Article:
Protestants Show Interest in "Wisdom" of Natural
Family Planning.
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Protestants Show Interest in "Wisdom" of Natural Family
Planning
14-August-2008 -- Catholic News Agency
Austin, Aug 13, 2008 (CNA).- Citing a desire to let their
faith in God guide their sex lives and to trust Him in every
aspect of their existence, some Protestants have become
practitioners of Natural Family Planning (NFP). Eschewing
contraceptives, some are now joining Catholics in fertility
classes and returning to traditional Christian teaching.
The Austin American-Statesman reports that the number of NFP
practitioners who are Protestants is difficult to quantify.
However, Rev. Amy Laura Hall, a Methodist minister and
associate professor at Duke Divinity School, says there
appears to be growing interest.
She said that, as a Protestant scholar writing about
reproductive issues, she frequently fields questions about
family planning. Hall explained that some ask how to avoid
preoccupation with finances and social advancement and
instead welcome children as gifts from God even if children
disrupt the parents’ life plans.
Historically, some Protestant perspectives grew from an
antipathy towards Catholic and fundamentalist families, she
claimed. The Anglican Communion, which includes the
Episcopal Church in the U.S., in 1930 changed its teachings
which formerly forbade contraception, while Methodist
literature after World War II advocated limiting the number
of children to an ideally two-child, sex-balanced family.
This history has not prevented all Protestants from
considering using NFP.
Phaedra Taylor, 28, told the Austin American-Statesman that
she ruled out taking birth control pills after reading
claims that the pill can cause abortions by rendering the
womb hostile to a newly conceived human life.
"I just wasn't willing to risk it," she said, explaining she
wanted her faith to guide her sexual and reproductive
decisions after her marriage, before which she had been
abstinent. She added that her avoidance of artificial
contraception is consistent with her efforts to eat
seasonal, locally grown foods and to be a good steward for
the Earth.
Her husband David Taylor, 36, who was arts minister at their
nondenominational church Hope Chapel, said family planning
reveals “a fascinating examination of God's sovereignty and
human free will.”
“What does it mean to submit your physical bodies to God's
sovereign care? ... God has given us power and freedom to
exercise that decision. We can say, 'God, we're going to
respect the rhythms you have given us.'”
Both spouses said the NFP method draws them closer, stating
they want to wait a few months before trying to conceive.
Megan Tietz, a 31-year-old Oklahoman Baptist and a mother of
two, told the Austin American-Statesman “…for me, using
hormonal birth control indicates that I don't really trust
God with every area of my life.”
“It is an effort on my part to control something that I
really believe God can be trusted with," she continued.
Katie Fox, 31, is a member of Hope Chapel along with the
Taylors. "I feel like it really works in harmony with the
way that God designed our bodies to work," she commented.
"In contrast with the pill, which works by altering and
suppressing our natural systems, NFP works by supporting
those systems in harmony with their functions. It goes with
the flow, so to speak. There is a wisdom and a rightness to
that which I really appreciate."
Fox has a 1-year-old daughter, explaining that NFP worked
until she and her husband “got lazy” one month and had
marital relations during her fertile period. She said the
pregnancy helped remind them that God was ultimately in
charge.
According to the Austin American-Statesman, experts say
that, when used to avoid a pregnancy, NFP can fail at rates
as low as one percent, though that rate rises to 25 percent
when the method is not followed perfectly.
Hall said that some Protestant couples face difficulties
when talking to their pastors about the spiritual issues of
human reproduction with some, in Hall’s words, being told
that they’re “crazy or irresponsible to consider not being
on the pill.”
David Taylor agreed that pastors have difficulty addressing
the issue, saying “My guess is that most churches are not
talking about sexuality.”
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