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UKcatholicGuy
Guest
is refusal to consumate a marriage a sin? mortal? venial? church teaching?
That is not quite accurate, Huiou, at least as far as the law of the Catholic Church. Canon 1061 The marriage comes into being at the exchange of consent. That is, it is ratified (ratum tantum).There is no marriage without consumation.
So, no it is not a mortal sin because it can’t happen.
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So there are all kinds of scenarios with different gravities. Do you have a particular one in mind?
You need to distinguish between two cases:is refusal to consumate a marriage a sin? mortal? venial? church teaching?
This is a saint that I can relate to. Does anyone know about this saint?the reason i ask is because i certain saint (forget the name) was married for 16 yrs before finally consumating the marriage
I don’t know about sinfulness category (but believe it is serious enough to be grave matter), but it does invalidate the marriage and is grounds for annulment.is refusal to consumate a marriage a sin? mortal? venial? church teaching?
Documentation, please.Contrary to modern hedonistic thought, consumation of a marriage is not brought about by sexual interaction between the spouses, it is brought about by childbirth and rearing the child in the faith. Thal59
That is not correct. There is such a thing as an “unconsumated Marriage”.There is no marriage without consumation.
in the feudal period, among the nobility, it was common for parents to betroth the two children at a very young age. It was also common for parents to send their children to another noble or royal household to be reared and educated, for the various career, social and other benefits that would accrue. Often the girl was sent to be brought up with the family of the boy she was affianced to. Catherine of Aragon was sent to England to be reared in the royal household for several years before her marriage to Arthur (brother of Henry8). Mary Queen of Scots was betrothed to Edward 6 (son of Henry 8 and Jane Seymour) at age 5 and spent some time as a child in the English court. Edward died young so she went on to live out her soap opera life.the reason i ask is because i certain saint (forget the name) was married for 16 yrs before finally consumating the marriage
A marriage ratum tantum that does not survive may be dissolved by the Apostolic See. A marriage that is ratified and consummated may not be dissolved by any human authority.
If the marriage does not survive?In short, nullity pertains to the ratification of a putative marriage. Dissolution is a remedy that may be applied in certain circumstances when a ratified marriage is not consummated.
A nature is something which all objects of the group have in common.By its very nature the institution of marriage and married love is ordered to the procreation and education of the offspring…
Jeanne Marie de Maillethe reason i ask is because i certain saint (forget the name) was married for 16 yrs before finally consumating the marriage
Thal,
Something is definitely confusing with your assessment. What about barren women? are they not wife to their husband?
E.G. What about Sari, and Elizabeth, prior to childbirth?
The quote from my post applies to the barren women you mentioned. Is it not reasonable to assume that these women both wanted and assumed they would be able to bear children when they married? Their infertility became known to them later and probably as an unhappy surprise to them.A childless couple has a valid marriage, but an unconsumated one. (This assumes the couple both desired and tried to bear children but failed.)<<
I am sorry, and I do not wish to offend, but if you wish to understand the meaning of a “consumated marriage” deeper, both as the Jews and early Christians understood it, you will have to do your own homework.Documentation, please.