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MicheleQ Forum All-Star
Joined: Feb 23 2005 Location: Pennsylvania
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Posted: June 24 2006 at 12:50pm | IP Logged
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I'm still waiting for it to appear online in English but we received our Diocesan paper this afternoon and there we're some quotes from it. I'm rather amazed because it seems to directly address the use of NFP as birth control and I haven't yet seen anything quite so clear.
Here's the quote from our paper (also found on Catholic News Service): "When for the good of the entire family it is best to avoid having another child, couples can abstain from sexual intercourse during fertile periods to avoid a pregnancy. However, using natural family planning to have only one or a maximum of two children "is nothing other than a kind of series of brief parentheses within an entire conjugal life willingly made sterile,"
I'd sure like to read the whole thing . . .in English!
God bless,
__________________ Michele Quigley
wife to my prince charming and mom of 10 in Lancaster County, PA USA
http://michelequigley.com
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Christine Forum All-Star
Joined: March 23 2006 Location: Washington
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Posted: June 25 2006 at 2:19pm | IP Logged
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Dear Michele,
Thank you for posting this. I read a very biased report on it in our Diocesan paper today. The article almost seemed to be pitting Pope Benedict XVI and Cardinal Trujillo against each other in several places, including the title. I was so happy that I had read your post first. I am looking forward to seeing, reading and hearing what Pope Benedict XVI and Cardinal Trujillo say when they are in Spain next month. Pope Benedict XVI and Cardinal Trujillo are in my prayers, as the media tries to portray them as understanding Church teachings differently.
Please let me know if you find the whole document in English. I will do likewise.
__________________ Christine
Mommy to 4 girls, 5 boys, & 2 in God's care
Memories of a Catholic Wife and Mother
Pretty Lilla Rose
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cvbmom Forum All-Star
Joined: Feb 15 2005 Location: Ohio
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Posted: June 26 2006 at 7:42am | IP Logged
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Yes, please keep us all posted when you find the whole document in English! I am very interested in this topic.
Christine
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Dawnie Forum All-Star
Joined: Aug 30 2005 Location: Kansas
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Posted: June 26 2006 at 10:47pm | IP Logged
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Wow! I'm glad to see something so straightforward being said about the selfish use of NFP.
Is this an encyclical? Do you know if it will address the use of condoms by couples in which one spouse has AIDS? I know the Church will uphold her teaching, but all the hype in the media about a "possible change" in the prohibition against contraception just make me want to scream!
Dawn
__________________ Mom to Mary Beth (99), Anna (02), Lucia (04), Clara (06), and Adelaide Victoria (2/28/09)
Visit my blog!Water Into Wine:Vino Per Tutto!
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Jen L. Forum All-Star
Joined: Oct 18 2005 Location: Virginia
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Posted: June 26 2006 at 11:45pm | IP Logged
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It looks like it's still not out in English, but I found more excerpts on catholicfire (blogspot)..(Warning: Long Post below :-)
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR THE FAMILY PUBLISHES NEW DOCUMENT ON THE FAMILY AND HUMAN PROCREATION
VATICAN CITY, JUN 6, 2006 (VIS) - The Pontifical Council for the Family, founded 25 years ago by John Paul II with the Motu Proprio "Familia a Deo Instituta," and presided by Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, today published a document entitled: "Family and Human Procreation."
The text, according to an explanatory note written by Fr. Abelardo Lobato O.P., consultor of the pontifical council, "is destined to be an object of study, both for its doctrine and in its pastoral application." The document opens with "an introduction to the theme of the relationship between ... the family and procreation."
This theme is then developed over four chapters covering "procreation; why the family is the only appropriate place for it; what is meant by integral procreation within the family; and what social, juridical, political, economic and cultural aspects does service to the family entail" The fifth chapter presents the theme "from two complementary perspectives: the theological, in that the family is an image of the Trinity; and the pastoral, because the family lies at the foundation of the Church and is a place of evangelization."
"The document," the explanatory note continues, "makes reference above all to Vatican Council II, to Pope John Paul II who dedicated great attention to these matters, and to the recent 'Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church.' All this means that the document aims not only to find a doctrinal approach to the problem, but also to open doors to future research on the questions that are the object of discussion today."
The introduction evokes the words of John Paul II in Puebla, Mexico, in 1979, where "he affirmed that the Church possesses the truth about man and at the same time seeks the truth entire. Man is not just a 'rational animal,' he is also familial. The family is connatural to man and was instituted by God. But today man has become a great enigma to himself and lives through the most acute crisis of his history in its family dimension: the family is subject to attack as never before; the new models of the family destroy it; procreation techniques jettison human love; the politics of birth control lead to the current 'demographic winter.' ... Along these paths ... we deviate towards a 'post-human' world. It is necessary to save man."
An understanding of human procreation, the text goes on, may be attained from various perspectives: "the historical," reaffirming the value historically attached to having descendants, "the anthropological, ... and the religious, which places man before God the Creator, Who infuses a soul into each individual and relies on man's cooperation to achieve the fullness of human existence."
The explanatory note continues: "Procreation is the means of transmitting life by the loving union of man and woman," and it "must be truly human." This means that it must be the "fruit of the actions of man," and the "fruit of a human act, free, rational, and responsible for the transmission of life. ... The unitive act of man and woman cannot be separated from its connatural dimension, which is that of procreation and which makes responsible paternity and maternity possible. Only on this personal basis can conjugal morality be understood.
"The Church's doctrinal documents, such as the Encyclical 'Humanae vitae,' and the Apostolic Exhortation 'Familiaris consortio,' refer to the fundamental principle of the dignity of human beings and their ethical dimension." The condemnation of abortion, the inseparable nature of the two dimensions - the unitive and the procreative - and the view of sexuality as a procreative function, "have their foundation in individual beings and their dignity."
"This is the key to the solution: an integral understanding of what is human. Without a 'meta-anthropology' which touches the being, the substance, the spirit, there can be no integral understanding of what is human, because the concepts of person and being are emptied of content. Morals and religion, which are fundamental and decisive values, are reduced to a 'private matter.' The return of metaphysics is vital in order to regain a sense of what is human in man.
"The human being is a familial being," Fr. Lobato's note adds, "and for this reason has the characteristics of a social, political, economic, cultural, juridical and religious being. The family is involved with each of these aspects, which are essential to it. The family requires services, help, protection and constant promotion; and the document indicates how each of these elements should develop. It emphasizes the juridical dimension and recalls that in 1983 the Holy See published the first 'Charter of the Rights of the Family,' which is a solid defense of that institution."
"The doctrine concerning integral human procreation," the note concludes, "is corroborated by the theology of creation and by the mystery of salvation revealed in Jesus Christ and put into effect in the new evangelization. The Creator wished human beings to be two-in-one; the Redeemer assumed the familial condition in Nazareth reminding everyone of the nature of the family since the beginning of the divine plan: two in a single flesh."
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Christine Forum All-Star
Joined: March 23 2006 Location: Washington
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Posted: June 27 2006 at 9:42am | IP Logged
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No, it is not an encyclical. It is a document that was written by Cardinal Trujillo. Here is some more information from Zenit.
__________________ Christine
Mommy to 4 girls, 5 boys, & 2 in God's care
Memories of a Catholic Wife and Mother
Pretty Lilla Rose
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