C
carjack
Guest
I am a Catholic who married a non-Catholic. My family supported me. I never got a divorce though. Does your husband want to go to his sisters wedding?
Gina,
Go to the wedding and don’t let the scare tactics of some posters get to you. Your brothers sister is getting married. She chose not be a Catholic and to marry a non-catholic. You all had nothing to do with her choice. Does this mean that you will never attend a wedding of a friend who is non catholic? You will spend the rest of your lives keeping your Catholicism to yourselves? And we wonder why people have left the church in droves and are running to the Protestant churches. Scare tactics do not bring one closer to God. You can’t love what you fear.
You will be looking at her over the table at Thanksgiving…and at Christmas…and other family events. Right? or are they no longer invited to your home for dinner, birthday parties etc., because they didn’t marry in the Catholic Church? They know they can’t be Godparents…they know you can’t be witnesses as in “signing” as maid of honor and such. This is a given.
How are you showing this sister in law the faith? By shunning her and her new husband? Causing rift in the family is bringing one closer to the faith? How is that so?
it’s very cold and lonely in that cave of a world some folks choose to call Catholicism. Let her know the door is still open by teaching as Jesus did…attend the wedding.
Hmmmm…I wonder if the bride and groom at the wedding of Cana were Catholic? I doubt it. But Jesus went anyway.
The marriage IS taking place. It may not be in the Catholic church, it is the couples choice as where they will marry. Their marriage is valid according to laws of the land.And yet perhaps she actually wanted traditional opinions on the matter, which might be in short supply elsewhere (as there have also been many non-traditional opinions already on the thread here). The danger of scandal is real, and is far too little accounted for in modern moral calculus.
There is no scandal, only in your mind.
This isn’t a matter of “I disapprove of your choice of spouse/venue/etc…” It’s not even “You’ve defected from the Church but at least you’re doing something right in getting validly married.” Rather, this is “You’re going through the motions of getting married only to embark upon a life of (further) sin in your invalid union.” What’s to celebrate? We could strain and spin the matter to come up with the objective goods or lesser evils possibly secured by such a move, but the bottom line is that no marriage is taking place, and no Catholic can honestly pretend that it has - how are you going to attend without giving that impression?
A party is taking place. There can be no marriage, because the woman is already married to someone else, and the two are of different religions from each other.The marriage IS taking place. It may not be in the Catholic church, it is the couples choice as where they will marry. Their marriage is valid according to laws of the land.
The wedding that Jesus attended was between two persons who were equally yoked spiritually and socially, with neither of them being already married to someone else.Again, I doubt the couple married at the wedding of Cana were Catholic…I wonder why Jesus went according to you He is causing scandal now isn’t He?![]()
I guess my parents marriage wasn’t valid because they were of different religions. Someone had better notify the Diocese in Springfield MA and tell them they made a boo boo. I guess my brother’s marriage is invalid too. His wife is Pentacostal. I’ll have him call the Diocese of Charleston and check it out.A party is taking place. There can be no marriage, because the woman is already married to someone else, and the two are of different religions from each other.
That is true of the Catholic church. My parents were of different religions and were married in the Catholic church in 1956. They were married 50 yrs. Who knew?
The wedding that Jesus attended was between two persons who were equally yoked spiritually and socially, with neither of them being already married to someone else.
I guess my invitation was lost in the mail. I hope you took pictures and examined all the documents.
Keep in mind, if two people of the same religion marry, with neither of them being married to someone else, the marriage is both valid and Sacramental, even if they are not Catholic.![]()
It is possible for you to go to the wedding if after some thought you concluded that it would be for the best interest of family unity and the possible assistance in reconciling this sister to the church. You would not be able to be official witnesses though. You should check with your priest if you aren’t sure what to do.My sister in law will be marrying in a civil ceremony to a non-Catholic. She was raised Catholic but has long since practiced. She was married before (in a civil ceremony) and divorced.
My husband and I are both practicing Catholics. I have discussed with my husband the fact that attending such a wedding would give tacit approval to his sister. As I’ve tried to explain to my husband, we would give scandal in attending such a ceremony. This is causing much stress between my husband and I. Please advise.
Gina
How does Christmas/Thanksgiving/etc. relate to causing scandal?I guess my parents marriage wasn’t valid because they were of different religions. Someone had better notify the Diocese in Springfield MA and tell them they made a boo boo. I guess my brother’s marriage is invalid too. His wife is Pentacostal. I’ll have him call the Diocese of Charleston and check it out.
I guess Gina should stay away from this horrid soon to be scandalous sister-in-law. She may need to let them know that they are not only not welcome to Thanksgiving and Christmas, sacraments by members of the family taking place in the Catholic church are off limits as well.
Does the church really want to cut themselves out of the picture of the rest of the world? Are Catholics a “cut above” everyone else spiritually? No, of course not. Even Gina’s priest told her to go to the wedding.
Oh, Gina, don’t say what Diocese you are in…someone may call the bishop and let them know you are causing scandal.
Do you all really see how crazy this can get? How is that teaching as Jesus did?
The reason that some recommend against giving gifts to those who are entering presumptively-invalid marriages is because it appears hypocritical to give a gift in honor of a marriage one must presume invalid and believes in conscience that he should not attend. In other words, it is the reasoning behind the witholding of the gift that is important, not a hard-and-fast rule against giving gifts altogether to the invalidly-married.
With that distinction in mind, it should become clear that gift-giving in such a situation is a matter of prudential judgment that should be exercised according to the individual circumstances. So, for example, this could mean giving gifts for Christmas and birthdays but not for wedding anniversaries. It could also indicate that certain gifts appropriate for the validly married may not be appropriate for the invalidly married (e.g., a weekend getaway to a romantic bed-and-breakfast). Please note in this case though that the emphasis is not on giving a gift that the couple “shares” but on not giving a gift that encourages the ongoing state of adultery.