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4. WHAT CONNECTION IS REQUIRED FROM THE
MORAL POINT OF VIEW BETWEEN PROCREATION AND THE CONJUGAL ACT?
a) The Church's teaching on marriage and
human procreation affirms the "inseparable connection, willed by God and
unable to be broken by man on his own initiative, between the two meanings of
the conjugal act: the unitive meaning and the procreative meaning. Indeed, by
its intimate structure, the conjugal act, while most closely uniting husband
and wife, capacitates them for the generation of new lives, according to laws
inscribed in the very being of man and of woman".(38) This principle, which is based upon the nature of marriage and the
intimate connection of the goods of marriage, has well-known consequences on
the level of responsible fatherhood and motherhood. "By safeguarding both
these essential aspects, the unitive and the procreative, the conjugal act
preserves in its fullness the sense of true mutual love and its ordination
towards man's exalted vocation to parenthood".(39) The same doctrine concerning the link between the meanings of the
conjugal act and between the goods of marriage throws light on the moral
problem of homologous artificial fertilization, since "it is never
permitted to separate these different aspects to such a degree as positively to
exclude either the procreative intention or the conjugal relation" (40) Contraception deliberately deprives the conjugal act of its openness
to procreation and in this way brings about a voluntary dissociation of the
ends of marriage. Homologous artificial fertilization, in seeking a procreation
which is not the fruit of a specific act of conjugal union, objectively effects
an analogous separation between the goods and the meanings of marriage. Thus, fertilization
is licitly sought when it is the result of a "conjugal act which is per se
suitable for the generation of children to which marriage is ordered by its
nature and by which the spouses become one flesh".(41) But from the moral point of view procreation is deprived of its
proper perfection when it is not desired as the fruit of the conjugal act, that
is to say of the specific act of the spouses' union.
b ) The moral value of the intimate link
between the goods of marriage and between the meanings of the conjugal act is
based upon the unity of the human being, a unity involving body and spiritual
soul. (42) Spouses mutually express their personal love in
the "language of the body ", which clearly involves both
"sponsal meanings" and parental ones.(43) The
conjugal act by which the couple mutually express their self-gift at the same
time expresses openness to the gift of life. It is an act that is inseparably
corporal and spiritual. It is in their bodies and through their bodies that the
spouses consummate their marriage and are able to become father and mother. In
order to respect the language of their bodies and their natural generosity, the
conjugal union must take place with respect for its openness to procreation;
and the procreation of a person must be the fruit and the result of married
love. The origin of the human being thus follows from a procreation that is
"linked to the union, not only biological but also spiritual, of the
parents, made one by the bond of marriage".(44)
Fertilization achieved outside the bodies of the couple remains by this very
fact deprived of the meanings and the values which are expressed in the
language of the body and in the union of human persons.
c) Only respect for the link between the
meanings of the conjugal act and respect for the unity of the human being make
possible procreation in conformity with the dignity of the person. In his
unique and irrepeatable origin, the child must be respected and recognized as
equal in personal dignity to those who give him life. The human person must be
accepted in his parents' act of union and love; the generation of a child must
therefore be the fruit of that mutual giving (45) which is
realized in the conjugal act wherein the spouses cooperate as servants and not
as masters in the work of the Creator who is Love.(46) In reality, the
origin of a human person is the result of an act of giving. The one conceived
must be the fruit of his parents' love. He cannot be desired or conceived as
the product of an intervention of medical or biological techniques; that would
be equivalent to reducing him to an object of scientific technology. No one may
subject the coming of a child into the world to conditions of technical
efficiency which are to be evaluated according to standards of control and
dominion. The moral relevance of the link between the meanings of the
conjugal act and between the goods of marriage, as well as the unity of the
human being and the dignity of his origin, demand that the procreation of a
human person be brought about as the fruit of the conjugal act specific to the
love between spouses. The link between procreation and the conjugal act is
thus shown to be of great importance on the anthropological and moral planes,
and it throws light on the positions of the Magisterium with regard to
homologous artificial fertilization.
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