The common good. the Canadian bishops and the public debate on contraception

Appleby, B.

Conscience 18(3): 15-19

1997


ISSN/ISBN: 0740-6835
PMID: 12178874
Document Number: 270684
Until 1969, contraception was illegal in Canada. It was, however, permissible for those who could prove that the actions which led to their criminal charge served the public good. Since the Catholic church was known to oppose the use of contraceptive devices, Protestants, Catholics, legislators, and citizens in the early 1960s believed that the Roman Catholic church would oppose all efforts to remove contraception from Canada's Criminal Code. In 1966, however, the Canadian Catholic Conference (CCC) did not oppose an amendment to decriminalize contraception. The author lists members of the Canadian Catholic hierarchy who supported a change in doctrine on contraception. The debate within the Catholic church, the Canadian Catholic hierarchy, and among parishioners over contraception is described. The bill decriminalizing contraception finally received Royal Assent on June 27, 1969. Although Pope Paul VI had issued Humanae Vitae, his encyclical proscribing birth control, in 1968, the public debate in Canada was long over and Canadians were soon to enjoy the legal use of contraceptive methods.

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