In my situation, I was baptized Catholic but raised outside the church. Unawares I committed a mortal sin by marrying a Christian in his church
It’s impossible to commit a mortal sin ‘unawares’. Literally, that means that the sin is not mortal, by definition.
Then when my husband was willing to convert to Catholicism and assist me to come back into the church/revert we get bombarded with opstacles and paperwork and accusations of being liars, and told our marriage was everything but valid.
So, strictly speaking, according to the Catholic Church, a valid [sacramental] marriage for a Catholic must be performed according to the form prescribed by the Church. That holds both for the Latin and Eastern Rites.
In your case, given the things you’ve said around the forums, you were treated pretty poorly. That really stinks. I can’t imagine how painful that was for you.
However, that doesn’t mean that the treatment you received is the policy of the Church, nor does it mean that it’s the treatment that all receive. You really received a raw deal, and I’m really sorry you went through that. But… that doesn’t mean that your experience is characteristic of the Church. Might there be others who can tell stories not unlike yours? I’m sure there are. Does that mean that you’re in the majority? Does that mean that most get treated that way? Nope. One instance like yours is too many; but that doesn’t mean that it’s representative.
Neither one of us had been married before. He left his parents home to marry me, I left my parents home to marry him. I thought this marriage blessing would be simple, no annulments, etc.
No annulment would have been necessary, if neither of you were previously married. Something’s really amiss, here, if you’re asserting that you were told you needed to get an annulment. (Did you mention the timeframe for this attempted return to the Church? Before or after 1983?)
My mortal sin was to have been baptized Catholic. If I was a satanist who happened to marry a Christian who now both wanted to be Catholic, all would have been easier. Something is wrong with this picture.
That’s what we keep telling you.
There’s something
very wrong about the treatment you’re telling us you received. It’s so wrong, it’s almost inconceivable.
Now the Eastern priest says that RCC tend towards legalism. He recognized we were both CHRISTIAN and practicing our faith since birth and because of the verses below, the paperwork and marriage was to seal our existing marriage, not creating a marriage that was not there to begin with.
If that’s what he told you, then he too wasn’t following what his Church teaches. (See
canon 810 of the CCEO: since you were required to follow the form of the Catholic Church for your marriage, but you instead were married by a non-Catholic minister, the marriage was not valid.) It’s not a mortal sin, as I mentioned above, but it nevertheless did not create a valid sacramental marriage.
Moreover, your marriage in the Eastern Rite was a ‘convalidation’, which required a new act of consent. So, it really
was “creating a [sacramental] marriage that was not there to begin with.” Don’t get me wrong – you two were really married civilly… just not sacramentally. So, there’s no “sealing”; instead, there was a “new act of marriage.”
I gave up on the revert process.
There’s really no ‘process’ to revert, though. Somebody in parish[es] in your area really gave you the run-around, and that really stinks. But, there’s no canonical process that you have to go through, in order to revert. It looks like someone really held up the convalidation of your marriage (which was necessary for you to return to the practice of the sacraments), though.
I am only a Catholic revert today BECAUSE my husband converted to Eastern Catholic. If he had chosen Eastern Orthodox, since I refused to give up on Pope Francis, I would be odd man out.
Actually, no. If you had married in the Orthodox Church, and then went to a parish that was following the rules, you could have regularized your marital situation (at the very least, through a radical sanation).
Casilda, I don’t want to appear to be minimizing or explaining away the pain that you went through. But, when you spin it as characteristic and representative of the Latin Church, you really are saying things that are untrue. I’m really sorry you were hurt so badly, and that you continue to carry that hurt with you.