P
Phemie
Guest
But Ed Peters’ book was written 7 years BEFORE the Vatican clarified what was formal defection and in that 2006 document ***“ACTUS FORMALIS DEFECTIONIS AB ECCLESIA CATHOLICA” ***from the PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR LEGISLATIVE TEXTS we read:Thank you for your affirmations.
What makes it a bit hard to rub off, however, is that I was referred to Edward Peters as the go-to guy for Canonical Law, and I quote him here:
“Joining a protestant denomination and actively participating in it, on the other hand, will probably be held to qualify as a formal act of defection. If so, you would not have been bound to observe catholic form at the time of your wedding” (100 Answers to Your Questions on Annulments, Page 144, Edward Peters, 1997).
- It is required, moreover, that the act be manifested by the interested party in written form, before the competent authority of the Catholic Church: the Ordinary or proper pastor, who is uniquely qualified to make the judgment concerning the existence or non-existence of the act of the will as described above in n. 2.