The contraceptive mentality has
entered into the
preaching practices of all the
Catholic churches I have attended since August 1968.”
Stem cell research: Down the
slippery slope from contraception
By Dermott J. Mullan
On Earlier this summer, the
news media gave a lot of publicity to stem cell research, including promises
that great medical advances will come from this research. The search for such
advances is, on the face of it, a laudable goal. The problem is that in order to
do this research, the stem cells often are extracted from a living human embryo.
And in the process of extraction, this unborn human embryo dies.
The health improvements are
only a promise at this stage of the research. But the killing of the unborn is
not a promise: it is a fact.
How did our society ever get to
the stage where an uncertain promise, with no guarantee of success, can so
overshadow people’s thinking that they are prepared to kill another human being
in an attempt to achieve the goal?
Actually, the same question
arose about ten years ago, when researchers promised that Parkinson’s disease
could be cured by implanting cells from aborted babies. Unfortunately, things
did not work out as the researchers had hoped. In fact, when tissues from the
aborted babies were inserted into Parkinson’s patients, the conditions of the
patients deteriorated, with the appearance in some cases of bizarre symptoms
(reported in The Lancet, March 17, 2001). Thus, the early optimism came
to nothing.
There are even reports of
parents who conceive a child with the specific aim of aborting the baby so that
genetically suitable material can be available for a sibling. These “designer
babies” are the latest development in the process whereby our culture has
distorted God’s plan for pro-creation, i.e., the gift of participating with him
in bringing a new human being into existence, to anti-creation, i.e., the
deliberate creation of life in order to destroy it.
How did things go so badly
wrong? When did we start down this horrific road? Why are so few people in our
culture questioning this massive holocaust? The answer is clear: it all started
with contraception.
The distortion of God’s plan begins:
August 14, 1930
For 1900 years, Christians believed (and taught) that interfering with God’s
plan of pro-creation was sinful. This age-old teaching survived even the major
disruption associated with the Protestant Reformation. The word “vice” was in
widespread use by members of all denominations as a common euphemism for birth
control.
And it was not merely
Christians who believed that contraception was wrong. Mahatma Gandhi wrote:
“Contraceptives are an insult to womanhood. The only difference between a
prostitute and a woman who uses contraceptives is that the former sells her body
to many men, the latter to one only…. It is the work of our generation to
glorify vice by calling it virtue.”
It was in the year 1930 that a
drastic departure from this age-old teaching occurred. On August 14 of that
year, members of the principal English-speaking post-Reformation denomination,
the Anglican Church, meeting in conference at Lambeth Palace in London, voted to
do away with the old teaching. Anglican couples were told by their bishops that
the use of contraceptives was no longer sinful.
The consequences of this
revised teaching were enormous and widespread. It was as if an earthquake had
struck, with its epicenter in the Anglican Church. So great was the influence of
the Anglicans among the post-Reformation denominations, that the devastation of
the earthquake spread rapidly from its Anglican epicenter to other Protestant
denominations. Most of the latter eventually also retreated from the age-old
Christian teaching that contraception is vice. Among the thousands of Protestant
denominations existing in the USA today, it is virtually impossible to identify
any that teach unambiguously the sinfulness of contraception.
Contraception: two responses
Within a few months of the Anglican bishops’ vote at Lambeth, two perceptive
observers, writing from totally different viewpoints, undertook the task of
spelling out to the world just what the consequences of contraception would be.
It is hard to imagine two more
unlikely comrades-in-arms in the battle against contraception. One was the Pope;
the other was an atheist. Despite these differences, the writings of both men
painted a vivid picture of the disasters that would accompany a contracepting
world.
The encyclical Casti Connubii
Recognizing the threat that contraception posed to humanity, Pope Pius XI
started working right after the Lambeth conference on a reiteration of true
Christian teaching. The Pope labored mightily, and within four months of the
Lambeth vote, he brought forth the encyclical Casti Connubii. This
teaching, a twenty-thousand word document to serve as armor for Catholics
against the onslaught, has recently been referred to by Steve Wood, founder of
Catholic Family International, as the most important document on family life in
the 20th century.
The Pope approached the issue
from the standpoint of the age-old Christian teaching that goes all the way back
to the first earliest chapters of the Bible. When God originally made man in his
image and likeness, he created them male and female. There is something about
the gift of sexuality that is in the image and likeness of God. It is not hard
to see what that something is: sexuality is meant by God to be used by husband
and wife to give themselves entirely to each other, leading to growth in their
love for each other, and also possibly making new life grow. As part of that new
life, God uses his infinite creative power to bring forth from nothing a new
human soul, a soul that will live for eternity.
Pope Pius wrote that God’s plan
for husbands and wives includes cooperating with Him not simply to bringing
forth children for this world, but also “fellow citizens of the saints, and
members of the household of God” (Eph. 2: 19). This is a serious duty of married
couples. If people choose to interfere with God’s plan for bringing new human
beings into existence, the Pope reminded Catholics that such a choice is
intrinsically evil. Always. The evil is so serious that mortal sin is involved.
The Pope predicted that access
to contraceptives would tend to make people become promiscuous. Nature has its
own way of discouraging promiscuity: there is always the possibility of
pregnancy. But contraceptives make it possible to circumvent this aspect of
nature.
Moreover, human nature being
what it is, when contraception is available, men are more likely to treat women
as objects of pleasure. And if women are treated as objects in their own home,
the dignity of womanhood and motherhood eventually disappears. God’s plan for
the woman to be the heart of the home (Pope Pius XI’s phrase) is thwarted.
Contraceptive marriage no
longer provides the natural situation where men and women can fulfil their
distinct and complementary God-given roles with dignity and joy. This leads to
the break-down of marriage itself, both as an institution and as a sacrament.
The Pope painted a truly disastrous picture of what would happen to families if
contraceptives were allowed to become part of marital life.
The novel Brave New World
Aldous Huxley, a novelist with no religious beliefs, was not quite as quick off
the mark as Pope Pius XI. But he came close. Four months after the Pope issued
his encyclical, Huxley started work on a novel describing what a contracepting
world would look like. By August 1931, the novel was complete. Included in
Huxley’s picture of such a world, there is a grim picture of what the Anglican
Church would become as a result of its support for contraception.
It is not easy to recommend
this novel. Its description of the promiscuity that is fostered by the
controllers of society makes for unsavory reading.
But the primary focus of the
novel, and the aspect which shows most clearly the link between contraception
and stem cell research, is its detailed description of how God’s plan for family
life is completely set aside and replaced by the sterile world of test-tubes.
Babies are deliberately engineered in test-tubes to have varying degrees of
intelligence. The smartest ones are called Alphas: from this group, the
controllers of society emerge. Below the Alphas, there are four lower grades,
the lowest being Epsilon: these are referred to as semi-morons, and are designed
to perform the most menial tasks in society. The controllers decide how many of
each class of human is to be developed at any time. This is “family planning”
carried to its logical extreme.
In this brave new world, God’s
plan for human life is totally destroyed. There are no family units, apart from
a few “savages” who are permitted to live the old way in folk museums in remote
parts of the world. For those who live in the “civilized world”, the words
“mother” and “father” lose all meaning, and in fact are treated by the citizens
as obscene terms that somehow refer to an earlier primitive stage of the human
race. This is truly Hell on Earth. And Huxley considers that this will be the
natural endpoint of the Anglican Church’s decision to allow contraception.
Huxley also points out in the
novel that the decision will backfire on the Anglican Church. Bishops in the
Church are portrayed in the novel in scandalous terms. Citizens are forced to
participate in a ceremony that is a mockery of the Eucharist. This dismal
prediction of the future Anglican Church has led Steven Kellmeyer, the author of
an article in Envoy magazine (Sept./Oct. 1998 issue), to describe the
pro-contraceptive Anglican Church with the graphic title “Little Lost Lambeth”.
Why did the Anglican Church deviate from
the age-old teaching?
Kellmeyer, in his Envoy article describes how the 1930 Lambeth vote in favor of
contraception came about. The vote was influenced by certain “enlightened”
bishops and advisers with connections to the “modern” research field of
eugenics. Francis Galton had coined the term “eugenics” in the latter 1800s to
describe the prospects of breeding a better human being, just as one would work
on breeding a better horse or dog. By the early 1900s, a research fellowship had
been established at University College, London, thanks to Galton himself. This
ensured that the cause of eugenics would be taken up and fought for by the
intellectual elite.
And where did Galton get the
idea of improved human breeding? From a cousin of his, Charles Darwin by name.
In his book The Origin of Species, Darwin had pointed admiringly to the
skills of pigeon and dog breeders in developing certain favorable
characteristics in animals. Darwin claimed that nature itself (given a long
enough time) can also breed favorable characteristics in all species, including
man. In this sense, Darwin claimed that there is no distinction between man and
any other animal.
Darwin’s ideas are very far
removed from the Judaeo-Christian view that God created man to be essentially
distinct from the animals. Darwin rejected the Christian view that God has a
plan for the life of each human being. Darwin’s ideas remove God from the
picture of biology. In the words of a famous modern evolutionist (Richard
Dawkins): “Darwinism made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled
atheist.” So it was ultimately Darwin’s ideas, disseminated into “intellectual”
society via the eugenics movement, that led to the momentous vote of the bishops
at Lambeth on August 14, 1930.
Once contraception is accepted,
God’s plan for human sexuality is inevitably set aside. And without that plan,
anything goes as far as sexuality is concerned. Aldous Huxley depicted some of
the grisly results in his Brave New World, results that have now become
all too real for us in 2001 in the form of stem cell research.
The Catholic Church repeats its teaching
against contraception
After Pope Pius XI issued his encyclical Casti Connubii in 1930,
Catholics were able to use it to defend themselves against the danger of
contraception for a few decades. Those were the decades when the Catholic Church
in America rose to its greatest flowering, with record high numbers of priests,
nuns, seminarians, with correspondingly large numbers of converts, and high
percentage attendance at Sunday Mass. And Catholic families were strong bastions
of God’s plan for family life: the statistics prove that divorce rates and
annulments among Catholics during those decades were miniscule.
But things changed in the 1960s
when a new method of contraception reached the market: the birth control pill.
This pill was unfortunately the means whereby Catholics became infected by the
contraceptive mentality. The story makes for grim reading.
It starts with the calling
together of a commission to advise Pope John XXIII as to whether or not Catholic
teaching should be revised to allow for the pill. Pope John died before the
commission completed its work, but his successor Paul VI authorized the
commission to continue. Paul VI expanded the commission to 64 members, including
clergy and members of the laity from many countries around the world.
In the early meetings, most of
the commission members were in favor of retaining traditional Catholic teaching.
But at one point in their deliberations, a prominent theologian (Father Bernard
Haering, C.SS.R.) addressed the commission and, despite his apparently
impeccable Catholic credentials, he convinced the members that the Church needed
to change. So persuasive were his words that the Commission eventually voted to
retreat from traditional Catholic teaching. The vote was lop-sided: 60 members
of the Commission voted in favor of change, and only 4 against. This vote, which
was supposed to be confidential, was passed on to the Pope for his
consideration. Needless to say, word about the vote leaked out, and it became
widespread “knowledge” that Catholic teaching on contraception was going to
change.
But the Pope did not follow the
commission’s recommendation. Following the lead of Pius XI in 1930, Paul VI in
1968 decided to repeat to the world, in no uncertain terms, the Catholic
teaching on contraception. Using the full authority of his office as Pope, he
proclaimed this teaching formally in his encyclical Humanae Vitae on July
25, 1968. Rejecting the opinion of the majority of the commission members, Pope
Paul sided with the 4-vote minority. (As it turned out, an archbishop from
Poland who would later become Pope John Paul II cast one of the 4 votes.)
The teaching of Humanae
Vitae is clear and unambiguous: contraception in all forms, including the
pill, is mortally sinful. The reason given was the same as Pius XI had used.
That is, contraception separates love from life, and therefore interferes in a
fundamentally destructive way with God’s plan for the gift of sexuality.
Pope Paul recognized that his
teaching might be difficult for some married couples to accept. But in a
singular expression of pastoral concern, he pointed out that everyone, including
priests, also occasionally encounter hard times in their lives as they “strive
to enter by the narrow gate.” When I read that sentence, the tone sounded to me
as if the Pope might also be including himself in this statement. And when hard
times come, the Pope wrote, all of us need to turn to Christ in Confession and
the Eucharist for assistance. Christ never demands the impossible, but is always
willing to help people rise to his calling for them.
Pope Paul reiterated the
warning that Pope Pius had sounded in 1930: contraception is not merely an
isolated moral problem. It leads to further moral problems, including marital
infidelity, a lowering of morality, and the tendency to treat women as objects.
But more presciently, Pope Paul
VI pointed out that once couples are allowed the use of contraceptives, there
will be serious consequences. Specifically, he asked: what is there to stop the
government from stepping in and imposing its will on the people? What is there
to stop the government from imposing whatever method of contraception that the
government judges most efficacious?
Pope Paul’s prophesy fulfilled in
America
This prediction in Humanae Vitae is nothing short of prophetic. Long
before the Chinese government decided to impose coerced abortions on its people
as a form of birth control, the Pope predicted that just such an evil would
occur once contraception was accepted as “normal” procedure by couples.
Unfortunately, we do not need
to go to China to see how the evil of contraception spread according to the
Pope’s prophecy. It happened right here in America. In 1973, the judicial branch
of the US government decreed that unlimited abortion was to be the law of the
land. In one fell swoop, the US Supreme Court, in its “Roe v. Wade”
decision, overruled the anti-abortion regulations of all 50 state legislatures.
What argument did the Supreme Court use to arrive at this decision: they
referred to a “right to privacy?” This right appears nowhere in the US
Constitution. However, the court had created such a right in 1965, claiming that
this right could be found in “emanations from the penumbras of the
constitution”. Never has such a vague basis been provided for a judicial
decision.
However, it is essential to ask
this question: What was the 1965 case for which the court considered it
necessary to invent the “right to privacy”? The answer is: “Griswold v.
Connecticut”, a case concerning access to CONTRACEPTION. The US Supreme Court in
essence decided in 1973 that abortion is legal because the Court had declared
for contraception in 1965.
Here we see in the most literal
sense possible a fulfillment of Pope Paul’s prophesy: Once you allow
contraception (in 1965), you are opening the floodgates for other forms of birth
control to be introduced by the government (in 1973). The fulfillment of this
prophesy in America is stunning.
The contraceptive mentality infects the
Catholic Church: Phase I
The issuance of the encyclical Humanae Vitae caused consternation among
certain Catholics who had expected Church law to change. In America in
particular, a well-orchestrated public protest against the encyclical was
organized on July 30, 1968. Priests and theology professors at many of the most
renowned Catholic colleges and universities led the protest. On television and
in newspapers, the message was spread as loudly as possible to Catholics that
they could reject the Pope’s teaching.
This has given rise to as much
a disaster for the Catholic Church in America as “Little Lost Lambeth” was for
the Anglican Church after 1930. No novelist has arisen to follow Aldous Huxley’s
lead in the context of the Catholic Church in America. Regrettably, there is no
need for such a novelist: what was predicted for the Anglican Church is already
widespread among Catholics. Opinion polls indicate that most people who call
themselves Catholic in America now use contraceptives as frequently as
non-Catholics do. Divorce rates are now as high among Catholics as in the
general population. And as the Pope predicted, contraception leads to widespread
approval of abortion among Catholics as well. This became appallingly apparent
in the 2000 presidential elections, when more than 50 percent of self-professed
Catholics voted for Al Gore, despite the latter’s open support for the barbaric
procedure known as partial birth abortion. And at least six self-professed
Catholics in the US Senate voted publicly on two separate occasions in favor of
partial birth abortion.
So widespread and long-lasting
has been the damage that followed on after the public rejection of papal
authority on July 30 1968 that the only image that comes close to an analogy is
the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. (See my article “The Catholic
Hiroshima” in New Oxford Review, September 2001, p. 22.)
The contraceptive mentality enters the
Catholic Church: Phase II
The public outcry by the theologians in 1968 is long gone. But the effects
linger on in the American Catholic Church. Not only have 70 percent (or more) of
Catholics stopped attending Sunday Mass on a regular basis, but even the
faithful Catholics who go to Mass each Sunday have been denied access to Church
teaching.
To see this, I note that
thirty-three years have elapsed since Pope Paul VI issued Humanae Vitae. To be
more precise, between July 25 1968 and the day on which I am writing this
(October 21, 2001), the number of weeks that have elapsed is precisely one
thousand seven hundred and thirty-four. Adding to this the six holydays of
obligation each year, the number of required Masses since Humanae Vitae
has been nineteen hundred and thirty-three.
I can personally attest that I
have attended all one thousand nine hundred and thirty-three required Masses
since Humanae Vitae, as well as about one thousand more daily Masses at
which a brief homily was preached. In the course of attending these Masses (more
than 3000 in number), the number of times I have heard a sermon on the
sinfulness of contraception is a small number: two.
One occurred on October 7,
1979, when one of those 4 faithful voters on the papal Commission came to
Washington DC. This one-time voter was now the Pope, and he gave a sermon the
like of which I have never heard before or since. Pope John Paul said: “You
Americans are well known in the world for giving good things to your children.
But I tell you that the best thing you can possibly give them is brothers and
sisters.” Here was the message of life proclaimed fearlessly: put aside the
evils of contraception (the Pope told us), and let God bless you with children,
who are the primary good of marriage. As it happened, when we heard that sermon
on the mall in Washington, my wife and I were expecting our seventh child (when
he was born a few months later, we named him John Paul). The second time was
when a retired priest of the diocese in which I now live (Wilmington) gave a
homily on the evils of contraception.
Apart from the Pope in 1979,
and Father Jennings in the late 1980s, I have never heard even a single Sunday
sermon on the sinfulness of contraception. Not once in more than three
thousand Masses. And it is not as if we were dealing with an obscure
theological topic that is of interest only to scholars. On the contrary, the
topic of contraception is something that may personally affect all married
Catholics every day (or night) of their lives.
This widespread silence among
preachers about the contents of Humanae Vitae is puzzling. Perhaps this
silence is related to the post-Vatican II requirement that homilies be tied in
some way to the scripture readings of the day. There is only one passage in
scripture that deals even remotely with birth control (Gen. 38: 9), and this
passage is nowhere to be found (as far as I know) in the readings for cycles A,
B, or C. In any case, my experience as a layman is unequivocal: The
contraceptive mentality has entered into the preaching practices of all the
Catholic Churches I have attended since August 1968. It is no wonder that
Catholics in America practice contraception as frequently as non-Catholics. It
is no wonder that the majority of Catholics in America think that there should
be no limits placed on the availability of abortion.
We Catholics have certainly
been given clear warnings about the evils of contraception in the writings of
Popes Pius XI and Paul VI. These warnings have been repeated clearly in the
preaching and writings of our current Holy Father. Pope John Paul II has
personally taken up the task of spreading the word about the evils of
contraception in every country he visits. It is as if he sees his visits as a
chance to allow Catholics to hear an item of Church teaching that their local
priests have decided (for whatever reason) to avoid.
Pope John Paul II has brought
forth some new arguments to show why contraception is inherently wrong. In
particular, the Pope has been at pains to stress the essential self-giving that
is meant to be at the core of sexuality. The strongest argument I know against
contraception (apart from intrinsic disgust with such unnatural practices)
emerges from Pope John Paul’s writing: When couples call upon God to witness
their marriage vows, they are taking an oath before God that they will use the
gift of sexuality as he planned it. If the couple then decides to use
contraception, they are breaking their oath. Because of this, contraception is
akin to perjury.
The predictions of the Popes
that contraception leads to a general decline in morality has certainly been
borne out in America. What contraception does is to separate the two aspects of
God’s plan for sexuality: the unitive (to bring couples together in love) and
the procreative (to have children). Once these two aspects are separated, there
are certain inevitable consequences. For one thing, people begin to regard sex
as something to be used for recreation without the “burden” of children. And the
creation of children becomes separated from the love of husband and wife: babies
can be brought into existence in a test-tube.
Another consequence of
accepting contraception is that there is no longer any logical defense against
homosexuality. If sex can be used for pleasure without any possibility of having
children, then homosexual behavior becomes permissible. In recent years, there
has undoubtedly been a great upsurge in public support for homosexuality in
America. And consistent with the lack of preaching against contraception, I have
never heard a single homily on the intrinsic sinfulness of homosexual practices.
And we have already seen that
contraception led to abortion in the US Supreme Court. Thus, contraception has
paved the way for both abortion and homosexuality. And it is precisely this
atmosphere of general rejection of God’s plan for sexuality that has brought us
to the stage where unborn babies are being killed for stem-cell research. God
help America.
Dr. Dermott J. Mullan is an
astrophysics professor at the University of Delaware. He has published more than
200 articles based on his research on magnetic field effects in the sun and
other stars. He also has a catechist certification from the Notre Dame Institute
of Catechetics. Born and raised in Northern Ireland, he came to the USA to study
for his Ph.D. He met his wife at the Newman Center at the University of
Maryland. They now have ten children, with ages ranging from 12 to 30.