T
Timidity
Guest
This is a hypothetical situation. Well, I suppose it applies to someone somewhere, but …
A man and women, both fallen-away Catholics, meet, fall in love, and marry in a civil ceremony. They have kids and go through life in their fallen-away status until one day they have a great moral awakening.
They go to the nearest priest and confess their sins, they have their children baptized, and talk about having their marriage blessed by the church. Then it occurs to them: one of them had a previous marriage before he or she had fallen away.
So the previously married party petitions for an annulment, but the tribunal returns a finding that the initial marriage was valid and sacramental and can not be found null.
What is the couple to do? I know what usually happens: a devout couple will acknowledge that they’re living in a mortally sinful state and regretfully refrain from the sacraments. But what should they do? I mean if they’re acknowledging that they’re living in an inherrantly sinful situation, isn’t it their duty to end the state of sin? But the only way to do that is for the couple to get a civil divorce (well, they could kill the ex-spouse, but we’re talking about a devout couple). But wouldn’t that cause hard to the children? And what kid of example would it set? A good one (they were so obedient to God…)? A bad one (look, marriage really is temporary…)?
I’m very perplexed by it.
A man and women, both fallen-away Catholics, meet, fall in love, and marry in a civil ceremony. They have kids and go through life in their fallen-away status until one day they have a great moral awakening.
They go to the nearest priest and confess their sins, they have their children baptized, and talk about having their marriage blessed by the church. Then it occurs to them: one of them had a previous marriage before he or she had fallen away.
So the previously married party petitions for an annulment, but the tribunal returns a finding that the initial marriage was valid and sacramental and can not be found null.
What is the couple to do? I know what usually happens: a devout couple will acknowledge that they’re living in a mortally sinful state and regretfully refrain from the sacraments. But what should they do? I mean if they’re acknowledging that they’re living in an inherrantly sinful situation, isn’t it their duty to end the state of sin? But the only way to do that is for the couple to get a civil divorce (well, they could kill the ex-spouse, but we’re talking about a devout couple). But wouldn’t that cause hard to the children? And what kid of example would it set? A good one (they were so obedient to God…)? A bad one (look, marriage really is temporary…)?
I’m very perplexed by it.