S
Serap
Guest
This is one scripture yes. I know of many very qualified priests advising otherwise for adultery.That’s not what Scripture says. In fact, Our Lord calls Himself “the Truth”.
As for whether or not “annulments” (declarations of nullity) are handed out too easily, that is a question for a different thread. (But I agree with you that they are.)
The question of children–again, I agree that they ought not to suffer from the adultery. But the adulterous spouse is the one who set the whole thing in motion with the adultery! The catechism disagrees with you that the adulterous spouse should be the one who gets to make the determination. I would encourage a betrayed spouse to stay, to try to work things out, especially if their are children involved–but on an equal footing of truth.
Why would they advise this?
I believe it’s to:
- keep happiness in the marriage
- give the offending spouse a second chance (between him and God)
- keep the children contained within the family unit
- keep the dignity of marriage in tact (i.e. avoid divorce)
- avoid adding fuel to our negative society by damaging the children