http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2009/09/22/catholic_sex/

New Catholic sex prayer -- but where's the sex?
The Church's booklet for married spouses replaces excitement and
intimacy with sack cloth and ashes

By Frances Kissling

Sept. 22, 2009 | A British publishing house has created a stir with a
new book. No, not the latest teen vampire saga or bestseller of
intellectual derring-do; this hot commodity is the Prayer Book for
Spouses. The 64-page booklet from the Catholic Truth Society (CTS)
contains prayers about pregnancy, about caring for children and
elderly parents. The prayer getting all the attention, however, is
about sex. It is the prayer married couples are advised to say “before
making love.”

It's hard not to detect a note of skepticism and confusion in media
reports, as though the prayer is something akin to Scientologists
using e-meters to uncover childhood secrets. "The Roman Catholic
Church encourages couples to pray before sex to remind themselves that
intercourse is a selfless act not driven by hedonism," reads a caption
in London's Daily Mail, which illustrates  the story with a cutesy
photo of a couple kneeling by a white bed. Those crazy Catholics --
what will they think of next?

As for the prayer itself -- well, it's gibberish. Perhaps it's unfair
to subject prayers to literary criticism, but this one is a dour
series of poorly strung-together clichés about married couples being
mired in “half-truths and little deceits," as CTS director Fergal
Martin said on the organization's website, adding this gloomy forecast
for marriage: “For many the struggle for sincerity and truth in loving
will be constant.”

But more important, whoever wrote this prayer (the authors are
unnamed) squeezed all the juice out of sexual pleasure. Had they
bothered to study the greatest of all prayers and songs of love -- the
Old Testament Song of Solomon, in which the lover and the beloved sing
to each other in 117 lines of exquisite intimacy and truth-telling --
they might have written something beautiful and evocative. It could
have started bydrawing on the third verse: “By night on my bed I
sought him whom my soul loves.” It could have ended as the Song of
Solomon ends: “Make haste my beloved and be thou like to a roe or to a
young hart upon the mountain of spices.” It could have invoked fine
wine, the nectar of the pomegranate, the “waters that cannot quench
love,” the “floods that cannot drown it.”

Instead the couple in the prayer whines and pleads and pretty much
avoids sex altogether: “Father, send your Holy Spirit into our hearts.
Place within us love that truly gives, tenderness that truly unites,
self-offering that tells the truth and does not deceive, forgiveness
that truly receives, loving physical union that welcomes. Open our
hearts to you, to each other and the goodness of your will. Cover our
poverty in the richness of your mercy and forgiveness. Clothe us in
our true dignity and take to yourself our shared aspirations for your
glory, forever and ever. Mary, our Mother, intercede for us. Amen."

Avoiding sex is something religion -- especially Catholicism -- excels
at. From the earliest days of Christianity, sex was suspect. The early
Christians were sure the second coming of Jesus would happen in their
lifetime and believed it was their obligation to prepare by spending
as much time as possible praying and thinking about God. They
understood that sex -- and especially its pleasure -- distracted them
from that purpose. The only possible redeeming feature of sex was
procreation. Just the idea of a prayer for making love would have been
anathema to them: Christians were advised to avoid sex, and married
couples living “as brother and sister” were the ideal. After all,
church leaders postulated that, if Adam and Eve had not sinned and had
been able to remain in paradise, sex would be devoid of all those
messy emotions -- pleasure, pain, jealousy, anxiety, need. And this
fear of sexual pleasure did not disappear with time. As late as the
18th century, sex was a sin outside procreation. The more pleasure you
had, the more sinful it was.

Modern Catholics are embarrassed by this history. They claim
everything has changed and, in some ways, it has. But even today, the
Catholic Church does not accept sexuality separated from procreation.
This despite the fact that most Catholic couples have sex for the
purpose of having children only a few times during their married life
and thousands of times as an expression of love and in pursuit of
pleasure. And why not? It is incomprehensible to believe that God
wishes couples to have more children than they can afford or thinks it
is “good” for them to abstain from sex when they are not prepared to
have children. This hostility to sexual pleasure has caused much
suffering. When modern contraception became available 50 years ago, in
the form of the pill, the church forbade its use and, for a time,
Catholic couples listened -- often to their detriment. Kate Michelman,
the former director of NARAL, was a young, faithful Catholic wife who
used the rhythm method. She had three daughters in three years and a
fourth child on the way when her husband left her. She had an
abortion, a painful choice about which she has eloquently written.
Today, 90 percent of Catholics in the U.S. use contraception and few
of them see any need to beg for forgiveness. The principles and values
that govern their sex lives are so far removed from the “prayer for
spouses” that the prayer is more like a fairy tale.

Catholic couples -- married, unmarried, gay and straight -- feel no
need for “forgiveness” for the wrongs the prayer alludes to. They do
not believe their lives are impoverished. They do not feel the need to
be “clothed” in dignity. Truth is found in nakedness; love itself is
enriching and requires no pardon.

If anyone needs to pray for forgivenessit is Popes and bishops for the
pain they caused to children by scaring them into believing they’d go
to hell if they masturbated, for the divorced and remarried Catholics
who have been denied the sacraments, for couples who followed the
teaching against contraception and had more kids than they could care
for, for gay Catholics who have been denied the right to marry, and
for infertile couples who are told they can’t use modern fertility
treatments.

The rest of us might pray that, as time marches on, more and more
Catholics stop following what bishops and "spousal prayers" say on
these matters -- and continue to follow their common sense and their
conscience.


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http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2009/09/22/catholic_sex/
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