Thank you, Tantum ergo; I have been a fornicator then. I accept the charge but have no idea right know how I’m ever going to feel repentant about it. I’m in no hurry to take the Eucharist.
I appreciate your diplomatic finesse, but I’ve received most of my education at construction jobsites so please feel free to give it to me straight next time.
Do you believe that the Church teaches with all the authority of Christ (‘as the Father sent Me, so am I sending you’, ‘he who hears you hears Me’, ‘what you bind on earth will be bound in heaven’ etc)? In other words that it is CHRIST Himself, through the Church, that teaches us, and not merely a bunch of fallible humans?
That it is He who teaches us about the sanctity of marriage, the invalidity of any priestly ordination except those of the Catholic and Orthodox churches, and the importance of celebrating the sacrament in front of a minister properly ordained by God? Whatever you may think, marriage in front of any but a Catholic or Orthodox minister does NOT, for a Catholic, mean that you were married in the eyes of God.
Feelings of repentance? Hmm, feelings are funny things, fleeting and often deceptive. Repentance is more about actions and acts of will than emotions. A bit like love in that way, as I’m sure you and your partner have found (I’m sure you haven’t ‘felt’ madly in love with her every single day, but you’ve performed actions and made choices of the will that constitute love).
Do you recognise that your ‘marriage’ was not solemnised as God intended it to be for members of His Catholic church, and thus not a sacrament nor marriage in His eyes? And thus hurt Him, as a mockery of His great sacrament(surely you can be sorry for THAT at least, as you might be if you hurt your partner inadvertently by some act, even if perhaps you don’t understand WHY it hurts them)? Do you further realise that to make things right you need to live as brother and sister with your partner (no sex) for a very short while until you can arrange a convalidation?
If you can answer yes to those questions, then you’re good to confess and turn a new leaf.