Home The Theology of the Body Resources Articles Essays Links Email
GENERAL AUDIENCE OF WEDNESDAY, 8 AUGUST 1984
At the Wednesday general audience of 8 August in St Peter's Square, the Holy Father spoke again on the content of the Encyclical "Humanae Vitae," regarding the transmission of life. The following is our translation of the Holy Father's address.
1. We said previously that the principle of conjugal morality, taught by the Church (Second Vatican Council, Paul VI), is the criterion of faithfulness to the divine plan.
In conformity with this principle, the Encyclical
Humanae Vitae
clearly distinguishes between a morally illicit method of birth regulation or,
more precisely, of the regulation of fertility, and one that is morally correct.
In the first place "the direct interruption of the generative process already
begun [abortion]...is morally wrong" (HV 14), likewise "direct sterilization"
and "any action, which either before, at the moment of, or after sexual
intercourse, is specifically intended to prevent procreation" (HV 14)—therefore,
all contraceptive means. It is however morally lawful to have "recourse to
the infertile periods" (HV 16): "If therefore there are reasonable grounds
for spacing births, arising from the physical or psychological conditions of
husband or wife, or from external circumstances, the Church teaches that then
married people may take advantage of the natural cycles immanent in the
reproductive system and use their marriage at precisely those times that are
infertile, and in this way control birth without offending moral principles..."
(HV 16).
Natural regulation versus contraception
2. The Encyclical emphasizes especially that "between
the two cases there is an essential difference" (HV 16), and therefore a
difference of an ethical nature: "In the first case married couples rightly use
a facility provided them by nature; in the other case, they obstruct the natural
development of the generative process" (HV 16).
Two actions that are ethically different, indeed, even opposed, derive from
this: the natural regulation of fertility is morally correct; contraception is
not morally correct. This essential difference between the two actions (modes of
acting) concerns their intrinsic ethical character, even though my predecessor
Paul VI states that "in each case married couples, for acceptable reasons, are
both perfectly clear in their intention to avoid children." He even writes:
"...that they mean to make sure that none will be born" (HV 16). In these words
the document admits that even those who use contraceptive practices can be
motivated by "acceptable reasons." However, this does not change the moral
character which is based on the very structure of the conjugal act as such.
Moral and pastoral dimensions
3. It might be observed at this point that married
couples who have recourse to the natural regulation of fertility, might do so
without the valid reasons spoken of above. However, this is a separate
ethical problem, when one treats of the moral sense of responsible
parenthood.
Supposing that the reasons for deciding not to procreate are morally correct,
there remains the moral problem of the manner of acting in this case.
This is expressed in an act which—according
to the doctrine of the Church contained in the Encyclical—possesses
its own intrinsic moral qualification, either positive or negative. The first
one, positive, corresponds to the "natural" regulation of fertility; the second,
negative, corresponds to "artificial contraception."
4. The whole of the previous discussion is summed up in
the exposition of the doctrine contained in Humanae Vitae, by
pointing out its normative and at the same time its pastoral character. In the
normative dimension it is a question of making more precise and clear the moral
principles of action; in the pastoral dimension it is a question especially of
pointing out the possibility of acting in accordance with these principles ("the
possibility of the observance of the divine law", HV 20).
We should dwell on the interpretation of the content of the Encyclical.
To this end one must view that content, that normative-pastoral ensemble, in the
light of the theology of the body as it emerges from the analysis of the
biblical texts.
5. The theology of the body is not merely a theory, but rather a specific,
evangelical, Christian pedagogy of the body. This derives from the character of
the Bible, and especially of the Gospel. As the message of salvation, it reveals
man's true good, for the purpose of modeling—according
to the measure of this good—man's
earthly life in the perspective of the hope of the future world.
The Encyclical Humanae Vitae, following this line, responds to the
question about the true good of man as a person, as male and female; about that
which corresponds to the dignity of man and woman when one treats of the
important problem of the transmission of life by married couples.
To this problem we shall devote further reflection.
Taken from: L'OSSERVATORE ROMANO - English Edition -- Reprinted with Permission -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana - The Holy See