That’s not an objective response an objective issue.
Yes. It is an objective response.
I’m not going to waste time trying to teach you vocabulary.
Priests in Australasia do NOT customarily explicitly ask the question.
Nor do the enquiry forms.
I really could care less what your absence-of-knowledge on this issue leads you to guess.
You may personally believe Canon law is injured by this approach.
Canon law is violated when a person who holds ecclesiastical office fails to perform his office as the law requires.
I’m growing weary of repeating this for no reason other than your own stubbornness and your own complete lack of any competence in this subject matter.
Just because you don’t understand something, that does not mean that someone who does understand it is wrong. You seem to think that way.
Canon law is violated when a pastor fails to due his duty.
It is his responsibility under canon law to know that a couple can be validly married before he performs a marriage ceremony. Failure to do that is negligence.
I’m not going to bother listing the canons because that serves no purpose when trying to explain something to a person who has no idea how to read the canons in the first place.
Yet the Archbishops and bishops (and a good number of their priests) there do not it seems.
Again, you’re attempting an argument-from-ignorance.
Do not, repeat, DO NOT think you can sit there and speak on behalf of the bishops. I’m quite certain that they know the law and I’m confident that they are applying the law appropriately.
I do not know the exact mechanics of how pre-marriage investigations are conducted in Australia. For purposes of this topic, I do not need to know. I know what the law says, and I’m confident that the bishops and other pastors are performing their own due diligence in investigating the eligibility of couples before marriage.
I don’t care what your personal opinion might be here. You’re wrong.
The fact that you are personally ignorant of something does not mean that it doesn’t happen. Apparently, I need to explain that to you.
Unless you can quote something Magisterial (other than simply the Canon itself) I think the view of the Australian hierarchy is preferable to your own.
NONSENSE.
You obviously have no idea what you’re writing about and you are in no position to tell me that the Australian bishops are ignoring canon law.
Your ignorance of the law does not equate to the bishops violating the law.
I understand you believe they are somehow mistaken in their understanding/application of Canon Law (rather than yourself) and somehow negligent.
You understand nothing. Nothing.
Its fairly clearly a prudential judgement as to what constitutes “due diligence” and Canon Law does not demand what you assert as the only correct application of the Law.
Again, you merely prove that not only do you not understand what you’re trying to write about, you don’t even understand what I’m writing here.