B
bobcrawford
Guest
A female member of our family was recently divorced. Her husband was found to be cheating with several women almost from the beginning of their marriage. She gave him three months to seek help, talk to their parish priest, and make a choice. After three months of him doing nothing, she went to the attorney to start the divorce process.
She wants to get an annulment but considers it more abuse. She said the annulment process as discussed with the priest and deacon just heaps on more hurt. She said she was the victim, but does not feel the church treats her that way.
Several issues here. First, her former spouse is probably a sociopath. If you read about sociopaths, because they are expert liars, they can hide it their entire lives. But there is no way to prove he is such because he refuses to get help.
Since she has to give testimony, anything that embarrasses him enrages him. Even though they are not married, he can still abuse her verbally and make her life a living Hell. This can happen because he can read her testimony.
Being a liar he knows how much the Church is important to her and her family. He was a converted Catholic and probably did so only for the marriage. He doesn’t care what the Church thinks so he could lie in his testimony to hurt her even more.
It seems to me the Church’s annulment process was developed around rational adults. It does not consider that one of the adults could be mentally ill, vindictive or could bring other harm from them reading the testimony of the other adult.
While I agree that marriage is for life, the Church’s law on making two people stay religiously married when one abuses the other, or consistent cheats on the other, just forces the innocent spouse to pay for the sins of the other spouse. It’s not wonder so many women today feel alienated from the Church and feel the Church is just another “good ol’ boys club” and not something open, loving and understanding of their plight.
I would think that the Church should realize that a spouse who endlessly cheated on the other spouse was never fully committed to the marriage before the marriage took place and therefore the marriage was invalid. I am not talking about a single mistake kind of adultery, but talking about consistent, on-going cheating. Why put women, through all the agony? It’s just more abuse.
I often think that some day a woman will seek an annulment. The ex-husand will read the testimony and become enraged, then seek out and murder the spouse because of the written testimony. Just a matter of time.
Would be nice if the Church reformed it methods in some areas that bring more hurt, humiliation and abuse.
JMHO
She wants to get an annulment but considers it more abuse. She said the annulment process as discussed with the priest and deacon just heaps on more hurt. She said she was the victim, but does not feel the church treats her that way.
Several issues here. First, her former spouse is probably a sociopath. If you read about sociopaths, because they are expert liars, they can hide it their entire lives. But there is no way to prove he is such because he refuses to get help.
Since she has to give testimony, anything that embarrasses him enrages him. Even though they are not married, he can still abuse her verbally and make her life a living Hell. This can happen because he can read her testimony.
Being a liar he knows how much the Church is important to her and her family. He was a converted Catholic and probably did so only for the marriage. He doesn’t care what the Church thinks so he could lie in his testimony to hurt her even more.
It seems to me the Church’s annulment process was developed around rational adults. It does not consider that one of the adults could be mentally ill, vindictive or could bring other harm from them reading the testimony of the other adult.
While I agree that marriage is for life, the Church’s law on making two people stay religiously married when one abuses the other, or consistent cheats on the other, just forces the innocent spouse to pay for the sins of the other spouse. It’s not wonder so many women today feel alienated from the Church and feel the Church is just another “good ol’ boys club” and not something open, loving and understanding of their plight.
I would think that the Church should realize that a spouse who endlessly cheated on the other spouse was never fully committed to the marriage before the marriage took place and therefore the marriage was invalid. I am not talking about a single mistake kind of adultery, but talking about consistent, on-going cheating. Why put women, through all the agony? It’s just more abuse.
I often think that some day a woman will seek an annulment. The ex-husand will read the testimony and become enraged, then seek out and murder the spouse because of the written testimony. Just a matter of time.
Would be nice if the Church reformed it methods in some areas that bring more hurt, humiliation and abuse.
JMHO