J
justbeinfrank
Guest
Hi everybody,
I was debating with a liberal Episcopalian the other day, and he was basically trying to say that the Catholic Church is a patriarchal organization that is/was generally opposed to women’s advancement.
To substantiate this claim, he said that, prior to Vatican II, annulments were *extremely *hard to obtain. Wives who fled abusive husbands were often met with an uncaring Church, which forbade them to remarry and punished them if they did.
Is this based in reality? How easy / difficult is it for a woman in an abusive marriage to get an annulment? And how easy / difficult was it, comparatively, before Vatican II?
Thanks,
Frank
I was debating with a liberal Episcopalian the other day, and he was basically trying to say that the Catholic Church is a patriarchal organization that is/was generally opposed to women’s advancement.
To substantiate this claim, he said that, prior to Vatican II, annulments were *extremely *hard to obtain. Wives who fled abusive husbands were often met with an uncaring Church, which forbade them to remarry and punished them if they did.
Is this based in reality? How easy / difficult is it for a woman in an abusive marriage to get an annulment? And how easy / difficult was it, comparatively, before Vatican II?
Thanks,
Frank