Redefined wrote:Hi alter idem,
You are right, I shouldn't care if she chooses to have a big family, but she isn't choosing to have a big family as she is choosing to do her Mormon duty. If the church didn't teach the "birth control, No No" concept, she wouldn't be having anymore babies because she would feel okay about using birth control without offending God.
But see, she's NOT really doing her 'Mormon duty', except in her own mind. You know your friend, I don't. But if she thinks she cannot use birth control because the church frowns on it, she's wrong. And if she continues to have children because she thinks it's a sin to use birth control, she's misguided. However, she could be having children because she really wants a large family. I think we have to be careful about judging others by our own perceptions--there's nothing wrong with having a lot of children, it's not always a bad thing. Some parents are great--my parents had seven and my husband's parents had six and they wanted big families and were wonderful, supportive, effective, loving parents. However, I know some who grew up in a family of one or two children and their parents probably shouldn't have had any.
"Tool of Satan" is my paraphrase for the quote boxed above in the OP.
Okay, thanks for explaining. It seemed a little out of character for a church leader to call something a 'tool of satan', so that makes sense.
It says Satan and his cohorts are using "nefarious propaganda [birth control, etc.] to lure people away from their primary responsibilities as wives mothers and homakers." And, birth control, etc. is "Satan's way of destroying women".
That translates as birth control being one of Satan's tools.
Tool=an instrument; the means whereby some act is accomplished;
Well, I think the point is that the church stresses that our role as parents is one the most important parts of earth life and at the time this article was written, the 1970's, many women were foregoing marriage and motherhood for careers. I think they wanted to stress to LDS that being a parent was more important than anything else a woman could do in earth life and to willfully choose to not be a parent would be a very bad choice--in an eternal sense.