1
1ke
Guest
No, not at all.If the priest is the officiant, logic would dictate the civil marriage never happened either, right?
In many places, including the US, the priest is also the civil officiant.
No, not at all.If the priest is the officiant, logic would dictate the civil marriage never happened either, right?
Not necessarily. In my state, and in many others, just the fact of being some kind of minister legally allows you to witness a marriage. I needed no such license and I’ve been performing marriages that had civil effect for three years now. In some states, you do have to register at the courthouse in order to witness marriages, but in most that isn’t the case.The priest must have a license by the state/province to marry in addition to being a priest.
Not in the US.The priest must have a license by the state/province to marry in addition to being a priest.
I don’t know why you are obsessed with this. But I’m done.That’s why I’m saying it really isn’t hard to check for a first cousin status check. Heck, they can outsource it.
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.) CatholicRules:
This is my big concern for you here too. Why is this such a concern to you? As I understand it, you’re talking about a marriage that has since broken up, and in any case to which you were not a party. So why does it matter so much?That’s why I’m saying it really isn’t hard to check for a first cousin status check. Heck, they can outsource it.
Actually, in Ohio, you do.CatholicRules:![]()
Not in the US.The priest must have a license by the state/province to marry in addition to being a priest.
Dispensations for consanguinity? Let’s just say that I’ve seen more than a few in my dealings with parish registers. In one isolated parish in particular every second wedding seemed to have such a dispensation.You make it seem like they hand those out like flyers.