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EmilyAlexandra
Guest
This is one of those questions to which I know that there will not be any one answer on which everyone will agree. However, I’d be interested to hear the range of opinions.
I think my mother has some strange ideas. She’s not Catholic, although she did consider converting and also considered becoming a nun. Since Catholicism has conservative views about sexual morality, I am curious to know whether Catholics would tend to agree or disagree with my mother and on what grounds.
This is what she says:
I think my mother has some strange ideas. She’s not Catholic, although she did consider converting and also considered becoming a nun. Since Catholicism has conservative views about sexual morality, I am curious to know whether Catholics would tend to agree or disagree with my mother and on what grounds.
This is what she says:
- If a couple have already had sex, there is no point in getting married. Basically, the only reason for getting married is so that you can have sex in its only proper context, namely, marriage. Therefore, if you have already had sex, there is no point in getting married.
- The above applies to civil marriage. With regard to religious marriage, not only is there no point in getting married, but the couple should actually not be allowed to get married. It “disgraces” the church when fornicators marry.
- A woman should not be allowed to wear white if she is not a virgin. Wearing white is a privilege reserved for virgins. If a woman is not a virgin on her wedding day, she should wear a coloured dress. Since wearing white is the norm in our culture, coloured wedding dresses would effectively advertise when the bride is not a virgin.
- There are plenty of reasons why a couple would want to get married. Some are purely practical considerations, e.g. the right to inherit property, the right to a pension, and the right to be recognised as next of kin. For most people, marriage is also seen as an added level of commitment imposing specific obligations, such as sticking with each other through thick and thin and being faithful until death. For many Christians, marriage is also considered to be a sacrament.
- and 3. Jesus was always talking about forgiving people, not judging, and letting him who is without sin cast the first stone. I cannot believe that Jesus would want people to be made to suffer for the rest of their lives on account of committing a sin, and nor can I believe that he would want somebody to be effectively subjected to a ritual humiliation on what is supposed to be one of the happiest days of her life.
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