H
Huiou_Theou
Guest
I think this was well stated. I would add, that one of the grounds of annulment is that one of the parties to a marriage does not know what is required of them in marriage – or what is total self giving. eg: The liturgy of the hours is beautiful, but it isn’t a requirement for marriage.Man and woman are designed to pair. They will do this with or without permission. … habitation could be looked at as two groups only 1)Natural marriage - they are married but deny this publicly 2) fornication - I know you have a need to deny this however setting aside the moral aspect you will find the Natural Moral Law can not be set aside. Intimacy will develop … Now you have a big problem one loves the other and the other still wants to be free …
Marriage is not immune from these same issues however in marriage both are asked to understand these issues before they develop intimacy. …
These two states are not the same …
Perhaps, in those cases, as in “living together” the difficulty is not so much the situation they are in as the people. But however, to go further – cohabitation and “marriage followed by divorce(s)” are a case of a one way statistic – those who enter the state are the only ones who can break up – and only who have broken up before – are capable of breaking a second time … or fifth time. What is the likelyhood of having one partner fail if they have failed before? ( Which naturally biases the statistic in one direction based on a few really bad apples…)
Take for example a neighbor who works in human services (the financial side of welfare) who went through the “wild” woman stage at college, had a husband – couldn’t stand him, as he loved his cars more than her – and sat in the garage often late at night drinking a beer from his convenience refrigerator – which angered her so much she dumped him.
I have just watched her (non-catholic) go through a remarriage and breakup, and my pained marriage has outlived both her cohabitation and marrage to this second man. He was “jettsetting” still – wanted to know if he was cute at the local bars…
Why then did they get married, isn’t it obvious neither of them was more likely statistically to succeed? (Did they BOTH learn from the first mistake, as it only takes ones to break the partnership?)
A statistic can lead one to interpret how people react to the first mistake, but it won’t answer how mixes of first time and second cohabiters interfere – or on what basis to avoid or choose a partner. Eg: if a person has failed before, are they more or less likely to be trustable, and more importantly than the % is why ???