Very true.
Moreover, if a man were to be discerning a call to the diaconate, and divorced his wife because she wasn’t a virgin on their wedding day – when the two of them had had sex before marriage! – something tells me that the diocese wouldn’t be too keen on keeping him in the diaconate program very long. Just sayin’…
I doubt very much having sex with his wife before they were married will have any bearing on his call to the diaconate. And he wouldn’t be divorcing her because she wasn’t a virgin at the time of the marriage, but because she lied/withheld that information from him before they were married.
(Oh, and BTW – the question I have is: just what theory would the proposed decree of nullity be based upon?
Lack of consent. One can’t fully consent to marry someone if the other party withholds information from them that would otherwise make them reconsider going through with the marriage. The Church is very serious about both parties giving 100% consent. One can’t give consent if they lack information that allows them to decide whether or not to consent.
That the OP’s husband was mistaken about her character?
Character at the time, or maturity at the time of vows. Someone who withholds information from a future spouse (because they are afraid the person will call off the wedding) lacks the maturity to get married. Plus, the intent on her part was to withhold the information from him because she knew it might change his mind about the wedding.
Come on dudes. She made a mistake, everyone does. But put the shoe on the other foot. What if YOU consented to a marriage, but the person you married lied about pertinent information because they were afraid (rightfully) that the other would call off the wedding if they knew? They lied because they thought the other person would not have gone through with the wedding if they knew. That, friend, is a consent issue. You can’t give full consent when the other party lies or withholds the truth.
It didn’t have to be about a previous sexual partner. It could have been a history of drugs, or alcohol, debt, a previous marriage that had been annulled, or a medical condition. You need to disclose these things to your future spouse and allow them the opportunity to choose what to do.
In other words, he would be saying that he was deceived about the fact that she was the kind of girl who would have sex before marriage? When he, himself, had sex with her before marriage?
Many people, especially in my mother and grandmother’s generation, would not marry someone with a previous sexual history. It’s not so much that important today as we get married older, and more secular, etc. But it’s an important piece of information to disclose. You definitely have no business leading your future spouse to believe you’ve had no previous sexual history if in fact you have.