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Responsible Parenthood
0n Wednesday morning, 1 August, at the general audience in St Peter’s
Square, Pope John Paul II continued his analysis of Paul VI's Encyclical
"Humanae Vitae” and the Conciliar document "Gaudium et Spes" in the context
of his theme responsible parenthood. Following is our translation of the
Holy Father's address.
1. For today we have chosen the theme of "responsible parenthood" in
the light of the Constitution Gaudium et Spes and of the Encyclical
Humanae Vitae.
The Council document, in treating of the subject, limits itself to
recalling the basic premises; the papal document, however, goes further,
giving to these premises a more concrete content.
The Council text reads as follows: "When it is a question of harmonizing
married love with the responsible transmission of life, it is not enough
to take only the good intention and the evaluation of motives into account;
the objective criteria must be used, criteria drawn from the nature of
the human person and human action, criteria which respect the total meaning
of mutual self-giving and human procreation in the context of true love;
all this is possible only if the virtue of married chastity is seriously
practised" (GS 51).
The Council adds: "In questions of birth regulation the sons of the
Church, faithful to these principles, are forbidden to use methods disapproved
of by the teaching authority of the Church" (GS 51).
Ruled by conscience
2. Before the passage quoted (cf. GS 50), the Council teaches that married
couples "shall fulfil their role with a sense of human and Christian responsibility
and the formation of correct judgments through docile respect for God."
(GS 50). This involves "common reflection and effort; it also involves
a consideration of their own good and the good of their children already
born or yet to come, an ability to read the signs of the times and of their
own situation on the material and spiritual level, and finally, an estimation
of the good of the family, of society and of the Church."(GS 50).
At this point there follow words of particular importance to determine
with greater precision the moral character of “responsible parenthood”.
We read: "It is the married couple themselves who must in the last analysis
arrive at these judgments before God" (GS 50).
And it continues: "Married people should realize that in their behaviour
they may not simply follow their own fancy but must be ruled by conscience—and
conscience ought to be conformed to the law of God in the light of the
teaching authority of the Church, which is the authentic interpreter of
divine law. For the divine law throws light on the meaning of married love,
protects it and leads it to truly human fulfillment" (GS 50).
3. The Council document, in limiting itself to recalling the necessary
premises for responsible parenthood, has set them out in a completely unambiguous
manner, clarifying the constitutive elements of such parenthood, that is,
the mature judgment of the personal conscience in relationship to the divine
law, authentically interpreted by the Magisterium of the Church.
True conjugal love
4. The encyclical Humanae Vitae, basing itself on the same premises,
goes further and offers concrete indications. This is seen, first of all,
in the way of defining "responsible parenthood". (HV 10). Paul VI seeks
to clarify this concept by considering its various aspects and excluding
beforehand its reduction to one of the "partial" aspects as is done by
those who speak exclusively of birth control. From the very beginning,
indeed, Paul VI is guided in his reasoning by an integral concept of man
(cf. HV 7) and of conjugal love (cf. HV 8;9).
Under different aspects
5. One can speak of responsibility in the exercise of the function of
parenthood under different aspects. Thus he writes: "In relation to the
biological processes involved, responsible parenthood is to be understood
as the knowledge and observance of their specific functions. Human intelligence
discovers in the faculty of procreating life, the biological laws which
involve human personality" (HV 10). If, on the other hand, we examine "the
innate drives and emotions of man, responsible parenthood expresses the
domination which reason and will must exert over them" (HV 10).
Taking for granted the above mentioned intra-personal aspects and adding
to them the "economic and social conditions", those are considered
"to exercise responsible parenthood who prudently and generously decide
to have a large family, or who, for serious reasons and with due respect
to the moral law, choose to have no more children for the time being or
even for an indeterminate period" (HV 10).
From this it follows that the concept of "responsible parenthood" contains
the disposition not merely to avoid "a further birth" but also to increase
the family in accordance with the criteria of prudence. In this light in
which the question of "responsible parenthood" must be examined and
decided, there is always of paramount importance "the objective moral order
instituted by God, the order of which a right conscience is the true interpreter"
(HV 10).
6. The commitment to responsible parenthood requires that husband and
wife "keeping a right order of priorities, recognize their own duties towards
God, themselves, their families and human society" (HV 10). One cannot
therefore speak of "acting arbitrarily". On the contrary the
married couple "must act in conformity with God's creative intention."
(HV 10). Beginning with this principle the Encyclical bases its reasoning
on the "intimate structure of the conjugal act" and on “the inseparable
connection of the two significances of the conjugal act" (cf. HV
12), as was already stated previously. The relative principle of conjugal
morality is, therefore, fidelity to the divine plan manifested in the "intimate
structure of the conjugal act" and in the "inseparable connection of the
two significances of the conjugal act".
L'Osservatore Romano August 6, 1983
Reprinted with permission
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