O
otjm
Guest
You might hold that but the Church doesn’t, unless it could be shown that the church (e.g. Lutheran, or Baptist, etc.) of one of the parties held that marriage must be witnessed by a minister. And I know of no church other than the Catholic Church (and perhaps the Orthodox, but let’s leave them aside) which requires the marriage to be witnessed by a minister.i never disagreed w/ that either…
but once the tribunal gets the facts it rules that it was invalid because it wasn’t in a church… by a minister…
it is conceivable that a minister was there in the court during the marriage… THAT may tend to validate the marriage… but not otherwise…
The Catholic Church cannot require that of Protestants, as the Catholic Church has no jurisdictional authority over Protestants.
And per Catholic sacramental theology, you will find the reason; in the Roman rite the theology of the sacrament is that the parties adminsiter the sacrament to each other; the priest is simply the official witness for the Church. So, because there is no authority for the Church to require an official witness to a non-Catholic wedding, and since they are baptized (which baptism the Church acknowledges as valid), then according to our own theology, they administer the sacrament to each other unless and until it is shown that there was reason to believe that a sacrament did not occur (was not confected). The presumption of the Church is that the parties did enter into a sacramental marriage.