H
HopkinsReb
Guest
Not really; divorced people get “remarried” all the time. Do you consider their second marriages valid? If it’s spouse A’s first marriage and spouse B’s second, do you have to presume the marriage valid for person A – because if they’re married, they’re married! – but invalid for spouse B? Does that mean that person B has to leave person A, but person A can never marry again?No, as both civil and religious definitions of marriage deny plural marriage. And again, this would be extremely rare.
Let’s say they’re part of some Mormon cult and she’s forced against her will to be some wacko’s first wife. If she escapes, does she have to live the rest of her life single? After all, if she’s married, she’s married.Define coerced. And considering that marriages in the ancient world were typically arranged by the father, you would have to find an exceptional case of “coercion”.
Not those differences per se, but lies about those differences. Say, an atheist fellow lies about being Christian to convince a Christian woman to marry him, then reveals after the marriage that he is atheist but now she’s stuck with him.Define “false pretenses”. If you mean I married a person who presented themselves as the opposite sex, when that wasn’t true, I would be on board with you. Claiming religious differences (as many on this site do to petition for annulment), or not wanting to have kids, etc., isn’t a legitimate reason for divorce.