The Record Newspaper 10 August 1995

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What's Inside .... How to get men to keep their promises? An American solution spreading to Australia provides an answer - Page 5 Croatia's bishops support their country's reconquest of the Krajina as a just reclamation of stolen land - Page 2

PERTH, WA: August 10, 1995

PRINT POST APPROVED PP602669 00303

Number 2957

POST ADDRESS: PO Box 75, LEEDERVILLE, 6902, WA LOCATION: 587 Newcastle Street, Cnr Douglas St (near Loftus St)

T ELEPHONE: (09) 22 77 080

FAX: (09) 22 77 087

Bishops condemn the pill agai By Peter Roseng en Natural family planning is not only a legitimate method for controlling the size of families, it is also more effective than contraceptive instruments such as the pill. the Australian Catholic Bishops Committee for Family and For Life has said in its latest pastoral letter to Catholics. The fourth pastoral statement to be issued by the committee. entitled God's Gift of Life and Love, reaffirms the Church's traditional opposition to contraception and its support for natural methods of contolling family size. Coming nearly thirty years after Pope Paul VI's heroic encyclical, flumanae Vitae. the letter calls on all Catholics, whether married or single, to come to a new appreciation of the importance and sacredness of married love and the Church's teaching on the transmission of life. Welcoming the release of the letter. Archbishop Barry Hickey said that, contraception aside, natural family planning stood on its own as an effective and drug-free method of family planning. He asked all clergy to also encourage young people to know what it is about. The Church teaches very clearly that artificial contraception is wrong of its very nature and cannot be used by Catholics. Silence about this matter could, and I'm sure, has, given the impression of a 'de facto' toleration of contraception by the Church," he said. Also supporting the letter's release, Ann O'Donnell, Director of Natural Family Planning Services for the diocese of Perth, said that the advantages for couples who used the method included freedom from drugs and devices; freedom from unhealthy side effects; and no effect on future fertility. It was also a viable and effective method, she said. Natural family planning is a method of birth regulation which relies on the accurate identification of the woman's natural cycles of fertility and infertility. The fertile phase in a woman's cycle can be recognised by a number of symptoms; this information can be used by couples to achieve or avoid a pregnancy as they desire. Couples may be fertile for up to nine days within an average cycle so the amount of abstinence from sexual intercourse required by couples may vary depending on the specific cycle characteristics and their motivation to avoid pregnancy. The pastoral letter also quotes the British Medical Journal, which says that while no method of fertility regulation, natural or technological, is 100 per cent reliable, modern methods of natural family planning have been found to be highly effective in

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Excerpts from the Catechism of the Catholic Church continue: abortion, euthanasia and suicide. Use them in spreading the Gospel in the workplace, family and neighbourhood- Page 15 Archbishop Hickey reflects on the end of World War II, reminding Australians that peace comes from within - Page 2

Heavy metal put to angelic Christian ends, for once

avoiding pregnancy among women from varied cultural, educational and economic backgrounds. A number of studies have found the pregnancy rate to be less than 1 per cent among couples who did not want any more children, which was comparable to the effectiveness of the contraceptive pill and considerably higher than rates achieved by condoms and diaphragms, it said. Planning a family was one of the responsibilities of married couples and they should always be free to determine their family's size, the letter said. It explores the life-giving, unifying and dynamic aspects of married love and also explains some of the basic facts of natural family planning. Presented in a short format, it explains not only the reasons for supporting natural methods of family planning but also quotes women and men who tell how it has benefitted their marriages. One woman, Jennie, quit the pill and together with her husband began instruction in natural family planning. We changed because I was sick of the side effects of the pill, so we weren't expecting the impact on our relationship that is already evident. Now our family planning is a shared responsibility. We communicate about our decisions more openly andI dont feel burdened like I used to when the onus was always on me," she said in the letter. The bishops also point out that many couples are turning to natural family plan- Chris Curtin with the Iron Maiden at Aquinas College. ning to escape the burdensome side-effects of chemical contraception. They say that a major advantage of the use of natural methHis Art Master, Paul Jacobs, believes it's By Colleen McGuiness-Howard ods is that they are not complicated and the largest scale work by a high school stucan be taught to anyone. dent he's seen and said Aquinas was proud Their letter says the use of natural methNo! This windmill is not a version of Don of Chris' effort and inspiration behind its ods also foster marriage-supporting charac- Quixote's dream but an impressive 5.4m- construction from the design through to the teristics in husbands and wives such as high iron and steel angel. finished product. self-awareness, self-control and communiAnd they may be windmill blades but But don't imagine this tall, lanky blonde cation skills which are essential for matu- they represent her wings. young man will be planting his sculptures rity and stable marriage relationships. Aquinas College Year 12 Applied Art stu- around Perth because, although obviously Abstinence also encourages spouses to dent Chris Curtin certainly explored his artistic by nature, he intends returning to communicate about their sex life and to fund of creativity when he imagined her his family's farm at the end of his studies. appreciate its overall place in their mar- and scoured his family farm, Mirrola, in But he hopes one day to come back to riage, it says. Beverley to gather materials, which his Aquinas and view again 'his angel' which Speaking from Adelaide, committee father then trucked down to Aquinas. he'll be leaving there for others to contemchairman Archbishop Leonard Faulkner The angel's face is a tractor seat, and her plate and admire. said the document's release was part of an form is made up from combine harvester But there's one more special touch to add ongoing series of statements by the Com- points, header teeth, corrugated iron gratmittee on family issues arising out of last ing from drench dips, washers, deep rip- - that of a garden which he'll establish near his angel's feet - which should make it year's International Year of the Family. ping points and other metal components. Anyone interested in discovering more Named the Iron Maiden, the angel, set something of a contemplative area, espeabout natural family planning can contact into a half a metre depth of concrete out- cially in its beautiful and serene setting. either the Natural Family Planning Centre side the college's metal work centre, stands The sculpture features in the Aquinas Art in Perth on (09) 221 3866 or the Billings tall against a clutter-free backdrop of Exhibition which opened this Thursday Ovulation Method on (09) 339 5981 (coun- Aquinas' spacious grounds, the Canning from 9 am to 3.30 pm and concludes next try caller's, freecall 1800 81 9844 River and a beautiful blue sky, holding a Thursday 17 at 1.30 pm. with special viewFull text - Pages 8-9 book containing the rules for Eternal Life. ing this Sunday from 2 - 5 pm.


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