I want to recommend once again an excellent article entitled
“Heroic Parenthood”, by Christopher Gawley, which can be read here in Christian
Order magazine.
I’m closing out my “NFP Awareness Week” posts with an
excerpt from that article:
The Solution Stated: Heroic Parenthood and the Cult of Embracing Large Families
Simply
stated, the idea of "responsible parenthood" sells the faith short
and is pregnant (pardon the pun) with concepts that are inconsistent with
Catholic heroism. We should not settle for "responsible parenthood"
but aspire for "heroic parenthood." Our Lord did not come so that we
may have a dispensation or a life centered around infertility; he came for us
to have an abundant life.
…More
than any other visible social institution, large Catholic families contradict
all of the ill-conceived assumptions of modernity. They are, as it were, a
collective middle finger to an anti-culture that would tell us that God is
dead, that man and life are worthless, and that it would be better if we were
never born. The shining radiance and exuberance of large families is a living,
breathing rejoinder to the dour and childless chorus. But large families are
more than a counter-cultural expression, they epitomize Catholicism in practice
because the parents are blessed by living out their married vocation in the
fullest sense. God's blessing of children and fecundity itself seems to be a
forgotten part of this debate
…. We
have an answer to those who would maintain that life should be little more than
a titillated distraction before rotting into nothingness: they are a death
people that want to organize society around preventing babies, killing babies,
killing disabled people, and killing old people. Their world is a more than a
social malaise: it is gripped by despair and thirsting for living waters. We
have to offer the living waters of the Gospel; we are a life people and nothing
communicates our trust in God, our love of life, our belief in each other than
our unconditional embrace of children. The world will be re-converted by such
families.
Mr. Gawley ends with this Postscript:
While
it would be virtually unthinkable that a diocesan marriage preparation program
might say something as follows, we can still dream:
For
you young Catholic people who are marrying in your twenties, you
can expect, God willing and absent a physical impairment or grave reason,
to have a home filled with many children. You should mentally, physically and spiritually
prepare for seven, eight, nine or more children given your ages. You should be
prepared to accept the hardships that come with having a large family for two
important reasons; children please our Lord and your cooperation with the Lord
in bringing forth new souls will in turn please our God, which will bring you
many graces. Second, having a large family will help you be saved, it will
re-focus your attention from the material attachments that are both rampant
today and hazardous to your eternal destination. Your many children will help
you to become better and holier people and will stand as a contradiction to a
world that has forgot how to live the abundant life. You, and your large
faithful families, will turn the tide against the scoffers and misanthropes who
would revile God's creation and man's place in it. We cannot promise you it
will be easy because it won't, but if you persevere in prayer and virtue, you
will overcome with God's grace. And should you live to see your children's
children, you will praise God all the more that he saw fit to give you the gift
of faith.
Have
life and have it abundantly — have children.
It's hard to explain the NFP enthusiasm among intellectuals without TOB gnosticism.
ReplyDeletehttp://remnantnewspaper.com/web/index.php/articles/item/1883-the-godfather-and-the-almost-traditional-family.
Randy Taylor