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Certain Conservative Mennonites such as Beachy Amish Mennonite fellowships, maintain a prohibition against the use of birth control, though natural family planning is permitted. [55] [page needed] [56] Old Colony Mennonites, like the Old Order Amish, do not officially allow birth control practices. [57]
Some communities openly allow access to birth control to women whose health would be compromised by childbirth. [16] The Amish are against abortion and also find "artificial insemination, genetics, eugenics, and stem cell research" to be "inconsistent with Amish values and beliefs". [17]
Some communities openly allow access to birth control to women whose health would be compromised by childbirth. [133] The Amish are against abortion and also find "artificial insemination, genetics, eugenics, and stem cell research" to be "inconsistent with Amish values and beliefs". [142]
Birth control restrictions may also come in less obvious ways, like allowing a pharmacist not to prescribe birth control because of religious conflicts or allowing Catholic hospitals and medical ...
Amish communities share general beliefs, but their practices may differ depending on region, levels of religious and cultural conservatism and the specific heritage of different communities ...
In 2020, the Supreme Court approved exemptions which would allow employers to deny coverage for birth control for religious or moral objections. Despite this, Trump said on his social media ...
The United Methodist Church, holds that "each couple has the right and the duty prayerfully and responsibly to control conception according to their circumstances."Its Resolution on Responsible Parenthood states that in order to "support the sacred dimensions of personhood, all possible efforts should be made by parents and the community to ensure that each child enters the world with a ...
Since early Islamic history, Muslim scholars approved of the use of birth control if the two spouses both agreed to it. [43] Coitus interruptus, a primitive form of birth control, was a known practice at the time of Muhammad, and his companions engaged in it. Muhammad knew about this but never advised or preached against it.