B
BornInMarch
Guest
In the Catholic Church, Marriage is considered to be eternal meaning that once made it can only be dissolved by death.
Having said that, marriages can still be annulled. An annulment means the marriage was invalid from the beginning because one or both of the spouses was unable to fully enter into marriage from the beginning. There are various reasons for an annulment, and they are listed in the link below.
stmarys-waco.org/documents/Grounds%20for%20Marriage%20Annulment%20in%20the%20Catholic%20Church.pdf
You present your case to a tribunal, and if they are convinced there’s a good reason then they’ll grant an annulment (97% of the cases that come before tribunals get accepted).
uscatholic.org/life/2008/07/annulments-what-never-was
So my question is, if a request for an annulment gets denied, does that mean you can never ask again? Case Closed?
If that’s the case, then what if new evidence is discovered after the fact that the tribunal did not previously know about (Evidence that would have changed the outcome of the decision had it been available)?
Having said that, marriages can still be annulled. An annulment means the marriage was invalid from the beginning because one or both of the spouses was unable to fully enter into marriage from the beginning. There are various reasons for an annulment, and they are listed in the link below.
stmarys-waco.org/documents/Grounds%20for%20Marriage%20Annulment%20in%20the%20Catholic%20Church.pdf
You present your case to a tribunal, and if they are convinced there’s a good reason then they’ll grant an annulment (97% of the cases that come before tribunals get accepted).
uscatholic.org/life/2008/07/annulments-what-never-was
So my question is, if a request for an annulment gets denied, does that mean you can never ask again? Case Closed?
If that’s the case, then what if new evidence is discovered after the fact that the tribunal did not previously know about (Evidence that would have changed the outcome of the decision had it been available)?