Pope Paul VI shocked both the Church and the media in 1968 with his release of Humanae Vitae, an encyclical focused on the use of contraception within marriage.1 Pope Paul VI was not the first to look into the issue of contraception, with Popes Pius XI and Pius XII beginning to address the issue when Anglicans, followed by other Protestant denominations, abandoned the traditional stance of opposing forms of contraception. In the early days of the birth control pill, in 1963, Pope John XXIII formed a Pontifical Commission to look further into contraception. Paul VI was influential on the topic, and he continued the commission with the understanding that there were to be no early media leaks of the report.2
When the commission reported their claims, they were split into two parties: a majority of the commission was in favor of a more lenient stance, while a minority of the commission was in favor of the current Church teaching. The Majority report came back in favor of allowing contraception, citing reasons such as the teaching had changed but there had not been a reiteration of that teaching. The Church was comprised of married couples who approved or had used contraceptives, and the teaching had changed in thought, but not on paper. This was meant to say that despite the official changing of the teaching in document, the teaching had already changed, because, the Church is comprised of mostly married couples. The Minority report came back and said that:
“one can find no period of history, no document of the church, no theological school, scarcely one Catholic theologian, who ever denied that contraception was always seriously evil. The teaching of the Church in this matter was absolutely constant. Until the present century, this teaching was peacefully possessed by all other Christians, whether Orthodox or Anglican or Protestant.”3
The Minority report went onto say that, “the Church cannot substantially err in teaching doctrine, which is most serious in its import for faith and morals, throughout all centuries or even one century, if it has been constantly and forcefully proposed as necessarily to be followed in order to obtain eternal salvation.”4 In this statement, the Minority report made clear that if the Church was mistaken in the past about the morality of contraceptives, then all other moral teachings of the Church could come under questioned.5 The commission was ended in 1966, after a leak by the Majority report. The leak let out that they claimed that contraceptives were not evil in their nature, while the minority stated that contraception was morally wrong.6 Pope Paul VI found himself in a tough position because he wanted to avoid a leak, as media attention would affect the commission’s ability to perform its task. He decided to reject the Majority report and favor the more traditional view of the Minority report.7
Pope Paul VI‘s acceptance of the Minority report proved to be influential in the drafting and eventual release of Humanae Vitae. According to The Record, a Western Australian Catholic newspaper, the encyclical had already been drafted in 1967, before the Synod of Bishops.8 Pope Paul VI had asked the Synod of Bishops to send him their reflections on the topic. This was a surprise to the Bishops. Later, Monsignor Gilfredo Marengo, author of books about Humanae Vitae, said in an interview to the Catholic News Service that, “The news about the desire of the Pope to consult all the members of the synodal assembly is very important, because one of the accusations repeated most often after the publication of Humanae Vitae was that the pope decided to act alone, in a manner that was not collegial.”9 Out of the 199 Bishops present, only 25 responses were received, and only seven of those asked, including Bishop Fulton Sheen, then Archbishop of Rochester, New York, and Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, later Pope Saint John Paul II, reiterated the Church’s teaching. Whereas other responses asked for more openness to contraception in certain circumstances. Individuals who asked for a more lenient teaching included the Cardinals of Baltimore and Philadelphia, the Archbishop of Detroit, and the Bishop of Pittsburgh. Despite the mixed results from Bishops, Pope Paul VI decided to continue with the Church’s teaching on contraception.10 The Record also reported that Pope Paul VI decided to delay the release of the encyclical, and revisit the document. Those who supported revisiting the encyclical in early 1968 include Bishop Carlo Colombo, Pope Paul VI’s personal theologian, and Cardinal Franjo Seper, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. A final revision included the deletion of a section in which Pope Paul VI took upon himself responsibility for the encyclical.11 Cardinal Karol Wojtyla exerted additional influence, including providing materials for Pope Paul VI in the months that led up to the release of Humane Vitae. And a Polish theologian, who worked with Cardinal Wojtyla, stated to the National Catholic Reporter that, “about 60 percent of our draft is contained in the encyclical.”12
Pope Paul VI enacted Humanae Vitae on July 25, 1968, and it was officially released on July 29, 1968 by Monsignor Lambruschini. Evidence of last minute revisions were surfaced in Australia, which had received advanced copies of the encyclical, and would have been printed in mid-June because of mail time. Though the changes would have been minor, as a result, the media had not noticed them, and only focused on the rejection of the Majority report. In Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI first discussed how this teaching was grounded in natural law and divine Revelation. Later on, the notion of responsible parenthood and conjugal love was described in detail.13 Conjugal love, “human, total, faithful and exclusive, and fruitful,” describes the self-giving of married couples.14 This means that marriage, the procreative act, and offspring are directly related, and any obstacle to this is intrinsically evil because it is not a total giving of self and is not intended to be fruitful and bear offspring. This love is meant to be, “just as God’s love overflows into His creation of new beings, so too does the love of spouses extend beyond themselves into the creation of new life.”15
In the aftermath of the Humanae Vitae, there was an immediate objection to the teaching by members of both the media and theologians in the Church. A main question by theologians in opposition of the encyclical was the balance between Church teaching and personal conscience. This objection was brought up to say that married couples, with well-formed conscience, should be able to make their own decisions when it comes to married life. Despite this, much opposition to Humanae Vitae were varied, with French bishops stating that, “‘contraception can never be a good. It is always a disorder, but this disorder is not always culpable.”16 A large group of theologians in Washington DC protested the encyclical even before most bishops had received Humanae Vitae, and as a result of their protest, those bishops needed papal intervention through the “Statement of Theological and Pastoral Principles.” In this, the Church’s stance on conscience was restated. In Australia, however, the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference affirmed that Humanae Vitae is a papal authoritative teaching that every member of the Church must accept, a reaction that differed from most responses that questioned the authority of the teaching and stated that it is up to the conscience of married individuals to decide whether or not to use contraceptives.17
Despite receiving objections from its release in 1968, and its continuing to receive objections to our current time, the teachings of Humanae Vitae have been upheld and reaffirmed through the release of additional papal encyclicals, particularly, through Pope Saint John Paul II. Two of his works, Evangelium Vitae, the “Gospel of Life,” and Theology of the Body, a lecture series, are famous for renouncing the culture of death that the modern secular world supports, and for calling for a culture of life. In Theology of the Body, he describes how in mankind’s fallen state, a union of male and female is necessary to understand original unity. As part of this, John Paul II calls for couples to avoid the materialism of the world that uses contraceptives to inhibit fertility, and instead to use natural methods, such as natural family planning, to limit family size. The Church has reiterated the message that the procreative act is inherently good; however, when it is outside of marriage or has barriers such as contraceptives, it is wrong because it does not allow for the total gift of self associated with the procreative act.18
- I would like to thank Dr. James Greenaway for his assistance in the researching phase of this article. ↵
- Karl A. Schultz, “The Triumph & Tragedy of the Most Misunderstood Document in Modern Church History,” New Oxford Review 85, no. 6 (July/August 2018): 20-21. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 15. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 17. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 17. ↵
- Cindy Wooden, “Birth of an Encyclical: Priest Documents Preparation of Humanae Vitae,” National Catholic Reporter, July 27, 2018. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ I: Pope Paul VI in Pastoral Mode,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. (April 2013): 186. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ I: Pope Paul VI in Pastoral Mode,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. (April 2013): 186-187. ↵
- Cindy Wooden, “Birth of an encyclical: Priest Documents Preparation of Humanae Vitae,” National Catholic Reporter, July 27, 2018. ↵
- Cindy Wooden, “Birth of an Encyclical: Priest Documents Preparation of Humanae Vitae,” National Catholic Reporter, July 27, 2018. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ I: Pope Paul VI in Pastoral Mode,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. (April 2013): 186-187. ↵
- Tad Szule, “Pope John Paul Helped Write ‘Humanae Vitae,'” National Catholic Reporter, April 14, 1995. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ I: Pope Paul VI in Pastoral Mode,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. (April 2013): 187-188. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 108. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 108-109. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ II: Conscience, Contraception and Holy Communion,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. 3 (June 2013): 299. ↵
- Joseph Parkinson, “‘Humanae Vitae’ II: Conscience, Contraception and Holy Communion,” Australasian Catholic Record 90, no. 3 (June 2013): 300-302. ↵
- Janet E. Smith, Humanae Vitae, a Generation Later (Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 245-247, 265. ↵
37 comments
Aaron Sandoval
This article was very interesting and informative especially for how controversial the topic is, especially in modern-day Texas. I really liked how the author discussed arguments from both sides which made it easier for the article to be as unbiased as possible. My favorite part of this article was the different arguments, I believe the author wrote this article in the best way to be as informative as possible.
Alicia Martinez
This article was well written and nicely described the position of Humanae Vitae with regards to contraception. This was not the first time that I have learned about the Church’s ideology concerning more modern issues. Reading about this was a good review about what I have learned in the past not only about Pope Paul VI, but about theological questions that have been proposed since Vatican II.
Anthony Coronado
I do believe that the Catholic Church has a strong insight into many religious tolerances, which often goes between the boundaries of political ideology as well. I do not foresee that the Catholic Church to change its views on contraceptives. But in today’s world, it is fast-changing, to the slow change between the Catholic Church. As in today’s world, people aren’t inclined to wait for marriage, or as the scientific study and research of inclined risk between the transfer of diseases. I do not foresee the change n contraceptive due to the believes that sex till marriage guidelines.
Joanna Martinez
The Catholic Church’s mentality on the idea of contraceptives are strong and are probably never going to change. I enjoyed learning about the debate within the church itself since most of the controversy is objected by individuals outside the church. Although my beliefs reside with Christianity, I do not believe that the church should control personal matters such as the availability of contraceptives. It is not unfair to judge others because of their use of birth control which is better than other methods. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed reading the article and appreciated the showcasing of both opinions of the issue.
Samantha Bonillas
Growing up Catholic and following the beliefs of the Catholic faith, such as the sacred sex vows for marriage, this article gave me insight. In today’s day and age, the “sex before marriage” belief/vow is hardly followed because some people want to “chill” and “have fun” and that can usually mean sex. Intercourse, in the Catholic faith, means not using contraceptives (birth control, condoms, etc.), in a sense, anything that prevents conception. Again, today most people use contraceptives due to carelessness and “having fun.” Overall, this article did give me insight on why this belief is instated in the faith.
Michael Lazcano
Being Catholic certainly affects how I look at this document, and me studying this document in my senior year also affects how I look it. The acceptance of the minority report, though unpopular, was what stuck to the morals of the Catholic Church and only demonstrated how they would not budge from how they view the sacred vows of marriage and sex. I think its harder for people like my age or a little bit older to gauge why it was held to such an importance at the time, but there was reasoning behind the decision. I think that not everyone can be satisfied and that’s okay, I can’t say I agree with the church either despite being Catholic, but I can understand why to had to release an encyclical on the matter.
Mauro Bustamante
What this article does is state the reasoning on why the Catholic Church made the decision to stick with ideology when other sects of Christianity were deciding to evolve. Contraception is a very severe act against the Church, and that seems to be reiterated in this article. It was a nice refresher by reading this article because it reminds the world of the morality of the sexual act that is confused by many people in today’s society. in all this article was a great refresher and educational.
Michael Thompson
Coming from a Catholic household, obviously I have to have an opinion on this. As my parents have taught me, they are for contraceptives, as they think that the risk of accidental pregnancy is too risky. My family thinks that there are too many abortions and children suffering in foster care, and that contraceptives, though not traditional, are safe, and the way to go. They are especially supportive for them for teens, as they are the one’s with the biggest problems, and even if they decide not to go with the abortion or foster care route, they teen parent would be struggling along with the family, and most importantly the child.
Gabriel Lopez
I was educated in a very classical and Catholic high school and have studied Humanae Vitae in my senior year. I was taught that contraception is a very severe act against the Church, and that seems to be reiterated in this article. It was a nice refresher by reading this article because it reminds the world of the morality of the sexual act that is confused by many people in today’s society. It was also interesting to learn that the pope accepted the minority’s report over the majority’s report. In terms of the morality of contraception, I agree that it should not be used because it makes the sexual act as a means for lust. However, I disagree with the severity of how bad the use of it is against the Church. Very educational article overall.
Eloy Cruz
In my Catholic faith and in my Hispanic community, I have always been taught that ANY kind of contraceptive is wrong. These contraceptives interfere with living beings both mature and in the womb. Regardless, in my personal opinion, I believe that contraceptives are ethical only when the possibility of producing an offspring was not in your favor such as rape or any genetic type of disease that has been passed down onto any offspring. There are may cases today where young teenage girls are sexually harassed and are left with the possibility of having a child, most of the times this child is not wanted because of how young the mother is or it will just serve as a reminder of that moment when the mother was sexually harassed. In these cases only where offspring was not consented to should there be no third party interjection. In other cases where a couple was consciously in the act of sex and were aware of the reproductive consequences at hand is the use of any contraceptive evil and unfair.