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Contraception is contrary to God's law: Why the Hahns became Roman Catholic
Catholic Education Resource Center website ^ | 2001 | Dr. Scott Hahn

Posted on 10/05/2012 3:22:55 AM PDT by koinonia

From a transcript of Scott Hahn telling his story: We [Kimberly & I] got married right out of college. Both of us had so much of the same vision. We wanted to do ministry together [as Presbyterians], we wanted to share the good news of Christ, we wanted to open up the Bible and make it come alive for people...

We were off to seminary a week or two after our wedding...

[In] a course that Kimberly took her first year... Dr. Davis had all the students break up into small groups so that each small group could tackle one topic... One dinner she announced that she was in a small group devoted to studying contraception. I remember thinking at the time, "Why contraception?"

The year before when I took the class, nobody signed up for that small group and I told her. She said, "Well, three others have signed up for it and we had our first meeting today. So and so appointed himself to be chair of the committee, and he announced the results of our study even before it began. He said, 'Well, we all know as Protestants, as Bible Christians, that contraception is fine, I mean so long as we don't use contraceptives that are abortafacients like the I.U.D. and so on.' He announced further that really the only people who call themselves Christians who oppose artificial birth control are the Catholics, and he said, 'The reason they do, of course, is because they are run by a celibate Pope and lead by celibate priests who don't have to raise the kids but want Catholic parents to raise lots so they can have lots of priests and nuns to draw from, you know.'"

Well, that kind of argumentation did not really impress Kimberly. She said, "Are you sure those are the best arguments they would offer?" And I guess he must have mocked or said, "Well, do you want to look into it yourself?" You don't say that kind of thing to Kimberly. She said, "Yes," and she took an interest in researching this on her own.

So that night at dinner... she said, "I've discovered that up until 1930, every single Protestant denomination without exception opposed contraception on Biblical grounds." Then I said, "Oh come on, maybe it just took us a few centuries to work out the last vestiges of residual Romanism, I don't know." And she said, "Well, I'm going to look into it."

...she handed me a book. It was entitled Birth Control and the Marriage Covenant by John Kippley... I began to read through the book with great interest because in my own personal study, going through the Bible several times, I had come upon this strong conviction that if you want to know God, you have to understand the covenant, because the covenant was the central idea in all of Scripture. So when I picked up this book I was interested to see the word 'covenant' in the title, Birth Control and the Marriage Covenant. I opened it up and I began reading it, and I said, "Wait a second, Kimberly, this guy is a Catholic. You expect me to read a Catholic?" And the thought occurred to me instantly at that moment, What is a Catholic doing putting 'covenant' into his book title? Since when do Catholics hijack my favorite concept?

Well, I began to read the book. I went through two or three chapters and he was beginning to make sense, so I promptly threw the book across my desk. I didn't frankly want him to make any sense. But I picked it up again and read through some more. His arguments made a lot of sense. From the Bible, from the covenant, he showed that the marital act is not just a physical act; it's a spiritual act that God has designed by which the marital covenant is renewed. And in all covenants you have an opportunity to renew the covenant, and the act of covenant renewal is an act or a moment of grace. When you renew a covenant, God releases grace, and grace is life, grace is power, grace is God's own love. Kippley shows how in a marital covenant, God has designed the marital act to show the life-giving power of love. That in the marital covenant the two become one, and God has designed it so that when the two become one, they become so one that nine months later you might just have to give it a name. And that child who is conceived, embodies the oneness that God has made the two through the marital act. This is all the way that God has designed the marital covenant. God said, "Let us make man in our image and likeness," and God, who is three in one, made man, male and female, and said, "Be fruitful and multiply." The two shall become one and when the two become one, the one they become is a third child, and then they become three in one. It just began to make a lot of sense, and he went through other arguments as well. By the time I finished the book, I was convinced.

It bothered me just a little that the Roman Catholic Church was the only denomination, the only Church tradition on earth that upheld this age-old Christian teaching rooted in Scripture, because in 1930 the Anglican Church broke from this tradition and began to allow contraception, and shortly thereafter every single mainline denomination on earth practically caved in to the mounting pressure of the sexual revolution. By the 1960's and 70's, my own denomination, the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, not only endorsed contraception, but abortion on demand and federal funding for abortion, and that appalled me. And I began to wonder if there wasn't a connection between giving in a little here and then all of a sudden watching the floodgates open later. I thought "No, no, you know the Catholic Church has been around for 2000 years; they're bound to get something right." We have a saying in our family that even a blind hog finds an acorn, and so it was, I thought. That was my second year.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; General Discusssion; Religion & Science
KEYWORDS: abortion; alteredtitle; catholic; contraception; hahn; prolife
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To: vladimir998

Look at some of zer0bama’s supporters ... The Obama-phone woman etc.

Little more than animals? That would be being polite.


21 posted on 10/05/2012 6:31:40 AM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: grame; koinonia; Ann Archy

By the way, the Apostolic Lutherans, Mennonites, Amish, Hutterites, and Bruderhoff are among the non-Catholic sects that teach against contraception. They often have huge families.


22 posted on 10/05/2012 6:38:38 AM PDT by Westbrook (Children do not divide your love, they multiply it.)
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To: stonehouse01
I enjoy pointing out the discrepancy involved in consuming only organic chemical free vegetables and then daily ingesting a powerful synthetic hormone that fools the body into thinking it’s pregnant!

LOL. So true. That reminds me of when a friend of mine got a lot of ugly looks at a breast cancer awareness fund raiser for handing out scientific studies that clearly show that the "birth control" pill causes breast cancer. These "discrepencies" rain on their parade. They want a cure, but they don't want to look at the cause.

23 posted on 10/05/2012 7:07:09 AM PDT by koinonia (Virgil Goode for President - I'm not getting paid to promote him :-))
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To: Vaquero

You wrote:

“The Obama-phone woman etc. Little more than animals? That would be being polite.”

I would not lump together the “Catholic, Irish and Italian community” with the Obama phone freeloader. That’s what you’re essentially doing.


24 posted on 10/05/2012 7:17:09 AM PDT by vladimir998
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To: taterjay
Statistics show that even most Catholic Christians have fallen short on this score. Thanks be to God we can learn from our mistakes, repent and move on.

Your comment reminds me of a married woman I know who, after years of taking the pill, confessed that she always felt like a prostitute... she felt used. Mind you, she and her husband were never unfaithful to one another, yet she felt the consequences of the "unnatural" aspect of the whole thing, and probably was bothered by her conscience as well.

The ironic thing in our society is that no one seems to recognize the obvious: if you take children out of the marriage equation then the relationship, instead of being based on self-giving and fruitfulness, becomes inherently centered on self indulgence - not exactly the best centerpiece for a marriage to last!

In my opinion the whole contraceptive mentality is to blame for all of the sexual problems of the day (and other problems as well). Simply put, if it is not about having children within marriage, then it must be about pleasure; and one can seek that pleasure when and where they prefer, that is, if it is not about having children with marriage. The results of contraception in society, although there is a lot of cover up and denial on this, are: depression, divorce, cohabitation, adultery, homosexuality, abortion, etc.

I think it's time to wake up and smell the coffee on this point, even if this means owning up to having fallen short of the mark in the past.

25 posted on 10/05/2012 7:26:30 AM PDT by koinonia (Virgil Goode for President - I'm not getting paid to promote him :-))
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To: koinonia
Well, that kind of argumentation [on why non-abortifacient contraceptives "are fine"] did not really impress Kimberly. She said, "Are you sure those are the best arguments they would offer?" And I guess he [Dr. Davis, presumably at Gordon-Cromwell Seminary] must have mocked or said, "Well, do you want to look into it yourself?" You don't say that kind of thing to Kimberly. She said, "Yes," and she took an interest in researching this on her own. So that night at dinner... she said, "I've discovered that up until 1930, every single Protestant denomination without exception opposed contraception on Biblical grounds." Then I said, "Oh come on, maybe it just took us a few centuries to work out the last vestiges of residual Romanism, I don't know." And she said, "Well, I'm going to look into it."

Oh, now it's contraception that caused the Hahns to convert? How often do they change their story?

As for Kimberly, "At this point [more than halfway through seminary] I was not steeped in Reformation theology, so the change in how I viewed justification did not seem momentous". Please consider the import of that statement. Here are two graduates of a Presbyterian College, two students nearing completion of their studies at reputedly one of the best evangelical Protestant seminaries in the country, two professing Christians – and the meaning of justification is not all that important to them. As we shall soon see, despite – or rather because of – their education, the Hahns – especially Scott – could not defend the Reformation principles of the Bible alone, faith alone, and Christ alone.
-- from the thread The Lost Soul of Scott Hahn

26 posted on 10/05/2012 7:33:11 AM PDT by Alex Murphy
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To: Vaquero
it just does not make sense to breed like that anymore.

I think "breed" is not the best term to use for families that were simply open to life, open to God's blessings in their marriage - whether in the Bronx or on the farm.

It should be pointed out that God Himself has put a limit on the number of babies a couple can have (no human couple has offspring the way rabbits do, for example, who can have 6-10 every other month!), and their are natural ways (without impeding human nature) of spacing children (like breastfeeding, or abstaining during fertile periods).

While big families had (and have) their problems, my simple question (and it's pragmatic) is this: Is our society better off because there are less children being born? I see divorce, adultery, violence, prostitution, substance abuse, addiction to pornography, etc. The problems today, after 50 years of contraception and abortion, are much worse than they were then. The sexual revolution is bearing its fruit - IMHO.

27 posted on 10/05/2012 7:42:58 AM PDT by koinonia (Virgil Goode for President - I'm not getting paid to promote him :-))
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To: vladimir998

no...it is neither racial nor nationality biased.

just lots of numbskulls out there who should not be breeding...and they seem to breed the most....too many baby mommies/ baby daddies out there littering and zer0 has me and you to pay for them.


28 posted on 10/05/2012 7:43:23 AM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: Alex Murphy

Hi Alex. Read the full article, they haven’t changed their story. It was just one of the landmarks (huge) in their journey that caused them to relook at the Catholic Faith. At any rate, their objective point about contraception is worth looking at objectively.

God bless you!


29 posted on 10/05/2012 7:48:00 AM PDT by koinonia (Virgil Goode for President - I'm not getting paid to promote him :-))
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To: Vaquero

But the Bible tells us that God’s instruction to mankind (including Adam and Eve) were to be fruitful and multiply.

When couples engage in contraception they are directly disobeying God.

On your thoughts about the money — God will provide. Where is your trust?


30 posted on 10/05/2012 7:54:51 AM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: koinonia
Contraception is contrary to God's law: Why the Hahn's became Roman Catholic
Scott Hahn appointed to endowed chair in theology, evangelization

Eucharist, Holy Meal
Scott Hahn on Our Lady
The found soul of Scott Hahn
The Lost Soul of Scott Hahn
Eucharist in the Pontificate of Benedict XVI (Commentary by Scott Hahn)
Do the Fathers Support Scott Hahn’s Theory?
Do the Father’s Support Scott Hahn's "Dragon" Theory?
The Scott Hahn Conversion Story
Our Father - In Heaven (Dr. Scott Hahn)
An Urgent Note >From Scott Hahn

31 posted on 10/05/2012 8:02:39 AM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: taterjay

It is something that is burdening my mind as well. I have not used birth control ever, getting older now, I am having this conversation with my daughters, It is my opinion that the world has gotten into the church with regard to this issue.


32 posted on 10/05/2012 8:42:06 AM PDT by ThisLittleLightofMine
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To: Vaquero; koinonia
"it just does not make sense to breed like that anymore."

You've fallen for the false choices the media sells, up to and including their bastardization of the language in order to cloud the issues.
It's animals that "breed" and the Satanic eugenics machine believes all but those who they select to be a part of the nobility are nothing but animals. Therefore, they plan on dictating to their livestock ("the masses" not a part of their nobility) which of their livestock are permitted to breed and when. Humans reproduce, they don't "breed", which is why the media and propagandists avoid using that term at all costs, they want their livestock to realize their place in the scheme of things.

Of course, the least expensive approach to controlling the breeding of your livestock is to chemically sterilize all but the few members of the herd you have selected for breeding stock. Given the number of people who have now sterilized themselves, it looks like it won't be any problem selling the herd the idea of mass sterilization. Once the cost of contraception is borne by the taxpayers via the Federal government, if follows that the government should cut costs by sterilizing people as early as possible. The same people who object to circumcision will soon be preaching that parents have a duty to sterilize their children while they're young. The obstinate, of course, can be sterilized whether they want to be or not since Buck v Bell grants our government the power to sterilize whoever it chooses for whatever reason it chooses. When you grant propagandists power to redefine the language you cede them the argument no matter what the argument is.

Unless you agree with that agenda, why is it better to slaughter those children who are conceived than to abstain a few days month in order to avoid conceiving them in the first place? NFP is not only more effective than the vast majority of contraceptives, it has no side effects. Well before "the pill" there were plenty of good Irish, Italian, Polish, German, and other Catholics I grew up around who limited the size of their family before the pill came along by simply knowing which time of the month to practice some self-discipline.

33 posted on 10/05/2012 11:01:22 AM PDT by Rashputin (Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory.)
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To: Rashputin
I grew up around who limited the size of their family before the pill came along by simply knowing which time of the month to practice some self-discipline.

how special for you....

34 posted on 10/05/2012 12:11:26 PM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: Vaquero

Why, yes, it was special. Much better than it no doubt was for those who grew up around folks who didn’t have self-discipline.


35 posted on 10/05/2012 12:22:52 PM PDT by Rashputin (Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory.)
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To: Salvation
But the Bible tells us that God’s instruction to mankind (including Adam and Eve) were to be fruitful and multiply

I believe in a Creator, I believe in a moral code....I do not believe that abortion is any more than murder...

BUT

I do not believe the bible is, for much of it, to be taken as written...I do not believe in Adam and Eve....In that regard I believe more or less along the lines of Louis Leakey when it comes to the first humans

Catholics don't believe in the literal interpretation of the Genesis story of Adam and Eve. The Catechism explains belief in original sin as Genesis giving a figurative account of a "primeval event" that occurred at the beginning of humankind's existence. Our first parents - regardless of what names they had - sinned. And their sin was larger than them. Its roots were in the kind of evil that exists in opposition to God. So as a Catholic you don't have to believe in Adam and Eve as historic person, but you do have to believe in the original sin of humanity, a sin that leaves a mark on every human since the very first.

...but hey, that's just me. I understand that we all believe differently...

36 posted on 10/05/2012 12:26:06 PM PDT by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: taterjay
even good and sincere Christians get their daughters on birth control at 16.

No, good and sincere Christians don't. One has to walk the walk not just talk the talk.

37 posted on 10/05/2012 9:16:05 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: kabumpo

Wonder why you don’t know the difference netween an actual title and an altered one. Probably the same reason why you posted your silly critique twice.


38 posted on 10/05/2012 9:24:17 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: A.A. Cunningham
netween(sic)

between

39 posted on 10/05/2012 9:25:36 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: A.A. Cunningham

Discuss the issues all you want, but do not make it personal.


40 posted on 10/05/2012 9:40:48 PM PDT by Religion Moderator
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