J
JackQ
Guest
The term “legal fiction” is used in civil law to denote something presumed for the sake of interpreting an event. It is not the same as something false, although it can be, in fact, false. I suppose it isn’t a term properly applied to canon law. But canon law does presume that marriages are valid, and uses that as a starting point when marriages are litigated. In most cases that’s reasonable, I think. But I also think that the opposite presumption should prevail regarding Protestant marriages. Actually, all I’m saying is that converts should be able to utilize the same defect of form argument that Catholics can.I feel I should point out that lack of form isn’t a “legal fiction”, any more than the Real Presence is a “theological fiction”. Jesus Christ put the Church in charge of the sacraments, so the rules that the Church puts in place really do affect those sacraments.
When the Church declared that the civil marriage of Catholics was invalid, this had a real effect – Catholics who married outside the Church no longer recieved the sacrament of matrimony, and the sacramental graces that accompany it.
Thus, to enact a rule that would remove the sacramental graces from all Protestant marriages would be a very significant change indeed, not just “another legal fiction” to help divorced Protestants enter the Catholic Church.
Now this is not the same as having the Magisterium declare Protestant or, for that matter, Buddhist marriages invalid or adulterous. Canon law is not the Magisterium. It is a human law. True, it attempts to implement the divine law as revealed to the Church, but it is itself a human law. That’s why it changes sometimes.
