Archive for the ‘NFPI’ Category

Natural Family Planning and Why NFPI?

Sunday, October 4th, 2015

John wrote the following to a priest who inquired about NFP International:

Our pastor got us back into teaching NFP because he wanted his engaged couples to have what we have to offer.  Our manual, Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach, teaches what is clearly the most complete approach.  It gives legitimate freedom of choice to couples and can be accessed all over the States and anywhere in the world that has access to the internet.

We are the only organization in America that promotes and teaches Ecological Breastfeeding according to the Seven Standards.  Others may mention breastfeeding, but their talk about continued breastfeeding is essentially the same as the “total breastfeeding” that was taught to my wife in the early Sixties.  When the mothers in her La Leche League group compared notes and noticed that one mom would have her first period at three months (as did my wife Sheila with our first baby) and another had over a year of breastfeeding amenorrhea (no periods), Sheila began to research the matter.  Why do women in “undeveloped” non-contracepting cultures enjoy two, three, and sometimes four years between babies just from breastfeeding?  The answer is contained in the closeness of mother and baby and the frequency of nursing episodes.  That’s why Sheila has written several books on the subject and why we include this information in our NFP course.  The rest of the NFP movement by and large talks about evidence-based NFP but refuses to acknowledge this evidence-based reality.

We may also be only NFP organization that systematically transmits Catholic teaching on sexual morality including chaste abstinence during the fertile time.  When couples who learned NFP elsewhere tell us that they practiced various sexual immoralities during the fertile time for years and say they were never taught about chaste abstinence, we acknowledge the need to transmit this teaching.

We support Humanae Vitae with a renewal-of-the-marriage-covenant theology that has roots in the Letter to Families by St. John Paul II and is much easier to grasp than his work in the TOB.

You would do your readers a favor by listing our website as a resource on your website.  I encourage you to visit and spend some time reviewing the blogs as well as all the material we have in NFP and Spiritual resources.  The NFPI Home Study Course continues to get rave reviews from users, and we ask for a donation of only $70, about half of what some others charge. 

In His service,

John F. Kippley
NFP International

Natural Family Planning: Why NFP International Is Needed

Sunday, July 26th, 2015

By the fall of 2004 it was becoming clear to us that the NFP organization we founded in 1971 was making changes or dropping the three main teachings we brought to that organization that had served people so well for the 32 years of our leadership.

These three main teachings are called the Triple Strand.  We think the Triple Strand is so good that it needs to be kept alive and spread– we think that everybody in the world has the right to know these things.  Further, we think that our two specific charisms (the eco-breastfeeding and the covenant theology) are special gifts from God and have been confirmed by the actions and words of St. John Paul II.  In addition, Dr. Konald Prem’s teaching of the sympto-thermal method is superior to other NFP methods and should continue to be taught.  Thus this was the main reason, among others, as to why we started NFP International.

Regarding ecological breastfeeding
In 1995 St. John Paul II co-hosted with the Royal Society of England a conference on breastfeeding at the Vatican.  In his talk, he endorsed the recommendations of UNICEF and the WHO for mothers to breastfeed for two years and beyond.  Frequent suckling is the only way that a mother will have a milk supply at 12, 18, and 24 months.  And the Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding are a mother’s best assurance of frequent suckling. Some couples use only eco-bf to space their babies apart.  We know of two mothers who have written a series of blogs about the Seven Standards.  One’s website was called something like “Crunchy Lutheran Mom.”  The other wrote for her diocesan paper in Ireland.

Regarding the Covenant theology
In 1994, ten years after he completed his opus magnum of the Theology of the Body, the Pope wrote a short document titled “Letter to Families from John Paul II.”  In it he specifically endorsed the covenant theology.  “In the conjugal act, husband and wife are called to confirm in a responsible way the mutual gift of self which they have made to each other in the marriage covenant.”  This may be the first time a Pope has used such terminology.  Scott Hahn, a rather famous convert, told me that I am the first person (of whom he is aware) to put that concept into writing.  I can’t prove or disprove his opinion, but I take it seriously because he is the best-read person I know.  My book, Birth Control and the Marriage Covenant, was the occasion for him and his wife to learn this when they were married students in a Protestant seminary.  At the time, Scott considered himself the most anti-Catholic member of the student body.  I consider it divine Providence that another couple in their married student housing complex lent that book to his wife, Kimberly, whose father was the fairly well known pastor of a Presbyterian church in North College Hill.

Regarding the Prem STM
In 1976-1978 the US Bishops NFP organization persuaded NIH to conduct a study to compare the Billings mucus-only system with the cross-checking sympto-thermal system.  The results were so much in favor of the STM that the investigators stopped the study.  The difference was something like twice as many unplanned pregnancies in the mucus-only section.  It was a randomized study, and the investigators could no longer pretend that they didn’t know which half of the study was more effective in avoiding pregnancy.  Yet two of the principal mucus-only advocates put up such a fuss that these results are by and large ignored.  All too many mucus-only advocates have the diocesan NFP jobs.

Soooooo, in a nutshell, that’s why we feel obliged to do what we can to keep these ideas alive.

John and Sheila Kippley
Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach
From July 19th to the evening of August 7th (NFP Awareness Week through World Breastfeeding Week) anyone can purchase the following printed books at a 40% discount at lulu:
Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor
Battle-Scarred: Justice Can Be Elusive
Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing

Natural Family Planning: John’s Plea to a Priest

Sunday, May 10th, 2015

Dear Father,

I called you Monday because I wanted to tell you about our Humanae Vitae apostolate.  In the face of low interest in natural family planning, a committee of American bishops in 1989 urged that every engaged couple ought to be required to attend a full course on natural family planning.  The bishops made it clear that this was not just a couple hours in a day-long pre-Cana course.  Interest seems to be even lower today, and that makes the bishops’ exhortation even more important.

I continue to work in the NFP apostolate because of what Leon Cardinal Suenens wrote in his book, Love and Control.   “The sins of omission and laziness of those who, for whatever reason, have the job of giving sex instruction will weigh heavier on the last day than the sins of the men and women who were never sufficiently instructed to meet their obligations.”

The immediate reason for my phone call was to show you a photograph that appeared on the front page of the Wall Street Journal weekend edition (Jan 3-4).  It showed a young boy doing a skateboard trick in a former Catholic church.  The caption reads, “The former Roman Catholic Church of St. Joseph in Arnhem, Netherlands, one of hundreds of decommissioned churches, was turned into a skate park.”

This is an all too visible result of the rejection of Humanae Vitae.  The Dutch and German bishops were perhaps the most obvious in the world in their non-acceptance of the 1968 encyclical of Bl. Pope Paul VI that reaffirmed the teaching of Casti Connubii, which in turn had reaffirmed the Tradition of some 1900 years condemning the sin of marital contraception.  In section 26, Humanae Vitae also encouraged the teaching of NFP by user couples to other couples.

I also wanted to point out a few passages in our NFP manual, Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach, that can help priests and deacons evangelize their engaged couples.  I use “evangelize” here in the sense of the “new” evangelization—showing that Jesus is the ultimate Author of the truths taught by the Church including its moral teachings considered so difficult in the minds of many Catholics who certainly need this sort of instruction.

Several things distinguish our NFP program, Natural Family Planning International, from other programs.  One is our teaching of Ecological Breastfeeding.  We cannot force this on anyone, but we know how appreciated it is by many.  It not only maximizes all the dose-related benefits of breastfeeding, but it also provides an extended time of natural infertility.  On January 13, Sheila received an email from a wife and mother who was emphatic in her thanks.  She and her husband used ecological breastfeeding for spacing, and it worked wonderfully, providing two to three years between each of their six children.

Sometimes this teaching has evangelical effects as witnessed by this:

The Kippleys’ teaching about ecological breastfeeding was instrumental in my conversion, not only to the fullness of Church teaching on marriage but also to the Catholic faith itself.  I was a 30-something, “childless-by-choice”, nominal Protestant when I encountered it, and my heart was so changed that I became Catholic within a year, AND became pregnant with my first child.  My husband and I used ONLY ecological breastfeeding to space our three children going forward, and our marriage and family life have been immeasurably enriched.  [Those] who encourage this teaching are truly evangelizing in a desperately needed way in today’s world.  — Pam Pilch, Virginia

Others are helped by another unique feature of the NFP International teaching—the covenant theology we use to support the teaching of Humanae Vitae.

My wife and I found the biblically based renewal-of-your-marriage-covenant theology so luminous and compelling that it helped us to accept Catholic teaching on birth control when we were still Protestants.  —Scott Hahn, commenting on John Kippley’s book, Sex and the Marriage Covenant: A Basis for Morality.

I want to thank you for running announcements of the NFPI courses, and I also want to encourage you to rethink the idea of requiring the NFPI course as a normal part of preparation for life-long marriage, not just the wedding.  The right kind of NFP course can help you evangelize your parish, encourage couples to think in terms of families larger than the cultural norm of one or two children, and thus save your school and eventually your parish.  (We have a priest friend in Illinois who recently closed his parish school.  He told his bishop and his parishioners that contraception and sterilization forced this closure.)

Lastly, for couples whose schedule makes course attendance very difficult, we have a Home Study Course that many couples have greatly appreciated.  For both the classroom course and the Home Study course we request a donation of only $70, about the cost of the bouquet the bride will toss at the reception.  Couples who adopt ecological breastfeeding will save $1,500 to $3,000 with each baby by not having to buy any formula, and both mother and baby will most likely experience better health.

I really don’t want to see our beautiful churches turned into recreation parks or, worse yet, mosques.  But the Church needs its couples to have at least three children to survive as a church and about five children to provide sufficient vocations and to fulfill its role in the culture.

Humanae Vitae is not just “nice” or an “ideal.”  It is absolutely necessary.  The Dutch and German churches are suffering greatly because of their non-acceptance of this teaching, and the same holds true for most of the European countries.  The Church in this country is not far behind, and it will not be saved just by Latin American immigrants, many of whom fall victim to the cultural bias towards contraception and sterilization, and many of whom are poorly catechized and fall victim to secularism or join a non-Catholic religious community.

Please rethink the idea of requiring engaged couples to attend our course.  It will be one of the greatest favors you can do for them, and many will be very grateful.  I wish that “encouragement” was sufficient.  In practice, however, when everything else is required for marriage preparation and the Humanae Vitae course is only encouraged, what comes across is that the pastor doesn’t think the latter is important, and typical couples, many already contracepting, are all too ready to agree.

Thank you for reading this.  I hope it has been less unpleasant for you to read it than for me to write it.  In many ways, I would like to quit.  But I have no reason to think that the Church has erred in its teaching about love, marriage and sexuality, and I have no reason to use either age or health as an excuse.  If you would like to discuss this further, please phone or contact me at the email address in the letterhead.

In His service,
John F. Kippley
[John received no reply of any kind.]