GotQuestions.org:
What does the Bible say about birth control? Should Christians use birth
control?
Modern birth
control methods were unknown in Bible times, and the Bible is, therefore,
silent on the matter. The Bible does have quite a lot to say about children,
however. The Bible presents children as a gift from God (Genesis 4:1; Genesis 33:5), a heritage
from the Lord (Psalm 127:3-5),
a blessing from God (Luke 1:42),
and a crown to the aged (Proverbs 17:6).
God sometimes blesses barren women with children (Psalm 113:9; Genesis 21:1-3; 25:21-22; 30:1-2; 1 Samuel 1:6-8; Luke 1:7, 24-25). God forms children
in the womb (Psalm 139:13-16).
God knows children before their birth (Jeremiah 1:5; Galatians 1:15).
The closest that Scripture comes to
condemning birth control is Genesis chapter 38, the account of Judah’s sons Er
and Onan. Er married a woman named Tamar, but he was wicked and the Lord put
him to death, leaving Tamar with no husband or children. Tamar was given in
marriage to Er’s brother, Onan, in accordance with the law of levirate marriage
in Deuteronomy 25:5-6. Onan
did not want to split his inheritance with any child that he might produce on
his brother’s behalf, so he practiced the oldest form of birth control,
withdrawal. Genesis 38:10 says,
“What he did was wicked in the LORD’s sight; so He put him to death also.”
Onan’s motivation was selfish; he used Tamar for his own pleasure, but refused
to perform his legal duty of creating an heir for his deceased brother. This
passage is often used as evidence that God does not approve of birth control.
However, it was not the act of contraception that caused the Lord to put Onan
to death; it was Onan’s selfish motives behind the action. Therefore, we can
find no biblical admonition against the use of birth control in and of itself.
Contraception, by definition, is merely
the opposite of conception. It is not the use of contraception that is wrong or
right. As we learned from Onan, it is the motivation behind the contraception
that determines if it is right or wrong. Married couples use contraception for
a variety of reasons. Some feel called to put off childbearing until they are
in a better position to care for children. Some, such as missionary couples,
may feel their service to God overrides the desire for children at a particular
point in time. Some may be convinced that God has a different plan for them.
Ultimately, a couple’s motives for delaying childbearing, using contraception,
or even having numerous children, are between them and God.
The inability to have children when
they are desired is always presented in Scripture as a bad thing, especially
considering the cultural stigma attached to childlessness at that time. There is
no one in the Bible who expressed a desire not to have any children. At the
same time, it cannot be argued from the Bible that it is wrong to use birth
control for a limited time, or even permanently, for that matter. All married
couples should seek the Lord’s will in regards to when they should try to have
children and how many children they seek to have.
It all comes down to this: no one has
the right to determine whether someone else should or should not use birth
control, how many children is the “right” number for them, or whether they
should have children at all. As in all things, we are not to judge others or
cause brothers and sisters in Christ to stumble, spiritually speaking.
Note – the principles outlined in this article apply equally, generally
speaking, to the various methods of birth control, including using a condom /
condoms, diaphragm / diaphragms, spermicide / spermicides, contraceptives,
intrauterine devices, IUD, or coitus interruptus. Also, those who use oral or
hormonal contraceptives (the Pill) or an IUD should be aware that both those
methods of birth control can prevent the implantation of a fertilized ovum; in
other words, low-dose oral contraceptives and IUDs can be abortifacients.
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