H
His_helpmeet
Guest
A marriage, validly entered, MUST be for life. If a couple does not intend to be together for life, that marriage is de facto invalid.So, a tribunal can grant an annulment if it deems right? Is that tribunal doing their work through the Holy Spirit?
Marriages are not made in heaven. One can marry, only for years down the line it breaks into tiny pieces. Like a wine glass dropped from a tall building, it shatters into many many pieces, totally unable to put back together again!!
How does God approach these marriages? Does he see each one as an individual case or lump them together under the same umbrella?
As i have stated before, nothing is black and white, as far as i am concerned!
Many things are said in the Bible but i for one believe strongly that one has to take, with a pinch of salt ‘some’ of the things printed in the Bible! We cannot understand Gods mind! We cannot read those words in the Bible and say for 100% DEFINITE that these ‘are’ Gods words! Only God knows us. Only God can decide what is a right or wrong marriage. Nothing is black and white.
Sorry to those who believe every single word in the Bible but for me, the Bible was written by ‘man’ interpreted as to how that person believed things to be at that moment in time.
I am sure that God is a very caring man who is a lot more understanding and forgiving than led to believe by those who state that what is written is 100% TRUE. God is all love. All caring. All understanding, and most of all, all Mercy!
The tribunal is indeed guided by the Holy Spirit in making their decisions. Sometimes these decisions are not easy. This is why marriage should NEVER be undertaken lightly.
For the record: my husband is divorced. He received a declaration of nullity for his first marriage. We married civilly prior to the declaration being granted, primarily because we knew that, due to our sinful natures, complete abstinence was not likely to be possible and we knew that there were overwhelming grounds for nullity. We married sacramentally 6 months after the declaration of nullity was granted.
DH and I decided, even before we got married, that divorce was NEVER going to be an option. Obviously, he is divorced from his first wife, but that was due to the fact that she cheated on him and left, citing her belief that marriage wasn’t required to be permanent if you weren’t happy. Since DH and I do not recognize divorce as an option for us, it REQUIRES us to work out our disagreements. We both thought and prayed long and hard before we decided to marry, and we believe that God has called us to be married.
Apart from problems such as adultery and abuse, I cannot see that any marriage could simply “shatter”. The Church’s processes for marriage are designed to ensure that such things do not occur, and there are additional programs, such as Retrouvaille, that are designed for couples whose marriages are in serious trouble.