29.07.2022 Views

Angelus News | July 29, 2022 | Vol. 7 No. 15

On the cover: A pilgrim walks on his knees outside the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in 2019. For our special pilgrimage issue, on Page 10 Mike Aquilina writes on how the urge to leave everything and travel afar is as old as Christianity itself. On Page 14, Elise Ureneck recounts the unexpected graces of her last pilgrimage with her late mother, and on Page 16, California historian Stephen Binz points the way to the pilgrim path in our own backyard. On Page 20, Pasadena native Jenny Gorman Patton tells of finding the healing she needed, rather than the one she wanted, at the Marian shrine of Lourdes, France.

On the cover: A pilgrim walks on his knees outside the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in 2019. For our special pilgrimage issue, on Page 10 Mike Aquilina writes on how the urge to leave everything and travel afar is as old as Christianity itself. On Page 14, Elise Ureneck recounts the unexpected graces of her last pilgrimage with her late mother, and on Page 16, California historian Stephen Binz points the way to the pilgrim path in our own backyard. On Page 20, Pasadena native Jenny Gorman Patton tells of finding the healing she needed, rather than the one she wanted, at the Marian shrine of Lourdes, France.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

SHUTTERSTOCK<br />

A time to tell the truth<br />

Why the latest criticism of the Church’s teaching<br />

on birth control could use a reality check.<br />

BY CHARLIE CAMOSY<br />

Earlier this month, the Pontifical<br />

Academy for Life’s (PAL)<br />

official Twitter account suggested<br />

that Catholic teaching on the<br />

necessary connection between sex and<br />

openness to having children might<br />

one day be discarded, just as the<br />

Church once rejected its long-held<br />

belief that the earth was the center of<br />

the solar system.<br />

“The Sun does not rotate around the<br />

Earth,” read the academy’s tweet from<br />

<strong>July</strong> 11. “Otherwise there would be no<br />

progress and everything would stand<br />

still. Even in theology. Think about<br />

it.”<br />

The idea that the Church might<br />

overturn St. Pope Paul VI’s 1968<br />

encyclical “Humanae Vitae” (“On<br />

Human Life”) has predictably set off<br />

a firestorm of reaction in the Catholic<br />

world, both positive and negative:<br />

That this suggestion was made by an<br />

institution founded to advise the pope<br />

on issues of law and biomedicine and<br />

their implications for morality and<br />

Church teaching, was doubly disturbing.<br />

This all started with the recent<br />

publication of a new 528-page book<br />

(currently available only in Italian),<br />

the apparent result of a 2021 academy-sponsored<br />

theological seminar.<br />

America magazine’s Gerard O’Connell<br />

reported that “the subject that<br />

is likely to draw most attention is the<br />

revisiting of the question regarding the<br />

use of artificial contraceptives” in the<br />

book’s seventh chapter.<br />

O’Connell noted that, both in<br />

the seminar and in the book, it was<br />

affirmed that a couple can make a<br />

“wise choice” by having recourse to<br />

contraception in situations where the<br />

“conditions and practical circumstances<br />

would make it irresponsible to<br />

choose to procreate.”<br />

Those words suggest the select group<br />

behind the document wants to revisit<br />

St. Paul VI’s authoritative teaching in<br />

“Humanae Vitae” that the connection<br />

between sex and openness to having<br />

children was so essential that it needed<br />

to be honored in every single act,<br />

without exception.<br />

Other academy members have<br />

strongly objected to the book being<br />

published. Dr. Mónica López<br />

Barahona, an academy board member<br />

and president of the Jérôme Lejeune<br />

Foundation in Spain, said the book<br />

does not represent an official declaration<br />

of the PAL and also that it should<br />

have been reviewed by Vatican doc-<br />

26 • ANGELUS • <strong>July</strong> <strong>29</strong>, <strong>2022</strong>

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!