G
Gorgias
Guest
On the other hand, none of these things are requirements (or even predictors!) of a happy Christian marriage. Knowing how to balance a checkbook isn’t an indicator that you know how to live out the vocation of marriage, is it?Many of us over 35 have lived on our own, paid bills, and many of us had trouble finding someone to marry due to work obligations
There’s a difference, though, between “we had our marriage convalidated because we didn’t realize at the time of the first ceremony that it was invalid in the eyes of the Church” and “knowing it’s invalid, let’s go do it anyway; we can just go back and do the ‘Catholic thing’ later”… no?My question is as follows: because we are in the midst of very unusual circumstances and Catholic Church weddings are on hold for the foreseeable future, would it be permissible for a couple to get married by a Justice of the Peace and later do as we did and have a Catholic ceremony?
I’m confused – you write “cohabitating is not permissible” and then proceed to talk about cohabitating and conceiving children…Obviously, cohabitating is not permissible. But when you have two adults ready for marriage how long can they reasonably be expected to wait when there are two rents to pay, two household utilities, etc and, as mentioned above, couples in their late thirties have a limited window during which to have children.
It gives witness to an invalid ceremony as if it actually were valid, right? Moreover, it says “the Catholic ceremony isn’t the important part – what’s important is the state’s approbation”, no?I don’t see anything wrong with a courthouse wedding, followed by a Catholic Church wedding/validation when we aren’t on lockdown.
They were mistaken on that count, if that’s what they said. A valid marriage between two baptized Christians is a valid, sacramental marriage. The Catholic Church doesn’t “redo” weddings merely because two non-Catholics got married elsewhere. In your case, it seems that – prior to the annulment – your husband wasn’t free to marry, so once that impediment was removed, ya’ll were free to marry in a valid wedding rite. Since you were Catholics, that rite takes place in the Church.Regardless of an annulment or lack thereof, we were married as evangelicals so we had to have a convalidation either way. This is what our parish and priests told us.