C
Catholic2003
Guest
Deacon Ed:
The applicable canon is CCEO 781. I quoted both CCEO 780 and 781 in full in my post #12 of the “Catholic and Greek Orthodox wedding” thread; here again is CCEO 781:Sorry, I did misunderstand what you were saying. However, you are still incorrect. There are two canons that address the issue of Catholics marrying Orthodox (1127 and 1160). Neither address the issue of an Orthodox marrying a member of some other Christian (or non-christian) tradition.
Canon 781 If sometimes the Church must pronounce a judgment about the validity of a marriage between baptized non-Catholics:
1º regarding the law to which the parties were subject at the time of their wedding, can. 780, §2 is to be observed;
As to the power of the Catholic Church to bind non-Catholic Christians with regard to marriage law, here is a quote from the Nullity of Marriage by Frank J. Sheed:2º regarding the form of marriage celebration, the Church recognizes any form prescribed or admitted by the law to which the parties were subject at the time of their wedding provided that the consent was expressed publicly and, if at least one of the parties is a baptized member of an Eastern non-Catholic Church, the marriage was celebrated with a sacred rite.
The 1917 Canon Law did in fact bind Protestants by ecclesiastical marriage law; however, this was changed in 1983 Canon Law by a deliberate decision of the revision committee.If two baptized Protestants marry in church or before the registrar, they receive the sacrament though they may never have heard that marriage is a sacrament. Therefore, since the marriage of the baptized is always a sacrament, it is directly subject to the legislation of the Church: for obviously the question “Are A and B (both of them baptized) married?” is really a question: “Did A and B receive the sacrament of matrimony?”; and to that question only the Church can give an answer–the State is not concerned with sacraments.