V
Vancleave596
Guest
So my wife and I separated for about 9 months and she even started the divorce process in court. She changed her mind at the last minute, we started working on our marriage, we attended Retrouvaille, and we are on the road to a healed and hopefully better marriage.
However my question is this:
While going through this, she was all but guaranteed by multiple priests that the marriage would get annulled if it went through the process post divorce in the court. Meaning that our marriage was never valid in the first place, and never was to start with. So even though we no longer want to get divorced, if it would through the process it would be considered invalid.
With that logic, regardless of whether we stay together or not, our marriage is still invalid.
We were married originally almost 11 years ago outside the Catholic Church in a small non-denominational church. About 5 years ago we had our marriage convalidated in the Catholic Church.
However after talking with 3 different priests, they all told me the same thing:
“It doesn’t matter that we had our marriage convalidated, the annulment process will always look at the original marriage date and whether or not it was valid at the time.”
Meaning that no matter what we do, our marriage is only “valid” because the Church assumes all marriages are valid until proven otherwise. And since we aren’t getting divorced, and we aren’t going through annulment process, it won’t ever get “proven invalid”.
This greatly disturbs me. I feel its like:
A thief steals something and is guilty, but since no court has even found him guilty, he is presumed innocent since no one proved he committed a crime. The fact that the court hasn’t found him guilty doesn’t mean he isn’t guilty of the crime.
So my questions are this:
If my marriage would be invalid after going through the annulment process(which it most certainly would), and if getting our marriage convalidated doesn’t matter when they look at whether we have a valid marriage, then A)whats the point of convalidating a marriage?, B)won’t my marriage always be invalid (if it would be invalid after going through the annulment process, it would mean its actually invalid now right?) C) There is nothing to be done except divorce, get an annulment, and get remarried to make it 100% valid.
This logic seems crazy to me, but if the convalidation didn’t make our marriage valid if it was invalid to start with, then what else can we do?
Thanks, and I hope my spiderweb logic makes sense.
However my question is this:
While going through this, she was all but guaranteed by multiple priests that the marriage would get annulled if it went through the process post divorce in the court. Meaning that our marriage was never valid in the first place, and never was to start with. So even though we no longer want to get divorced, if it would through the process it would be considered invalid.
With that logic, regardless of whether we stay together or not, our marriage is still invalid.
We were married originally almost 11 years ago outside the Catholic Church in a small non-denominational church. About 5 years ago we had our marriage convalidated in the Catholic Church.
However after talking with 3 different priests, they all told me the same thing:
“It doesn’t matter that we had our marriage convalidated, the annulment process will always look at the original marriage date and whether or not it was valid at the time.”
Meaning that no matter what we do, our marriage is only “valid” because the Church assumes all marriages are valid until proven otherwise. And since we aren’t getting divorced, and we aren’t going through annulment process, it won’t ever get “proven invalid”.
This greatly disturbs me. I feel its like:
A thief steals something and is guilty, but since no court has even found him guilty, he is presumed innocent since no one proved he committed a crime. The fact that the court hasn’t found him guilty doesn’t mean he isn’t guilty of the crime.
So my questions are this:
If my marriage would be invalid after going through the annulment process(which it most certainly would), and if getting our marriage convalidated doesn’t matter when they look at whether we have a valid marriage, then A)whats the point of convalidating a marriage?, B)won’t my marriage always be invalid (if it would be invalid after going through the annulment process, it would mean its actually invalid now right?) C) There is nothing to be done except divorce, get an annulment, and get remarried to make it 100% valid.
This logic seems crazy to me, but if the convalidation didn’t make our marriage valid if it was invalid to start with, then what else can we do?
Thanks, and I hope my spiderweb logic makes sense.