G
God_Seeker_1
Guest
Hi everyone,
I just wanted to throw this out before the wisdom of the forum.
I was born and raised Catholic (baptized, received holy communion), and when I was at the age of 14 or 15 I just stopped believing in God. I became an agnostic/atheist. When I turned 18, I came across a baptist at my college and he shared the gospel with me, I soon thereafter had a radical conversion experience. I then got married to a girl in the baptist church, who was not a catholic as far as I can remember, but then got civilly divorced from her a few years later.
Since then, I’ve come back to the Catholic Church. The tribunal declared my form marriage annulled because of a lack of form. Since I was baptized Catholic, I was bound by the canonical form of the sacrament, which I did not observe. And just the other day my wife (someone different than my former “spouse” in the baptist church) received the sacrament of marriage in the Church.
However, today I picked up a book, Copyright 1997 called 100 answers to your questions on annullments by Edward N. Peters, a person well studied under Canon Law, and he said in the book that in the above scenario, if I became a baptist, then I formally renounced my catholic faith, and therefore I was not bound to observe the canonical form of the sacrament, and my former union in the baptist church is likely a valid union. He cited Canon 1117.
I told the Tribunal over and over again that I had become a protestant baptist and spent many years there. But they still insisted that the former attempted union in the baptist church was null.
What am I to do?
I just wanted to throw this out before the wisdom of the forum.
I was born and raised Catholic (baptized, received holy communion), and when I was at the age of 14 or 15 I just stopped believing in God. I became an agnostic/atheist. When I turned 18, I came across a baptist at my college and he shared the gospel with me, I soon thereafter had a radical conversion experience. I then got married to a girl in the baptist church, who was not a catholic as far as I can remember, but then got civilly divorced from her a few years later.
Since then, I’ve come back to the Catholic Church. The tribunal declared my form marriage annulled because of a lack of form. Since I was baptized Catholic, I was bound by the canonical form of the sacrament, which I did not observe. And just the other day my wife (someone different than my former “spouse” in the baptist church) received the sacrament of marriage in the Church.
However, today I picked up a book, Copyright 1997 called 100 answers to your questions on annullments by Edward N. Peters, a person well studied under Canon Law, and he said in the book that in the above scenario, if I became a baptist, then I formally renounced my catholic faith, and therefore I was not bound to observe the canonical form of the sacrament, and my former union in the baptist church is likely a valid union. He cited Canon 1117.
I told the Tribunal over and over again that I had become a protestant baptist and spent many years there. But they still insisted that the former attempted union in the baptist church was null.
What am I to do?