L
Liberanosamalo
Guest
I think the real issue here is not the letter of the law but rather the spirit of the law. Ask yourself, what is a woman to do if her husband abandons her and she falls in love years later with another man. Should she truly live a live of celibacy because the man she married broke his vow before God and her?
I personally think annulments are being handed out like candy because marriage licenses have been handed out like candy.I would say unequivocally “NO”. It makes sense to me that our church leaders would leave an out for special circumstances. Jesus is all forgiving and surely he would not condemn my wife for falliing in love with me and marrying me after she was abandoned by her former husband. That really does not sound like the Jesus I have come to know in my life.
The Jesus you have come to know in your life loves you. And He died for you. And His death on the cross was the horrible price He paid for sins like adultery.
I’m speaking as the abandoned wife, who was left at age 30 with not one but THREE young children. And because of his legal games and delays, I did not have a divorce decree for several more years. And then my annulment application took over 19 months from the time I went to the chancery until I had my final decree.
During that time, before we even had a divorce decree, he was dating. Before the annulment was applied for by me, he was getting engaged to someone else. It doesn’t matter whether he loved her or not, what HE was doing was wrong. And it was as wrong for him to do it as it was for your wife to do it.
No, it’s not fair when someone sins and others suffer. Sin always has social consequences. Even sins we think are private.
My XH’s sins have forced me into a life of celibacy. Is it fair? No. But you know what? I’m much happier than he is. I have been the parent to show my children that no human being, no matter how wonderful, is worth going to hell for. You say your wife shouldn’t be punished for falling in love with you. Well, no. You can’t help who you love. But by marrying you, she put you above God and His law. She made you an idol. Harsh? Yes. Sorry.
If you take your situation to it’s next step, it’s the same slippery slope where someone is in a “loveless” marriage. Why should they be forced to honor that bond if they fall in love with the guy at work and want to marry him? Why should a woman whose husband is paralyzed in Iraq be forced to live a celibate life when she can marry the guy in the next cubicle at work and live happily? Why honor that first bond she made?
No, your church hasn’t walked away from you. You walked away from it when you attempted to marry someone against all church rules.
Just because you love someone and “feel” married, doesn’t mean you are. The Church says that your wife has a sacramental bond with a man (not you) and so is ontologically incapable of making a bond with someone else. (The same with a priest with holy orders who cannot make a bond with a woman in marriage, no matter how much he loves her.) To take your line of reasoning into the civil realm, if a man is married civilly, and doesn’t get divorced, he cannot go get a second wife in the next town. He may set up house with her, and have kids, but he’s a bigamist. The law will not look upon this kindly. Well, a civil marriage like yours is like spiritual bigamy.
Not that there is not a remedy. And I have been through it. You need to go to your diocesan chancery (or call the chancery in the diocese where your wife’s marriage took place.) And this is NOT for YOU to do! YOU are not a party to this. This is HER marriage she needs to deal with. Yada was very correct. The paperwork she will fill out is exhausting and comprehensive. It requires much work and hard questions, and witnesses. The Church says for a valid bond to be made in marriage, it must be free at the time of consent. Anything that interferes with that free consent is grounds for a declaration of nullity. But it has to be investigated. Was it a “shotgun” wedding? Was there substance abuse involved, very young age? Promiscuity by one or both parties before the wedding? Family circumstances that would cloud consent or understanding of marriage? Grave family pressure to marry? Psychological problems evidenced before the marriage? Previous broken engagements? (My XH had two of those.)