J
joanofarc2008
Guest
Exactly!!!With the truth being that God did not join together all legal marriages…only some…
Exactly!!!With the truth being that God did not join together all legal marriages…only some…
You might post in Vocations. She would have to have a decree of nullity, and different congregations and orders have different rules about divorced women. She should expect to be treated very carefully, since they would want to make sure she wasn’t just trying to enter on the rebound, when she needs to do a lot of healing first.I know a woman whose husband left her after 7 months of marriage. Can she become a nun?
Dear jrenea.I know a woman whose husband left her after 7 months of marriage. Can she become a nun?
She needs to go and talk to her priest and discern this. Just because she’s been deserted by her husband does not mean she is called to a vocation of religious service. Is she even civilly divorced yet?I know a woman whose husband left her after 7 months of marriage. Can she become a nun?
I had this thought during my divorce too. It passed. For your friend it may be real. It may not be. The biggest thing for her is not to put the cart before the horse. She will need to work first on taking care of the divorce and finding out if she is eligible for a decree of nullity. She will also need to take care of any debt she has incurred from the divorce. All that being said once she has the decree of nullity in hand there is no reason she cannot then start discerning what her vocational call is. However, until that day she is still married and has a vocational call to her current marriage even if she is living separately.You might post in Vocations. She would have to have a decree of nullity, and different congregations and orders have different rules about divorced women. She should expect to be treated very carefully, since they would want to make sure she wasn’t just trying to enter on the rebound, when she needs to do a lot of healing first.
By referring to my wife as my “ex-wife” in public circles then I am not standing up for the Truth of the indissolubility of marriage. I am helping to spread the lie that a civil divorce can separate what God joined. \
Go back and look at my words again remembering a simple phrase - render unto Cesar.
You are entirely wrong - there are two parts to marriage - the Sacramental part and the natural, legal part. The legal part will always be Cesar’s in this country as well as several others. This is why Canon Law is written as it is to be make allowances for the differences between legalities over international borders. You see you are oversimplifying the case yet again.Hello Joanofarc, hope you are well. Marriage has never and will never be “Ceasar’s.”
*…God himself is the author of marriage. The vocation to marriage is written in the very nature of man and woman as they came from the hand of the Creator… *(CCC 1603).
*In his preaching Jesus unequivocally taught the original meaning of the union of man and woman as the Creator willed it from the beginning: permission given by Moses to divorce one’s wife was a concession to the hardness of hearts. The matrimonial union of man and woman is indissoluble: God himself has determined it “what therefore God has joined together, let no man put asunder.” *CCC 1614
*
Thus the marriage bond has been established by God himself in such a way that a marriage concluded and consummated between baptized persons can never be dissolved. *CCC 1640
Marriage is God’s. We are not to allow Ceasor, or President or any set of civil judges define it for us and instruct us on what language to use.
If a civil divorce does separate what God joins then how does a husband become an “ex-husband?”
Bryan
LOVE SO AMAZING
Hello Rainbow, hope you are doing well. I do not know if he is your husband or not.Bryan…I didn’t say for you to call her exwife…I said lets make a deal and I call mine what I want and you call yours what you want…surely didn’t mean to hurt feelings.
I am not perpetuating a lie…because I really believe that God never joined my ex and I together. If I kept calling him my husband, I would be wrapping myself in a huge web of deceit. Truly. There are days I so want to call him that…and if you look through the posts sometimes my heart starts melting and I do call him my husband. But believe me, he wasn’t and if he ever was, the Good Lord will so know why I can’t call him that anymore. If your wife treated your children the way my ex treated my children, I think you would not want to call her your spouse either. I feel a great sadness when I read posts saying it is possible maybe to get back together in the future with a spouse…because in my case that could never happen. The psychological damage it would do my children and myself would be off the wall. I also feel a great joy when I read those posts, because in many cases maybe God did join the people together and then something beautiful would be happening if they did get back together. In my own case though, getting back together is an absolute never will happen thing…and I have gone from crying about it every hour of every day to living a very beautiful life filled with joy and lots of love , although not from my ex. If I were to go around calling my ex my husband, then I would most of all be telling a lie to myself. I know my marriage history alot better than anyone, and believe me, if that was God joining two people together, than I would give up on the entire concept of love. But I am chosing, and it takes work, to accept reality and still go on and treasure this beautiful world filled with beautiful people…and lots of love.
Originally Posted by jrenea
I know a woman whose husband left her after 7 months of marriage. Can she become a nun?
She needs to go and talk to her priest and discern this. Just because she’s been deserted by her husband does not mean she is called to a vocation of religious service. Is she even civilly divorced yet?
Actually, my opinion on my marriage matters very much so…at least to me and to God. If God cares to count each hair on my head, then I am sure He also cares what I think. I may be wrong in what I think about things, but still, I am sure that it still matters to God.Hello Rainbow, hope you are doing well. I do not know if he is your husband or not.
If he was your husband then he is your husband and he is not your “ex-husband.”
If he wasn’t your husband then he is not your husband and never was your husband so he couldn’t possibly be an “ex” husband.
I wouldn’t call myself the “ex quarterback of the Chicago Bears.” For I never have been the QB of the Chicago Bears.
Apparently he is I guy you were civilly married to and are no longer civilly married to.
But whether or not he is your husband, I do not pretend to know. Neither of our opinions on it will matter anyway. Our opinions on it do not change the reality that you are either married or never were married. God knows… and he will be a witness to it. One way or the other.
God bless you Rainbow.
Bryan
LOVE SO AMAZING
Hello Rainbow, first of all, I love the rhyme. Who would have ever thought to put “die my hair blue” with “tiramisu”!?!? 4 claps in each!!!Actually, my opinion on my marriage matters very much so…at least to me and to God. If God cares to count each hair on my head, then I am sure He also cares what I think. I may be wrong in what I think about things, but still, I am sure that it still matters to God.
If I make a decision that is based on erroneous thinking, which happens all the time, God will not chunk me into hell. He will guide me, nurture me some more, and help me try again. He knows my eyes are on Him. This is what is so joyful about being a Christian. Our lives are based on forgiveness. We aren’t so great at it, but God is. He forgives and forgives, in dimensions that we are clueless about. While praying in front of the Eucharist or tabernacle, we can learn to “just be” and to “be still” and know that we are enough. What a concept! Whether I am divorced, whether I have an exhusband or a husband, or a legal husband or nonlegal exhausband, it truly doesn’t matter!!! It doesn’t matter if I remarry, whether I dye my hair blue or whether I eat tiramasu for breakfast. That is just the tiny stuff in life. The BIG picture is God
is that my ex and I will be reunited in heaven in glorifying our God.
If your wife treated your children the way my ex treated my children, I think you would not want to call her your spouse either.
The ignorance would need to be of no fault of my own. In other words, I truly desired to obey God but just had no possible way to find and know the Truth. Maybe being born in a jungle and raised by a band of gorillas I would not be held accountable for stealing my brothers bamboo. In the US, however, the vast, vast, majority of us have access to Church teaching.If I make a decision that is based on erroneous thinking, which happens all the time, God will not chunk me into hell.
Because there would be a big difference in suggestions given between a young woman who has just recently been abandoned, and an older woman with a putative marriage that already ended. A decent vocations director wouldn’t look twice at the former, except to refer her for help. Plus if there is no civil divorce, it may be a very dramatic bump in the road but the marriage could be saved. We are given too little detail to really answer.I am wondering why it would matter if there has been a civil divorce yet?
You made me laugh, and it is Monday morning before any coffee…gosh, just love tiramasu, or however you spell it! I am sure it is a God thing!Hello Rainbow, first of all, I love the rhyme. Who would have ever thought to put “die my hair blue” with “tiramisu”!?!? 4 claps in each!!!
Our blessed Lord plainly taught that eating even “tiramisu” is not sinful (in moderation of course)
Matthew 15:11 It’s not what goes into your mouth that defiles you; you are defiled by the words that come out of your mouth.
But He also plainly taught that it does matter if we divorce and “remarry.”
Mark 10:12 And if a woman shall put away her husband, and be married to another, she committeth adultery.
And St. Paul taught that committing adultery is kind of a big deal…
1 Corinthians 6:9
9Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind,
As long as “inheriting the kingdom of God” is a big deal.
I am curious how it is that your husband can be such a bad guy who is so horrible to your children and will traumatize your children by reuniting with you and will never change and yet you still believe that he is going to join you in heaven? (I am not saying that none of those things are true, I am just wondering how they could all be true.)
The ignorance would need to be of no fault of my own. In other words, I truly desired to obey God but just had no possible way to find and know the Truth. Maybe being born in a jungle and raised by a band of gorillas I would not be held accountable for stealing my brothers bamboo. In the US, however, the vast, vast, majority of us have access to Church teaching.
If I truly want to know if contracepting is okay then the vast majority of us can find that out.
God doesn’t “chunk us into Hell.” That is a misconception of God that many atheists have. This isn’t the case at all. We freely choose to separate ourselves from God. God does not forcefully prevent us from walking away from Him in this life and that choice is what leads to eternal separation from Him. Should I choose to “remarry” and be an adulterer then I am choosing to walk away from Him. Should I choose to be abusive to my children and spouse then I am choosing to walk away from Him.
Bryan
LOVE SO AMAZING
Hi, Christlifer!When a non Catholic divorces three times, then converts to
Catholicism, how can the Catholic church accept this person
when his previous three wives are still alive? This makes him
an adulterer doesn’t it?
Because forgiveness and salvation is God’s to give, not hers, not yours, and not mine. We can’t possibly know, we aren’t to judge. If God wills it, it can happen. And we know that His desire is that all of us, even her husband, join Him in Heaven…I am curious how it is that your husband can be such a bad guy who is so horrible to your children and will traumatize your children by reuniting with you and will never change and yet you still believe that he is going to join you in heaven? (I am not saying that none of those things are true, I am just wondering how they could all be true.)
Sure Matthew 5:31-32I have skimmed this thread on Divorce. I am new to this forum
and have a question on this subject.
Maybe someone here can help me.
When a non Catholic divorces three times, then converts to
Catholicism, how can the Catholic church accept this person
when his previous three wives are still alive? This makes him
an adulterer doesn’t it?
Thanks for any help you can give. Including Scripture in your
answer is always a plus.
christlifer
21 "It was also said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife must give her a bill of divorce.’
It is the unlawful part that the decree of nullity part seeks to investigate. If the marriage at the time that it took place was unlawful than the Sacramental part was invalid and did not happen. Now, that being said in the case that you mention considering there is no benefit of knowing the first was unlawful then until that it is established the second and third are unlawful as per ligamen. Now, once the first is established is unlawful then it is looking at the second and then the third.But I say to you, whoever divorces his wife (unless the marriage is unlawful) causes her to commit adultery, and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery.
I had prayed alot about it years ago, and God so comforted me. I am completely trusting God to heal him and also myself. I have never been in my ex’s shoes, but I can only imagine having been married to me was not the easiest roadBecause forgiveness and salvation is God’s to give, not hers, not yours, and not mine. We can’t possibly know, we aren’t to judge. If God wills it, it can happen. And we know that His desire is that all of us, even her husband, join Him in Heaven…
And doing God’s will, even as an abandoned spouse, is still to love the spouse that left, in this case, loving them would be praying for their salvation. And as Sunday’s Gospel reminds us, true faith is approaching God with the certainty that He can do anything. Regardless of what her spouse might have done and may do between now and the moment of death, God can save him. Speaking to God with that sort of certainty, the same way the leper approached Christ and requested healing with a certainty that He could do it is demonstrating faith in God’s power.
How will He get her husband from where he is now to join her in Heaven? It may not even be possible for us to comprehend, but it’s not necessary that we understand how, just have the faith to know that God can do anything. So, whatever her husband has done and will do, it’s faith in God that tells her all that can be true and he still can join her in Heaven…
Originally Posted by FCGeorge
I am wondering why it would matter if there has been a civil divorce yet?
Plus if there is no civil divorce, it may be a very dramatic bump in the road but the marriage could be saved.