When you pray say: Father, hallowed be your name, your
kingdom come. Addressing God as Father is amazing enough. But this should blow
our minds: Men share a title with God, the title of Father. We’re going to see
that all men are called to fatherhood in some capacity. Fathers generate life. The
most obvious example is natural fatherhood. Most men are called to natural
fatherhood where they and their wives, together with God, procreate new human
life for the building up of the Kingdom.
Then there are men like me involved in supernatural
fatherhood. I don’t have biological children but people call me father because
of my role as spiritual father. This goes all the way back to Apostles. St.
Paul talks about being a spiritual father as he is writing to his spiritual
children.
Then there are also men who never marry and never have
biological children. In their vocations, they are called to generate life for
the Kingdom as well. They are called to lay down their lives and be fruitful in
imitation to Christ so that others can have life. St. Paul reminds us today in
his letter to the Colossians, talking about Jesus: “He brought you to life along with him.” These men build up the
kingdom in any number of ways like teaching, serving, coaching, praying. There
is no limit to the ways to generate life.
So, getting back to natural fatherhood, if building up of
the Kingdom is important, then fatherhood continues for decades into the lives
of their children as they are reared and educated to be citizens of God’s
Kingdom. What an awesome responsibility!
To show the Father’s love for us, Jesus gives some obvious
examples of fatherhood in the Gospel today. But procreating and educating his
children is only half of the task of fatherhood.
The man is also called to make a gift of self for the good
of his wife.
Today begins Natural Family Planning Awareness Week. NFP is
a tool that is very helpful to ensure both sides of the coin of fatherhood are
kept intact. It’s practice helps a man generate life in a generous and
responsible way and at the same time make a full gift of self to his bride.
Nothing is held back, especially not his fatherhood.
Because of this, many priests, including myself, require NFP
classes in marriage preparation. The numbers speak for themselves. Couples who
practice NFP have a divorce rate approaching zero, and report that they are more
satisfied with their marriages. While the rest of the culture has a divorce
rate of 50 percent.
In our first reading from Genesis, what was the grave sin of
the people of Sodom that God wanted to destroy it? They were using their bodies
in ways that God did not design them to be used. They were using God’s gift of
their sexual faculties not to generate life, but to generate lust and
corruption. They were using each other in acts that were completely sterile. Not
only were they sterile, they promoted death and destruction. God is not the God
of death and destruction. He is the God of life and love.
Throughout the entire Judeo-Christian tradition, until
recent decades, fertility was seen as a blessing and sterility was seen as a
hardship. But in our present culture at large, fertility is seen as a
liability, as something to be suppressed. That is contrary to God’s plan. Fertility
is not something wrong with our bodies, but something right with our bodies. Women’s
fertility doesn’t need to be suppressed by dangerous drugs and hormones. It
just needs to be understood. And God gives us the ability to understand it. These
are the skills learned in NFP.
The conjugal embrace of husband and wife is not only good,
but holy. It’s God’s primary way of strengthening their bond with each other
and bringing new human life into the world.
Saint John Paul II explained in his The Theology of the
Body: “[W]hen the conjugal act is deprived of its inner truth because it
is deprived artificially of its procreative capacity, it also ceases to be an
act of love.”
God’s design is that the conjugal embrace has both a unitive
and procreative meaning, open to love and life. There is an inseparable
connection between these two meanings. In the contraceptive mentality, a separation
occurs and the full gift of self is diminished. The act now says, I am holding
back part of myself from you. NFP is the way to live responsible generosity if
a couple prayerfully discerns they have a grave reason to avoid pregnancy.
This is definitely a counter-cultural message. In the
culture, people are treated as objects more and more. Our own national
government mandates that health insurance programs provide contraception
without regard to the deeper effects on the human person.
Really, it all comes down to who has the more adequate understanding
of human nature. I’m going to side with St. John Paul II and His Theology of the
Body. I’m going to side with the Church and her 2,000 years of the most
brilliant minds in the world pondering both the natural law and everything God
has revealed. I’m going to side with the infallible guidance of the Holy Spirit
that Jesus guaranteed the Church would have.
Because of this, the Church will always support what is best
for marriages because marriage holds families together. And that’s important
because families are the building blocks of society. Strong families means
strong society where people can flourish. That’s God’s plan for the human race.
The contraceptive mentality has become such a part of the
culture that we are allowing it. I mentioned that on Fourth of July Weekend, when
we were observing the Fortnight for Freedom. In the case involving the Little
Sisters of the Poor, the Supreme Court instructed lower courts to hear further
arguments. In March of 2012 all the diocesan bishops of our country
acknowledged that the contraceptive mandate from the Department of Health and
Human Services is indeed a persecution because it forces people to provide
services that have been deemed inherently evil by natural law reasoning.
But the outrage was relatively small. Vast numbers of
Catholics yawned and said it’s no big deal. In November of that same year Many
Catholics voted to reelect the same officials who put the contraceptive mandate
in place.
Many Catholic dioceses, universities had to file law suits
for protection from the mandate. Charities affiliated with religious
organizations found themselves in the same threat. Priests for Life and the
Little Sisters of the Poor were looking at steep fines that would have put them
out of business. The owners of Hobby Lobby, my friend who owns a meat
processing company, and many other private citizens, who own companies that
employ people, faced the same threats.
Some of those cases have been solved, but not all.
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