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babochka
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Were confessions and anointing permitted?In our diocese weddings with no more than 5 people were allowed.
Were confessions and anointing permitted?In our diocese weddings with no more than 5 people were allowed.
I never saw a document that forbid the sacrament of the sick or confession, though I admit I did not try to avail of Confession, assuming it wasn’t happening. Even now, when we’re back to having Sunday Mass for up to 50 people, l’m not sure Confession is scheduled. That’s why when I attend Mass for the first time in 3 1/2 months tomorrow, I will abstain from Communion. I’ll find out then what Fr. is doing for that sacrament.Phemie:![]()
Were confessions and anointing permitted?In our diocese weddings with no more than 5 people were allowed.
Good point.I don’t know the current status, but in a diocese where even confession and anointing of the sick are (were?) not allowed, I don’t imagine that the bishop permitted weddings, either, no matter how small.
Exactly. But since those were canceled in some places, I would assume that weddings, no matter how small, would have also been canceled. It is hard to imagine that a bishop would allow a wedding to take place, with at least five people present, but not allow confession and anointing of the sick.Confession and anointing of the sick should never had been cancelled to begin with. Those sacraments are essential.
What’s the rush? They can’t wait a few months?Some of those places are in an indefinite church closure. Is it reasonable to expect couples to wait that indefinite time in order to be married? At what point will they be able to legitimately consummate a valid marriage within the Church without the ceremonies of a wedding (where the Church has made herself unavailable) and still be able to receive communion when the Church reopens?
They must not cohabit and they should wait until the Church wedding can be arranged. When talking about their whole life waiting several months is not a big ask!How many months is just a few? Is there an amount of time that is so far beyond just a few that the couple could legitimately dispense with the church wedding and simply begin to cohabit?
This is purely anecdotal, but my husband and I had our first date, were engaged six weeks later, and married a few months later…twenty years ago. My marriage is the single greatest blessing in my life. We were evangelicals at the time, if that makes a difference. But we each had been living on our own and know what we were looking for and what we were not wanting, and instead of dinner and movies dates we talked and talked and talked–openly and honestly.tuffsmurf:![]()
Freedom to marry needs to be determined and the couple need to understand what marriage is.I never understood those long preparations before a wedding. We managed to plan everything in about 4 months, what could possibly take a year to prepare?
Then there needs to be availibility.
As long as it takes for the virus crisis to be under control.I was referring to the churches with the indeterminate delayed weddings. How long can a church cancel weddings and expect that the couples should not be allowed to cohabit? In some places there have been closure that appear to be indefinite. In other cases there could be reclosures due to a resurgence of the virus. How long is reasonable for the Church in a particular area to be closed before the couples can legitimately cohabit in valid marriages without the church wedding?
Oh dear. You are obviously a member of the crazy conspiracy theory club!!Under control according to whom? Some of the civil authorities ordering these lockdowns are active enemies of the Church and are attempting to destroy the Sacraments.
I live in the Philippines which is a Catholic country. We are under lockdown. Churches and other places where people can gather are closed down. Nobody is complaining because it’s a matter of public health and safety. Mass obligation is dispensed with.It’s no conspiracy theory when Governors are threatening priests with arrest for holding Mass. Even the Navy tried to shut down Masses, only to be overruled by the President.
Requiring a year of marriage preparation as the standard is kind of harsh in my opinion, and unnecessary in most cases. But I think six months is very reasonable. When my husband and I got engaged, we set our wedding date almost exactly six months out. A few people expressed surprise at such a short engagement, so I guess it’s all a matter of perspective. :woman_shrugging:t2:I always disliked the idea of long engagements in general, but maintaining six months to a year of sexual purity seems…daunting.