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TheLittleLady
Guest
I’m not sure what you are trying to say.
All sacraments require proper matand form
All sacraments require proper matand form
Yep, it has been null from the beginning, which means it never existed. But the life lived while presumed to be married during a marriage which never existed aren’t considered in the same light as say two folks just living together, or in a marriage the Church doesn’t consider valid.Annulment is the “unfortunate word”, not nullity . A declaration of nullity – as your cited text asserts – does not make a marriage null . Rather, it only asserts the fact that it has been null from the very beginning. It is a declaration of a fact, and not an assertion of a change in status. Perhaps this is where you’re misunderstanding the situation?
A natural marriage requires the same matter and form.I’m not sure what you are trying to say.
All sacraments require proper matand form
That conclusion makes no sense to me. We cannot sin “by accident”. A knowing and free choice is required.Having cake and eating it too.
Right!But the life lived while presumed to be married during a marriage which never existed aren’t considered in the same light as say two folks just living together, or in a marriage the Church doesn’t consider valid.
Legitimacy is a function of civil law, not canon law. If your marriage was civilly valid, then there’s no question of legitimacy of children, even if the marriage wasn’t canonically valid.you thought you were married so your children aren’t illegitimate.
You say that in a tone that suggests that the person really did think that it was invalid from the start. That’s not the case – for each of the spouses – in a nullity proceeding. So… no: not “having your cake and eating it too.”Now you say you didn’t realize what you were doing, or were coerced, or whatever
It’s more like “I thought I had cake, but it turns out that it was always a cow pie.”Having cake and eating it too.
People keep saying that, but legitimacy of children is definitely addressed in the canons on Marriage.Legitimacy is a function of civil law , not canon law. If your marriage was civilly valid , then there’s no question of legitimacy of children, even if the marriage wasn’t canonically valid.
This isn’t accurate.Legitimacy is a function of civil law , not canon law. If your marriage was civilly valid , then there’s no question of legitimacy of children, even if the marriage wasn’t canonically valid.
Two thoughts:People keep saying that, but legitimacy of children is definitely addressed in the canons on Marriage.
Under the old code, illegitimacy was an impediment to Ordination.
OK, then… what are the effects of “illegitimacy” (which is a status that the 1983 code doesn’t address)? Recall that anything in the 1917 code that’s not addressed in the 1983 code is abrogated…This isn’t accurate.
Can. 1137 The children conceived or born of a valid or putative marriage are legitimate.
Not all civil marriages are valid or putative, for example those of a Catholic wed civilly without dispensation.
Note that the marriage Rite also doesn’t speak of “vows” but of “exchange of consent”.Vico:![]()
I will grant that the Catholic Encyclopedia and the CCC both omit the word “vow” from their description of Matrimony, which would seem to be a curious lacuna, given the popular description of “marriage vows” exchanged in the Rite. I still do not see how a covenant is not a vow; either it is not solemn or it is not a promise, but to me a covenant seems like an especially solemn promise. This is the first time I have ever seen anyone deny that husband and wife indeed exchange vows. I suppose I am bound to believe Vico the expert, but this rocks my world.Anesti33:![]()
No, CatechismDoes a covenant agreement not have the character of a vow?
vow: solemn promise from Old French vow from Latin votum2102 A vow is a deliberate and free promise made to God …
1662 Marriage is based on the consent of the contracting parties, that is, on their will to give themselves, each to the other, mutually and definitively, in order to live a covenant of faithful and fruitful love.
covenant: mutual compact to do or not do something, a contract from Old French covenant from Latin convenire (come together, unite)
Look up civil annulments due to immigration fraud. The person seeking citizenship or residency “marries” fraudulently. Last time I checked, that has to do with intention.I have never really understood why a secret intention would invalidate consent. Consent doesn’t work that way in the civil law, in the civil law secret intentions are not accepted to invalidate an obligation.
Yes they are. Civil law has annulment statutes.Consent doesn’t work that way in the civil law, in the civil law secret intentions are not accepted to invalidate an obligation.
Annulment, yes, but not for mental reservations. This was actually considered by jurists who formed the Roman civil law, and it was unanimous that mental reservations cannot invalidate obligations. That would undermine the public trustworthiness of transactions.Yes they are. Civil law has annulment statutes.
Having the consent be both matter and form did not seem quite right to me, so I went looking for something about the matter and form of matrimony. The best I could find was from the Catholic Encyclopedia, which I assume illustrates the thinking even if it has been rendered obsolete in the century since:TheLittleLady:![]()
No. Baptism makes it sacramental; as for validity…What makes a marriage valid is consent. What makes it sacramental is matter and form
Ascension Press:
The form of matrimony, as implied above when discussing the ministers, is the consent of the marriage (Canon 1057). When the spouses give this consent publicly in front of the church, the marriage is presumed valid. The matter consists of this consent, along with the desire to live together in unity, as well as the consummation of the marriage (Canons 1056, 1061).
It helps me understand how the consent could be both matter and form, a minor diversion. We now return you to your more interesting discussions.The same holds true of the sacramental contract of marriage; in so far, therefore as an offering of the marriage right is contained in the mutual declaration of consent, we have the matter of the sacraments, and, in so far as a mutual acceptance is contained therein, we have the form.
That is a bit of a snide comment.Having cake and eating it too.
Nah… rather, it’s the case that divorces are easy to get. So… why bother with an annulment if you can easily divorce?my understandning is that civil annulments in the USA is rare and hard to get. They seem to be reserved for very obvious cases of fraud.
form = sign or words – what the consent consists of