farronwolf
New member
Not to derail another thread running about Biden and his not adhering to Catholic teaching, or rather his opponent thinking that he wants to hurt God, hurt the Bible, or whatever nonsense was spewed by someone who has no idea of what it means to be a christian, I am bringing this over here.
Mind you there may be some things that need some further explanation in this post.
By my understanding, the Church presumes a marriage which takes place outside the Church itself to be valid, or not depending on whether the two person are catholic or not.
Catholics who exchange vows in the presence of ministers from other religious traditions or civil officials are not considered validly married in the eyes of the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church views all true marriages with respect. It presumes that they are valid. Thus, it considers the marriage of two Protestant, Jewish or even non-believing persons, any of whom marry according to their own tradition, to be binding in the eyes of God.
So the Church must convalidate a marriage which has taken place outside the Church for someone who either is or becomes Catholic.
Yet the marriage in the Church is only presumed valid, because at a later date a tribunal may decide that the marriage wasn’t valid. The people could go through marriage prep, have the priests blessing, be married for decades, have children, bring them up in the Church and then at a later date be declared null, which doesn’t really mean it was null, just that it didn’t meet the requirements for a valid marriage. (this is a cop out in my opinion).
The children aren’t illegitimate, the couple wasn’t engaging in sinful activity by engaging in sex while not in a valid marriage, and on and on.
The people are then free to do the same thing again (get married within the Church) with the Church’s blessing. Is there a limit on the number of annulments a person can get? I have one sister who has had two of them. Sarcasm here, she is now very righteous.
What I have trouble reconciling is if one person entered the marriage with a lie or whatever to make it invalid, how does that get the other person off the hook? The requirements and vows are not incumbent on the other doing what they say they will do. Each person takes the vow themselves. How is the person who caused the marriage to be invalid not guilty of living a life of sin during the time they are married.
This seems like a case of wanting to eat your cake and have it too. You can’t have both. If the marriage is declared invalid, then it never was any better of a marriage than one which the Church would not have recognized for not being in the proper form in the first place.
Maybe folks who are smarter than me can explain this in a fashion which makes sense.
Mind you there may be some things that need some further explanation in this post.
By my understanding, the Church presumes a marriage which takes place outside the Church itself to be valid, or not depending on whether the two person are catholic or not.
Catholics who exchange vows in the presence of ministers from other religious traditions or civil officials are not considered validly married in the eyes of the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church views all true marriages with respect. It presumes that they are valid. Thus, it considers the marriage of two Protestant, Jewish or even non-believing persons, any of whom marry according to their own tradition, to be binding in the eyes of God.
So the Church must convalidate a marriage which has taken place outside the Church for someone who either is or becomes Catholic.
Yet the marriage in the Church is only presumed valid, because at a later date a tribunal may decide that the marriage wasn’t valid. The people could go through marriage prep, have the priests blessing, be married for decades, have children, bring them up in the Church and then at a later date be declared null, which doesn’t really mean it was null, just that it didn’t meet the requirements for a valid marriage. (this is a cop out in my opinion).
The children aren’t illegitimate, the couple wasn’t engaging in sinful activity by engaging in sex while not in a valid marriage, and on and on.
The people are then free to do the same thing again (get married within the Church) with the Church’s blessing. Is there a limit on the number of annulments a person can get? I have one sister who has had two of them. Sarcasm here, she is now very righteous.
What I have trouble reconciling is if one person entered the marriage with a lie or whatever to make it invalid, how does that get the other person off the hook? The requirements and vows are not incumbent on the other doing what they say they will do. Each person takes the vow themselves. How is the person who caused the marriage to be invalid not guilty of living a life of sin during the time they are married.
This seems like a case of wanting to eat your cake and have it too. You can’t have both. If the marriage is declared invalid, then it never was any better of a marriage than one which the Church would not have recognized for not being in the proper form in the first place.
Maybe folks who are smarter than me can explain this in a fashion which makes sense.