My girlfriends run the gamut of being the long-skirted,
homeschooling Catholic types to the secular-moral-code-but-loving kind.
In comparing one end of the spectrum to the other there is a
huge difference between how both groups decide when to start and stop having
kids.
It's a division can be pretty accurately summed up in two little
questions:
“Are you guys ready?” “Are you guys done?” With children,
that is.
Interestingly, it’s not the answers to these questions that
divides my friends so much as the fact that
amongst those who are actively
practicing their faith, the queries of being ‘ready’ and ‘done’ with
childbearing don’t come up. Oh, they
(we) ask things like, “So, when can we
expect a little so-and-so?” but always with an underlying assumption that children
will inevitably come along. And in
regards to ‘done-ness,’ with children, I’ve heard Catholic moms say things
like, “Well, I guess no more are coming,” but more as resignation to the fact
and not like the shutting off of a perfectly good water faucet forever.
So why does one group of friends pose these questions while the
other does not?
I have two ideas about this.
The first regards the question of higher authority.
The contents of the bottle won't guarantee her happiness. |
In contrast, those fully adhering to their faith view money through
a different higher authority: God’s will for them their family.
On God’s balance sheet, the numbers may not seem as child-friendly
upon first glance, however His form of assets includes various factors that
will lead to different type of fiscal security including the ability to discern
one’s true needs (which requires wisdom, a gift of the Holy Spirit), persevere
in sacrifice (which requires fortitude, a cardinal virtue), and yes, other people’s
help given in the way of one’s community or even parish (which is the charity we
are all called to).
The only way to trust in God’s Providence for your
family, I’ve found, is to just go for it.
But for many people, making that act of faith without the back up plan
of contraception, in vitro fertilization and abortion is asking too much.
I know plenty of families whose homes, salaries, cars,
vacations and toys I’d love to have, but my higher
authority requires I think outside my ‘bank account box’ as well as my socially
engrained notions of success.
My second idea on this topic is that, as far as practicing Christians
never asking each other: it's because we already know the answers. For us, it’s
equivalent to being asked if we are ready or done with doing God’s will, to
which the answers are always going to be, respectively, “I hope so,” and, “Never.”
But it’s different with my secular friends for whom the
topics frequently, and I do mean frequently,
come up. At times I’ve gotten the
feeling that many are searching for validation for their own personal choices.
It’s not my place to approve or disapprove someone’s decision, but I do find it
a bit tragic that they feel they need the thumb’s-up from other people, or
society, or even the Internal Revenue Service, in order to either follow or ignore the desires in their hearts that are written by God.
In radical contrast to them, are those who aren’t asking
anyone’s permission to have a big family.
For the latter group, having more children than is
considered practical, without the comforts that others find essential, during
the times that most would call inconvenient or even unwise, is not only possible
but very welcome throughout their lives.
Why?
Perhaps it all goes back subordinating their lives to will
of God, in which lies the true peace, joy and security that only He can give in
the midst of the most unlikely of circumstances and oftentimes in the most
unexpected of ways.
A lovely reflection.
ReplyDeleteFrom my vantage point of approaching 50 years old, I am amazed when peers talk of their various medical procedures - tubes tied, husbands snipped. Sheesh.
I am glad my husband and I let this fertility pass naturally.