Statement on the Government and Birth Control
A
Statement Issued by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (1)
November 14, 1966
1. The good of the individual person and that of human society
are intimately bound up with the stability of the family. Basic to the
well-being of the family is freedom from external coercion in order that it
may determine its own destiny.
2. This freedom involves inherent personal and family rights,
including the freedom and responsibility of spouses to make conscientious
decisions in terms of nuptial love, determination of family size, and the
rearing of children. The Church and the State must play supportive roles,
fostering conditions in modern society which will help the family achieve
the fullness of its life and mission as the means ordained by God for
bringing the person into being and maturity.
3. We address ourselves here to certain questions of concern to
the family, with special reference to public policies related to social
conditions and the problems of our times.
4. In so doing, we speak in the light of the Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World adopted by Vatican
Council II. Faced with our Government's stepped-up intervention in family
planning, including the subsidizing of contraceptive programs at home and
abroad, we feel bound in conscience to recall particularly the solemn
warning expressed in these words:
5. ". . . [There] are many today who maintain that the increase
in world population, or at least the population increase in some countries,
must be radically curbed by every means possible and by any kind of
intervention on the part of public authority. In view of this contention,
the Council urges everyone to guard against solutions, whether publicly or
privately supported, or at times even imposed, which are contrary to the
moral law. For in keeping with man's inalienable right to marry and generate
children, the decision concerning the number of children they will have
depends on the correct judgment of the parents and it can in no way be left
to the judgment of public authority" (Church in the Modern World,
Section 2, No. 87).
6. Therefore, a major preoccupation in our present statement
must be with the freedom of spouses to determine the size of their families.
It is necessary to underscore this freedom, because in some current efforts
of government—federal and state—to reduce poverty, we see welfare programs
increasingly proposed which include threats to the free choice of spouses.
Just as freedom is undermined when poverty and disease are present, so too
is freedom endangered when persons or agencies outside the family unit,
particularly persons who control welfare benefits or represent public
authority, presume to influence the decision as to the number of children or
the frequency of births in a family.
7. Free decision is curtailed when spouses feel constrained
to choose birth limitation because of poverty, inadequate and inhuman
housing, or lack of proper medical services. Here we insist that it is the
positive duty of government to help bring about those conditions of family
freedom which will relieve spouses from such material and physical pressures
to limit family size.
8. Government promotion of family planning programs as part of
tax-supported relief projects may easily result in the temptation and
finally the tragic decision to reduce efforts to foster the economic,
social, and indeed moral reforms needed to build the free, enlightened
society.
9. In connection with present and proposed governmental family
limitation programs, there is frequently the implication that freedom is
assured so long as spouses are left at liberty to choose among different
methods of birth control. This we reject as a narrow concept of freedom.
Birth control is not a universal obligation, as is often implied; moreover,
true freedom of choice must provide even for those who wish to raise a
larger family without being subject to criticism and without forfeiting for
themselves the benefits or for their children the educational opportunities
which have become part of the value system of a truly free society. We
reject, most emphatically, the suggestion that any family should be adjudged
too poor to have the children it conscientiously desires.
10. The freedom of spouses to determine the size of their
families must not be inhibited by any conditions upon which relief or
welfare assistance is provided. Health and welfare assistance should not be
linked, even indirectly, to conformity with a public agency's views on
family limitation or birth control; nor may the right to found a large
family be brought properly into question because it contradicts current
standards arbitrarily deduced from general population statistics. No
government social worker or other representative of public power should in
any way be permitted to impose his judgment, in a matter so close to
personal values and to the very sources of life, upon the family seeking
assistance; neither should he be permitted to initiate suggestions placing,
even by implication, public authority behind the recommendation that new
life in a family should be prevented.
11. For these reasons, we have consistently urged and we
continue to urge, as a matter of sound public policy, a clear and
unqualified separation of welfare assistance from birth control
considerations—whatever the legality or morality of contraception in general
or in specific forms—in order to safeguard the freedom of the person and the
autonomy of the family.
12. On previous occasions we have warned of dangers to the
right of privacy posed by governmental birth control programs; we have urged
upon government a role of neutrality whereby it neither penalizes nor
promotes birth control. Recent developments, however, show government
rapidly abandoning any such role. Far from merely seeking to provide
information in response to requests from the needy, government activities
increasingly seek aggressively to persuade and even coerce the
underprivileged to practice birth control. In this, government far exceeds
its proper role. The citizen's right to decide without pressure is now
threatened. Intimate details of personal, marital, and family life are
suddenly becoming the province of government officials in programs of
assistance to the poor. We decry this overreaching by government and assert
again the inviolability of the right of human privacy.
13. We support all needed research toward medically and morally
acceptable methods which can assist spouses to make responsible and generous
decisions in seeking to cooperate with the will of God in what pertains to
family size and well-being. A responsible decision will always be one which
is open to life rather than intent upon the prevention of life; among
religious people, it includes a strong sense of dependence upon God's
Providence.
14. It should be obvious that a full understanding of human
worth, personal and social, will not permit the nation to put the public
power behind the pressures for a contraceptive way of life. We urge
government, at all levels, to resist pressures toward any merely
mathematical and negative effort to solve health or population problems. We
call upon all—and especially Catholics—to oppose, vigorously and by every
democratic means, those campaigns already underway in some states and at the
national level toward the active promotion, by tax-supported agencies, of
birth prevention as a public policy, above all in connection with welfare
benefit programs. History has shown that as a people lose respect for any
life and a positive and generous attitude toward new life, they move fatally
to inhuman infanticide, abortion, sterilization, and euthanasia; we fear
that history is, in fact, repeating itself on this point within our own land
at the moment.
15. Our government has a laudable history of dedication to the
cause of freedom. In the service of this cause it is currently embarked upon
a massive, unprecedented program of aid to underdeveloped nations. Through
imaginative and constructive efforts, it shows itself willing to do battle
with the enemies of freedom, notably poverty and ignorance. We gladly
encourage our government to press this struggle with all the resources at
its disposal and pledge our cooperation in all the ways in which we or those
responsive to our leadership can be of assistance. Our nation's duty to
assist underdeveloped countries flows from the Divine Law that the goods of
the earth are destined for the well-being of all the human race.
16. In the international field, as in the domestic field,
financial assistance must not be linked to policies which pressure for birth
limitation. We applaud food supply programs of foreign aid which condition
our cooperation on evidence that the nations benefited pledge themselves to
develop their own resources; we deplore any linking of aid by food or money
to conditions, overt or oblique, involving prevention of new life. Our
country is not at liberty to impose its judgment upon another, either as to
the growth of the latter or as to the size of its families.
17. Insofar as it does so, our country is being cast in the
role of a foreign power using its instrumentalities to transgress intimate
mores and alter the moral cultures of other nations rather than in the
historic American role of offering constructive, unselfish assistance to
peoples in need. Indeed, we are aware of existing apprehension in the minds
of many of the peoples of the world that the United States, in its own great
affluence, is attempting, by seeking to limit their populations, to avoid
its moral responsibility to help other peoples help themselves precisely
that they may grow in healthy life, generous love and in all the goods which
presuppose and enrich both life and love.
18. Programs inhibiting new life, above all when linked to
offers of desperately needed aid, are bound to create eventual resentment in
any upon whom we even seem to impose them and will ultimately be gravely
detrimental to the image, the moral prestige, and the basic interests of the
United States.
19. Obviously, therefore, international programs of aid should
not be conditioned upon acceptance of birth control programs by beneficiary
nations. Equally obvious, however, should be the fact that, in the practical
administration of overseas assistance, neither direct nor indirect pressures
should be exerted by our personnel to affect the choice of spouses as to the
number of children in their family. In the international field, as in the
domestic field, both our government in its policy and our American
representatives in their work should strive above all to bring those
economic and social advances which will make possible for spouses
conscientious family planning without resort to contraceptive procedures
fostered among them by controversial policies backed by American political
power and financial aid.
20. Sobering lessons of history clearly teach that only those
nations remain stable and vigorous whose citizens have and are encouraged to
keep high regard for the sanctity and autonomy of family life among
themselves and among the peoples who depend in any way upon them. Let our
political leaders be on guard that the common good suffer no evil from
public policies which tamper with the instincts of love and the sources of
life.
(1) Because the documents of Vatican II were issued in 1965, the American
bishops decided not to issue their own Pastoral that year. At the November
14-18, 1966, meeting, the National Welfare Conference, which had served as the
general secretariat of the American Bishops since 1919, was reorganized as the
United States Catholic Conference, and the bishops' organization was
restructured as the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Since the formation of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1966,
their Statements have not been signed. Where the title would not make the
subject completely clear, an introductory sentence was usually used by the
bishops to explain the topic.