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somecanadian
Guest
I’m not familiar with the gotcha thing. I think I’m too new to be on the lookout for that. Haha.
Thank you for your politeness and help. It is greatly appreciated. I will give her the information.Your sister needs to contact that priest to figure this out. If she’s too weak to do it herself, I’d suggest you help her. I don’t see why you couldn’t. Especially if she’s ill.
The pattern starts like this:I’m not familiar with the gotcha thing. I think I’m too new to be on the lookout for that. Haha.
I’m not all that new and not even sure what a gotcha is, but it sounds like some kind of a trap or game to me. Frankly, I’ve never seen a game played on here unless it’s in the Casual Forum and identified as such and very innocent. I spend most of my time there. People are more polite and less inclined to make me run to the Episcopalians for some civility! And a much better choir - I am a professional classical singer.I’m not familiar with the gotcha thing. I think I’m too new to be on the lookout for that. Haha.
Why wouldn’t I know a ton of detail about my own sister who I grew up with and consider my best friend? I know everything about her just as she knows everything about me.OP: Conveniently explains away every option with increasingly unlikely details (often a TON of detail) that make Church teaching or officials look as bad as possible
I was just thinking that myself. Great minds!This sounds like a super tricky situation. If it’s a valid marriage the parish will have a record of it. SO if talking to the priest can’t happen you CAN go to the parish and ask for the marriage records. If there are none, you know it wasn’t done properly or validly.
Well, if things are as you say, then looking up the record or clarifying with the priest is the best you can do, if he gives you that information (ours wouldn’t, except what was public record.)Why wouldn’t I know a ton of detail about my own sister who I grew up with and consider my best friend? I know everything about her just as she knows everything about me.
No confusion. Canon law is canon law. And, as you can see, a very nice @somecanadian has helped me find the direction in which to proceed.She still has to be the one to contact the priest because it is her marriage. Gathering hypothetical information is only going to confuse the issue.
Sorry, not buying that despite your cute avatar. We have entire forums here filled with people asking very similar questions. If we didn’t, CAF would cease to exist.Asking your relative (unless relative is a canon lawyer) or a bunch of strangers on the Internet is unlikely to resolve the matter.
There can be a question without error on his part.By even asking this question, you are raising a possibility that the priest erred. If you trust the priest then there should be no problem and no question.
I’m very sorry. I did not mean to offend. It is actually fairly common for people to ask questions here without even knowing what kind of assumptions they are making. As often as not, they’re here finding out what the questions are as much as what the answers are. I suppose it is shocking at first, except that people do it in spite of good faith and do it so often that it really isn’t shocking. It would not be a shocking assumption to believe that there was no finding of nullity because the process was fast. If a defect of form exists, however, that can be verified pretty quickly.I assume nothing. I know it because both told me they did not seek an annulment.
I don’t know why you would ever think I would “assume” something so important about my own sister and brother-in-law. It’s rather shocking.
I am very confused, because you told us they were already married. Why would he file civil paperwork? Or do you mean you know they have a valid civil union because the priest is also an officer of the state?The priest seemed to think that because he performed the marriage in the rectory, it was not “in the Church.” I don’t see it that way, but he’s the priest, not me. Still, priests make mistakes. They are human.
Yes, there were two.So, it seems that what we have here is: two people, who were Catholic, had merely civil marriages. Those marriages ended in divorce. A priest then witnessed their (the two, aforementioned Catholics’) wedding within his own parish. Were there any other witnesses present at this wedding?
So, the requirements of canonical form were observed. When did this wedding take place (the year)?Yes, there were two.