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TheAdvocate197
Guest
I agree, and I don’t think that civil marriage is somehow completely worthless in all cases.
From which study do you quote this statistic?78% of those baptized as Catholics have turned their back on the faith.
Extrapolation from Pew Research data.joeybaggz:![]()
From which study do you quote this statistic?78% of those baptized as Catholics have turned their back on the faith.
Such situations would NOT be a problem, but with the qualification that other conditions would have to apply.I do not disagree, Father. What of circumstances where the intent isn’t necessarily marriage but to establish a next of kin relationship? Or perhaps enter into a joint guardian role of the dependent children of another (a widow, perhaps, maybe one who herself is also impotent due to some later accident)?
Is that trying to imitate marriage, necessarily, if they went into it with non-sexual affection for each other and know that no sexual actions of any type should be untertaken and they maintain separate bedrooms? What if the state allowed such all inclusive contracts but distinguished it from marriage? It seems like a gray area for discernment, assuming the partners in the contract all properly understood and agreed with the Church that they are not married and can’t be married.
FrD I was seeking a Magisterial source for this view.Any attempt at invalid marriage is always morally wrong. Nothing changes that.
I don’t need to provide a “magisterial source.”Any attempt at invalid marriage is always morally wrong. Nothing changes that.
Any attempt at an invalid marriage is morally wrong.
That’s hardly something I need to prove, so I’m not going to waste time listing the thousands of ways that I could prove it if needed to be done.
When people in Europe get a civil marriage certificate in preparation for being married in the Church, they are not “attempting an invalid marriage” but are merely following the procedure defined by the state and Church. If they marry in a civil-only ceremony without intending a church marriage, then they are attempting marriage invalidly.
It is called at “attempt-at marriage” because if it is not-valid, then it is likewise not-a-marriage.I have never found it helpful myself to assert universals in this way.
I mean those which, when applied to concrete reality, no longer seem to be the helpful universal’s they started out being. They turn out to be little more than semantic tautologies.
Its a bit like saying all killing of the innocent is morally wrong.
If by “innocent” we simply mean “somebody who does not deserve to be killed” what have we learnt?
Your response re the German situation is more helpful than this universal. But then it also means the universal is not actually a universal afterall because the universal is perhaps poorly worded and in fact intention to later marry is not included in the universal.
Surely the word “attempt” then is not quite right. “Attempt” (as in electio) seems more about matters of external observation/compliance than immorality. Later intent is irrelevant.
Therefore the obtaining of a civil marriage by a Catholic couple is in itself already the complete fulfilment of the universal statement above. It makes no difference if they allegedly intend to marry 1 week, one year or 10 years later. They have attempted an invalid marriage full stop.
Perhaps it would have been better to replace the word “attempt” with “directly intend”.
“Any direct intent to procure an invalid marriage is morally wrong”
Its a bit like killing I suppose. “Thou shall not kill” does not mean attempting to kill another is morally wrong (it may be necessary in self defence).
What is morally wrong is directly intending to kill - even in self defence.
Crusader, you bring up a valid and logical point. I then would ask, why did Jesus save the adulteress from the just punishment of the Mosaic law? Answer, we don’t know. Was Jesus “wrong” in contravening the law? Was it a “false mercy?” I certainly would never claim that. But Jesus did find it merciful and in his perfect sense of justice, right.The Church can’t follow the false mercy of the world but must obey Christ.
The Church will never allow those reforms it’s impossible
“It is a part of Church Law…” Yes, and Church Law, if not an Infallible Teaching from the Chair of Peter or Unanimous Council Proclamation can be changed and altered. No where in Scripture do I find any words where Christ himself taught who could “eat His flesh, and drink His blood.” Christ didn’t put limits on his mercy or His gift.That is a dangerous assumption to make.
Our Lord would never allow so called “irregular unions or marrages” in the Church since they are by nature adultery and sinful.
St. Pope John Paul II was very clear about this and just because Pope Francis thinks we should do it. Doesn’t mean that we should abandon Our Catholic Faith and Morals.
It is apart of Church Law No Communion for the divorced and remarried without an Annualment.
Nothing will change it and please don’t accuse me of being harsh with Pope Francis.