Pope Francis: No Catholic need to breed like "rabbits"
BBC News
BBC News
Good Roman Catholics do not need to breed like "rabbits", the
Pope has said, but should practice "responsible" parenting instead.
Pope Francis spoke as he returned from the Philippines, where he met
former street children abandoned by parents unable to afford to care for them.
Standing firm against artificial birth control, he said new life was
"part of the sacrament of marriage".
But he said population experts advised three children per family.
Pope Francis raised eyebrows last week when, in the aftermath of the
Charlie Hebdo killings in Paris, he said it was wrong to provoke others by
insulting their religion.
He told journalists as a joke that his assistant could expect a punch if
he ''cursed his mother''. At the same time, the Pope defended freedom of
expression.
"Excuse my expression"
Speaking to journalists while heading back to Rome from the Philippines
on Monday, Pope Francis was asked what he would say to families who had more
children than they could afford because the Church forbids artificial
contraception.
He replied with an unexpected turn of phrase: "Some people think
that - excuse my expression here - that in order to be good Catholics we have
to be like rabbits."
"No. Parenthood is about being responsible. This is clear."
The Pope said he knew many ways allowed by the Catholic Church that
could ensure families only had as many children as they wished.
He cited the case of one woman he had met who had had seven children by
Caesarean section and was expecting her eighth - a pregnancy he said was
irresponsible.
"She said, 'I trust in God.' But God gave us the means to be
responsible," the Pope said.
But he added that for the poorest, a child was a treasure for its mother
and father.
To a separate question, the Pope said that most importantly, no outside
institution should impose its views on families.
Progressive, Western ideas about birth control and gay rights were
increasingly being imposed by groups, institutions or nations there, often as a
condition for development aid, he said.
"Every people deserves to conserve its identity without being ideologically
colonised," the Pope said.
During his trip to the Philippines the Pope defended traditional Vatican
teaching, which opposes artificial contraception.
On Sunday, an estimated six million people attended an outdoor mass he
celebrated in the capital, Manila.
Pope Francis in quotes
- On
freedom of speech: "If my good friend Doctor Gasparri [who organises
the Pope's trips] speaks badly of my mother, he can expect to get punched.
You cannot provoke. You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make
fun of the faith of others. There is a limit."
- On
homosexuality: "If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and
has good will, who am I to judge?"
- On abortion: "It is not 'progressive' to try to resolve problems by eliminating a human life... This defence of unborn life is closely linked to the defence of each and every other human right."
- On hunger: "With all the food that is left over and thrown away, we could feed so many. If we were able to stop wasting and start recycling food, world hunger would diminish greatly."
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