Tis_Bearself
Patron
Somehow my husband and I (married 25 years ago) missed out on the quiz/ assessment. No such thing was ever brought up. I wonder how ours would have come out. Our pastor barely even asked us any questions verbally.
There was no quiz for us 44 years ago. We didn’t even meet with the priest together. I was in one province and met with my Pastor once; he’s non-Catholic, was in the military posted 2 provinces away, and met with the Catholic Padre. I presume a lot of paperwork was involved to make sure all the Ts were crossed and Is were dotted.Somehow my husband and I (married 25 years ago) missed out on the quiz/ assessment. No such thing was ever brought up. I wonder how ours would have come out. Our pastor barely even asked us any questions verbally.
To be fair, that’s an incomplete list. The things that the priest or deacon who talks with them will be attempting to determine are whether they consent to enter into a Christian marriage as the Church defines it, whether they are free to marry, and whether any other impediments to marriage exist.You’ll be asked three things:
- Will you be accepting of children should God send some your way?
- Do you intend to be faithful?
- Do you intend this marriage to be until death?
We don’t require Catholic couples to undertake a catechism exam prior to getting married - or even to be practising. The bigger issue however is how it will affect your relationship together. Differences in religious belief (as well as differences in intensity of religious belief) can easily become a source of tension in married life - especially if they’re swept under the carpet. I’m not saying you need to thrash it out totally right now, before you get married, but it is perhaps something you and your fiance need to have a conversation about (if you haven’t already done so).I’m not so much concerned about how it will affect our marriage. I’m more concerned as to whether or not we will be allowed to get married in the Catholic Church. Will the Catholic Church still marry us if he has doubts about some of the teachings of the Catholic Church?
This is the warning which everyone thinking of getting married to someone needs to listen to @Holly3278If your fiance is struggling to understand what the Church teaches on marriage and why persons who have SSAD can’t get married then he should talk to a good Catholic priest, read a good Catholic catechism and most of all pray that God will help him to accept everything the Church infallibly teaches.
Exactly!The soul cannot abide truth in this one very serious issue, it will not…eventually…abide it anywhere else
Also, finally, despite passing assessment, quizzes etc. , there is a dishonesty in getting married in front of God’s most Holy Tabernacle where His Son resides if truth is not loved
There is no quiz on adherence to all the precepts of Catholicism…So there are no rules that says he has to believe everything that the Catholic Church teaches in order for us to get married in the Church?