history behind us: Pope Paul VI was right.

Not just a little bit right, but walk-off-grand-slam right.

The ironic part? Most of the real proof is coming from outside of the church, sometimes by genuinely curious social scientists simply doing their work, sometimes from rabid opponents inadvertently confirming the predictions.

Consequences
What were some of these consequences? Well, to give you a basic idea I’m simply going to quote from a brilliant analysis by Mary Eberstadt in the current issue of First Things:

The encyclical warned of four resulting trends: a general lowering of moral standards throughout society; a rise in infidelity; a lessening of respect for women by men; and the coercive use of reproductive technologies by governments.

Take a few moments to reflect on those points, and see whether the world we inhabit in 2008 exhibits any of these characterstics, at least more so than 1968.

Pretty hard to argue with it, I think. In fact, I’d argue (and I think not only the objective numbers but subjective personal experience supports this simple, but pointed observation: the world we inhabit today bears almost no resemblence to what the proponents of the sexual revolution promised.

In any case, continuing with her article:

… most of the experts actually producing the empirical evidence (that Humanae Vitae predictions were right) have been social scientists operating in the secular realm.

“I cannot imagine any development in human history, after the Fall, that has had a greater impact on human beings than the Pill. . . . The entire horizon of the sexual act changes. I think there can be no question that the Pill gave incredible license to everything from adultery and affairs to premarital sex and within marriage to a separation of the sex act and procreation.”

– Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

The entire analysis is well worth the read and careful reflection, but more on that later.

In the Long History of Christianity
Perhaps the most striking fact about the acceptance of artificial contraception itself is simply that it flies in the face of an essentially unbroken line of Christian tradition, both Protestant and Catholic alike. Again from the same article:

Of course, all that Paul VI did … was reiterate what just about everyone in the history of Christendom had ever said on the subject … It was, in a word, No.

… Martin Luther in a commentary on Genesis declared contraception to be worse than incest or adultery. John Calvin called it an “unforgivable crime.” This unanimity was not abandoned until the year 1930, when the Anglicans voted to allow married couples to use birth control in extreme cases, and one denomination after another over the years came to follow suit.

Seen in the light of actual Christian tradition, the question is not after all why the Catholic Church refused to collapse on the point. It is rather why just about everyone else in the Judeo-Christian tradition did. Whatever the answer, the Catholic Church took, and continues to take, the public fall for causing a collapse—when actually it was the only one not collapsing.

A careful look at the now historical record of the past 40 years really makes the case far more eloquently than I ever could – Paul VI was right about the consequences that would result.

What then?

Personal Effects
Our own lives, mostly unintentionally, have mirrored both the good effects that resulted from obeying the dictates of Humanae Vitae, and some of the tragic consequences from straying outside. That story has some very painful aspects to it and is not really ready (and may never be, at least not this side of the veil) to fully see the light of day.

Yet there have been some enormously grace-filled, beautful moments that we still enjoy today. In a later post I’ll mention a few vignettes from our personal life, particularly where they may be helpful for those making their minds up on these things.

A Crazy Idea?
This may seem like a completely crazy idea or it may make a lot of sense to you, but either way about ten years ago Archbishop Chaput put into words what so many of us have had trouble even admitting might be true, much less actually articulating in public:

“If Paul VI was right about so many of the consequences deriving from contraception, it is because he was right about contraception itself.”

– Arch Chaput of Denver, on the 30th anniversary of Humanae Vitae

So perhaps it comes down to just this. Taking the emotion out of the argument, just look at the facts. Read the encyclical (it’s short – I read it in about one or two hours), look at some of the articles analyzing the evidence of the past 40 years, perhaps dive into some of that evidence itself.

And then see where that evidence and simple logic takes you … perhaps even questioning assumptions and conclusions that we’ve taken as simply “givens” for must (if not all) of our lives.

Stuff to Ponder
This is a very rich, very deep topic and it’s almost hard to know where to stop. But maybe simpler is “where to begin”?

Personally, I think it’s worth starting by reading Humanae Vitae itself. I sat down to read the famous encyclical for the first time in my life yesterday, and finished it in an hour and a half to two hours (with distractions). While it may not be soaring poetry, it is a compact, sincere, well-grounded, loving presentation of what needed to be said in 1968 … and what needs to be understood in 2008.

So I’ve included a link to it here (in two forms), as well as a host of other materials, including:

This is obviously a topic which remains ever-current, and as Fr. Corapi notes actually gains in significance with each passing day. For those who care we are definitely in the throes of some real struggle.

Catholic or not, Christian or not, or simply not sure where you stand … this is worth a serious look. The evidence is real, the record is clear, the questions lie before us even now.

Two More Things
First of all, 40 years after Humanae Vitae the Catholic Church is in no way “doomed”. In fact, despite seemingly overwhelming odds, many self-inflicted injuries, and the predictions of many opponents, despite all that there are increasingly visible signs of fundamental renewal everywhere.

Much of that renewal is being led by the youth, whether it’s at these really stunning World Youth Day events (there were 500,000 people for the closing Mass at the WYD that just ended in Sydney, Australia), or regional events like Youth 2000 or the Steubenville Conferences there’s energy and real lives changing everywhere. Seminaries are filling back up, vocations to renewed religious orders are increasing, Catholic media (EWTN etc.) not only exists but is having growing impact everywhere, conversions into the Church are steadily increasing, innovative “new evangelization” efforts such as Catholics Come Home are showing real results, and much, much more.

Are there problems? Of course, and there will undoubtedly be many more. This is a battle after all. But there is hope, much hope all around.

Secondly, I want to thank Pope Paul VI for having the courage to take this stand when the whole world was sliding headlong in the opposite direction.

It’s almost as if our society was tumbling down the mountain on which it was perched, and in the middle of the chaos Paul VI planted a solid pole of truth to hold onto.

Perhaps overly dramatic? Maybe. But the stakes are that high, to be sure.

Muchas gracias, Papa.

Hiding from God

Lord, before whose eyes the abyss of man’s conscience lies naked, what thing within me could be hidden from you, even if I would not confess it to you?

I would be hiding you from myself, not myself from you.

-St. Augustine of Hippo, The Confessions

Hmm … Blogging from the iPhone Now

Just a quick note to let you know that I’m going to try using this new app from wordpress that allows me to create posts directly on my phone.

Why this fascinates so much I don’t know, but it is definitely fun. I’ll let you know how it works out.

In the meantime, UFR perhaps I’m just fascinated in a Curious George sort of way …

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Onwards and Upwards

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From a letter by Ignatius of Antioch to the church in Magnesia:

We should then really live as Christians and not merely have the name …

All things have an end, and two things, life and death, are side by side set before us, and each man will go to his own place … unbelievers bear the image of this world, and those who have faith with love bear the image of God the Father through Jesus Christ.

Unless we are ready through his power to die in the likeness of his passion, his life is not in us.

- St. Ignatius of Antioch, marching towards execution

Today it is so easy for us (at least it is for me) to get very caught up in building a company, working through struggles in the family, even thinking about whether it’s too late to “save” the lawn from this year’s summer heat by turning on the sprinklers.

Or maybe fixating on the newest iPhone or Blackberry (mea culpa) … stuff that we know is only going to matter to us for a few months, or perhaps a year at best.

Yet it has always been so – easily preoccupied to the point of distractions by all sorts of things that aren’t worthy of that sort of attention.

For example, St. Peter used the image (1 Peter 1: 23-25) of how quickly grass “withers and fades” to turn our eyes away from what seems so important … to the things that last.

Back to St. Ignatius
So with that in mind, let’s go back to the short selection quoted above. The letter itself was taken from the second reading in this morning’s Office of the Readings (first part of the Liturgy of the Hours), and was probably written about 107 or 108.

Just in case you’re tempted to dismiss his encouragement as abstract ramblings, just so much theoretical knowledge or perhaps simply theological flights of fancy, understand that when he wrote this letter St. Ignatius was on a two year journey to his death.

Traveling in chains with ten or so Roman soldiers, St. Ignatius (the bishop of Antioch) frequently met with groups of Christians to offer encouragement. He also wrote a few letters, of which seven have survived from this remarkable journey.

Though not quite rising to the levels of canonicity, these letters are worthy of study and reflection. St. Ignatius had the impending reality of cruel martyrdom to help him get his priorities straight, to motivate him to break from the drudgery of walking halfway around the world in chains and simply think about what really mattered.

Even in this very short quote, he calls any who dare call ourselves Christian to a very high standard … We should then really live as Christians and not merely have the name … Unless we are ready through his power to die in the likeness of his passion, his life is not in us.

Now that’s intense.

Things that Last
So today, perhaps with the help of St. Ignatius let’s ask God to turn our heart towards Him, towards the things that last.

May our hearts be open to the change needed so that we are not merely Christians in name, but in fact. Not only in words, but in deed …

and begin to savor real joy.

Virtousity (male) in the 21st Century?

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Try this the next time you’re hanging around with some guys … just ask them two questions:

  1. What does it mean to be a virtuous man?
  2. Is it even possible?

I bet that’ll be an interesting social experiment in and of itself …

The Art of Manly Virtue
In a great article posted today over at Catholic Exchange, Mickey Addison explores what it means to be a man in our post-Christian, post-post modern, too-hip-to-be-you uber-snarky 21st century western culture.

Here are some choice quotes:

… men are more often presented as hapless perpetual adolescents or dimwitted loons who stumble their way through life haphazardly and without virtue …

… here’s my offering of manly virtue: work, honesty, respect, self-sacrifice, courage, honor, and piety.

Like all things in the lives of Christians, our model for manly virtue is Christ.

Jesus Christ worked hard all of His life and lived simply. He honored His Mother, He was compassionate to the poor and less fortunate, and He was courageous. On more than one occasion He stepped physically between unjust men and persecuted women. He obeyed the Law, but didn’t shrink from challenging authorities who had become so enamored with the Law itself they forgot its purpose.

Our Lord is the original action hero.

… real men still seek conquest and battle, they just seek it in the service of Our Lord and not in service to themselves.

It wasn’t long ago that the assault on masculinity in the West began … it’s time for real men to take their places in the line and turn back the tide.

Indeed.

While some of our buddies may think the very idea of virtue is pretty funny, and the Desperate Housewives / Dr. Phil crowd may think that men are weak, tempestuous morons to be manipulated and trashed at will, the plain truth is that all men are called to virtue.

Virtue is not some touchy-feely “can’t we all just get along” ideal, it’s the hard-nosed, foundational stuff missing in so many dysfunctional / broken families, churches, workplaces … for that matter, in so many broken parts of our often-decaying society.

Time to Step Up
So let’s take a hard look at the real men that have gone before us, starting of course with our Lord Jesus Christ, and continuing on to St. Joseph and the legion of saintly, manly men who have fought the good fight in days gone by.

But let’s do more than look … let’s step up our game and become real men.