When the marriage bed becomes a burden, When preventing cancer raises moral questions, When miscarriage shakes your faith in God’s power | ACW362
Ask Christopher West
Theology of the Body Institute
4.9 • 549 Ratings
🗓️ 8 December 2025
⏱️ 55 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Questions answered this episode:
- I love marriage and my wife, but we’re facing our biggest challenge: understanding sex and its rightful place. We stayed chaste before marriage; I was a virgin and she’d been abstinent for years. I desire union daily, and while she enjoys our intimacy, she doesn’t need it as often, though she still wants affection. We’re trying to discern how often sex should happen within God’s plan. She fears being used because of past wounds, and I fear rejection when she’s not ready. I worry her “no” means I’ve failed her. Since marrying, sex dominates my thoughts, and it’s becoming a burden.
- About ten years ago, at 45, I learned I carry a genetic marker for several cancers. Two of my sisters with the same marker developed endometrial and ovarian cancer. I later became a breast cancer survivor, another cancer on the list. My doctor told me there’s no good screening for ovarian cancer and strongly urged a hysterectomy, since pregnancy was unlikely and ovarian cancer is often detected too late. I chose the hysterectomy to prevent cancer, not pregnancy. But after studying Theology of the Body, I’m questioning that decision. What does the Church teach in a case like mine?
- My wife and I had two miscarriages this year, and the pain has been deep. She is angry with God, and I realized I repressed my own grief until recently. Now I often fight back tears and long for our two children. We keep asking God why. I can’t imagine how this suffering could be glorified here. Are some sufferings only understood in heaven? I also wonder whether physical imperfections like illness or miscarriage are God’s doing or simply consequences of human freedom. I doubt whether prayer can change anything, yet I still love God even as I struggle with doubts about His omnipotence.
Resources:
JPII Legacy Foundation Website
Donate to the JPII Legacy Foundation
Ask Christopher West is a weekly podcast in which Theology of the Body Institute President Christopher West and his beloved wife Wendy share their humor and wisdom, answering questions about marriage, relationships, life, and the Catholic faith, all in light of John Paul II’s beautiful teachings on the Theology of the Body.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | From the Theology of the Body Institute, this is the Ask Christopher West podcast. |
| 0:19.9 | Welcome everybody to another episode. Before you say anything. Yes. Hi, the best listeners. |
| 0:21.4 | Welcome everybody to another episode. |
| 0:23.6 | Before you say anything. |
| 0:24.6 | Yes. |
| 0:25.2 | I just want to tell our listeners, I am so grateful to be in this ministry with my husband. |
| 0:33.3 | Thanks, Wendy. |
| 0:34.2 | Yes, I'm just looking at you. |
| 0:35.7 | You work so hard. |
| 0:37.1 | And I'm grateful. I'm you. You work so hard. And I'm grateful. |
| 0:39.2 | I'm grateful. |
| 0:40.7 | You're working hard because you have that fire that St. Paul talked about, of just like, I need to share this good news. |
| 0:50.1 | I need to. |
| 0:50.9 | Woe to me. |
| 0:52.3 | If I do not proclaim this good news, you're right. |
| 0:56.5 | And we have some good news to proclaim about the feast day on which this episode is being released, which is not the day it's recorded. |
| 1:05.6 | In case you didn't know that, everybody, we record in advance. |
| 1:08.9 | But we know this episode is being released on December 8th. |
| 1:12.5 | Yes. Feast of. The Immaculate Conception. |
| 1:15.6 | And this is a very significant feast day for devotees like me to the theology of the body. |
| 1:25.4 | Because John Paul II started writing his theology of the body. Because John Paul II started writing his theology of the body on December 8th, 1974. |
| 1:36.7 | And that wasn't just by chance. |
... |
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