Is Birth Control Christian?: Of Course, We Thought, until Some Prolife and Home-School Activists Challenged the Practice

Evangelicals hear conflicting voices about birth control. And many are confused. Some have adopted the dominant cultural ethos: smaller families make for an increased standard of living. The Depression generation learned that lesson and passed it on to its offspring. In more recent years, younger couples have turned to dual careers and limited families not to increase, but to maintain their standard of living.

Others, who may have drunk still more deeply at the springs of culture, have chosen to delay or avoid having children in order to establish themselves professionally and financially. For them, it seems, children are not always blessings, but are often hurdles in the hasty race toward success.

Some have adopted views from their Roman Catholic brothers and sisters. Through association in the prolife movement or connections in natural childbirth and breast-feeding organizations, these evangelicals have discovered a warmly fecund earthiness that welcomes children and celebrates family. There they have heard about new forms of natural family planning that are more reliable than the older forms sarcastically dubbed “Vatican Roulette.”

Still others have been exposed to a rigid interpretation of “Be fruitful and multiply.” In some home-schooling and other countercultural circles, the notion that family planning is resisting God’s sovereignty has taken root. Copies of several books promoting this idea have recently arrived at CT. One typical title: Let God Plan Your Family.

What shall we think—and do—about family planning?

Are we free to exercise dominion over the size of our families as we do over the rest of creation (as long as a method of contraception does not cause the death of a developing person)? That approach appeals strongly to our Protestant sentiments.

Or shall we in every act of married love leave the door open to the gift of new life? That approach appeals to our love for things natural and our desire to trust God in everything.

May we limit our family size to no children at all?

Or must marriage mean an openness to some children?

The collection of essays in this CT Institute Special Report will not resolve these questions. As we gathered Christian thinkers to discuss the foundations for an evangelical ethic of family planning, we discovered differences that would not go away. Rather than smooth them over, we have let these authors interact in creative tension: For example, Stanley Grenz of Carey Theological College and James Burtchaell of the University of Notre Dame disagree on whether a Christian couple can responsibly choose not to have children. Reproductive health educator Debra Evans and family-planning physician Shirley Barron disagree on when life begins and how certain contraceptives work.

But all participants agreed that children are a blessing from the Lord. Unfortunately, it is easy to forget that truth when the technological nature of birth control makes fertility seem like a disease that needs to be cured. And when the prophets of overpopulation make children seem like parasites on a withering planet. And when the harpies of radical feminism make childbearing seem like a roadblock on the highway to economic justice. But as James Burtchaell so eloquently urges in his essay, children are above all to be welcomed; and we need children—either biological or spiritual—to stretch us beyond our limits and mold us into the servant image of Christ.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Make Room for Baby

James Tunstead Burtchaell

Readers’ “Downsized” Families

Letters

Surprised by Graphics

James I. Packer

Church Home on 18 Wheels

Editorial

Travesty at Wichita

The Struggle for Truth in a Land of Lies: The Church in Eastern Europe Faces a More Complex Challenge in Its Newfound Freedom than in the Black-and-White Days before the Revolution

Bud Bultman And Harold Fickett

The Perils of Being a Professional: You’re a Teacher, Lawyer, Doctor, Pastor? Congratulations! But Beware of These Traps

Nathan O. Hatch

Latter-Day Skeptics: Liberal, Yet Loyal Mormon Scholars Are Bringing Long-Kept Secrets about Joseph Smith into the Open

Charles W. Carpenter

Evangelical Mormonism?

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from November 11, 1991

Family Planning and the Plan of God

Stanley J. Grenz

Breeding Stock or Lords of Creation?

The Price of the Pill

Debra Evans

Searching for Life’s Beginning

Shirley L. Barron

What the Dissidents Learned about Paranoia

The Church’s Changing Mind

The Joy of Procreation

George K. Brushaber

The Other Peace Conference

Church Yearbook: Americans Believe Prayers ‘Effective’ in Gulf War

Seminaries: Enrollments up Slightly

News from the North American Scene: November 11, 1991

Christian Colleges: Few Gains for Minorities

Demonstration: Prolifers Deliver Roadside Message

World Scene: November 11, 1991

Christian Leader Killed in Political Violence

Caught in the Crossfire

Young Doctors in Debt

Soviet-Western Group Urges Stewardship of Creation

The Kingdom Strikes Back

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